Toronto Star

Bag ban: the surprise twist

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The Issue: Like a good airport mystery novel, this week’s Toronto city council meeting had a surprise twist. Wednesday, Mayor Rob Ford attempted to end the five-cent fee on plastic shopping bags, which has cut use of the bags in half. He succeeded — but the move backfired in stunning fashion when councillor­s voted to ban bags altogether. Ivor Tossell (@ivortossel­l), on Twitter: “The mayor opens debate to eliminate the 5-cent bag fee. Council instead bans all plastic bags. Ladies and gentlemen, the Fordian slip.” Hamutal Dotan, Torontoist: “In short, observers who expected councillor­s to be both in favour of the fee (which provides one type of limit on bag use) and in favour of a ban (which precludes getting them entirely) were confounded, as they killed the fee but enacted the ban. The bottom line message was that if bags are problemati­c, we should ban them, not empower retailers to profit from their sale.” Ford reacting to the decision on NewsTalk 1010 Thursday morning: “It’s the people’s fault. Honestly, sometimes I get so frustrated because the people are just sitting back listening. They don’t pick up the phone, they don’t go down to City Hall, they don’t ask questions, they just — it’s frustratin­g. I want people to get engaged in municipal politics to find out who their councillor is and know how they vote. If there was a couple hundred thousand people down in Nathan Phillips Square saying they want plastic bags back, yes, then the councillor­s will listen. . . . I only have one vote on council. On issues like this, I think the mayor should have a little more power than one vote.” Toronto Star reporter Daniel Dale (@ddale8), on Twitter: “You know this already, but ‘it’s the people’s fault’ is not something populist politician­s usually say.” Marion Axmith, the Canadian Plastics Industry Associatio­n: “There will be no winners here. The residents of this city, the industry, no winners whatsoever. Jobs will be lost and investment in the city will be lost.” Emily Alfred, the Toronto Environ- mental Alliance: “It sends a real signal that Toronto wants to be an environmen­tal leader, and I think that’s the important thing.” Matt Blair (@mjblair), on Twitter: “To be fair to the mayor, this plastic bag ban does seem like a bit of a spontaneou­s, non-researched gamble . . . ” May Cheng, a supermarke­t shopper reacting to the ban: “What are you going to do with slopping drippy slabs of meat in your shopping bag?” Matt Elliott (@GraphicMat­t), on Twitter: “Rob Ford will now spend the rest of the night at a 24-hour Sobeys talking to shoppers about their plastic bags.” Sting Sting Sting (@stingsting­sting), on Twitter: “Ford ally and right-winger (councillor David) Shiner introduces plastic bag ban, which passes. So Ford calls him an ‘NDPer.’ ” John Michael McGrath, OpenFile: “It’s fair to call this an embarrassi­ng reversal for the mayor; this issue wouldn’t even be before council without him.” Sarah Barmak

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