Los Angeles Times

Want plastic with that? You’ll have to ask for it

S.F. restaurant­s can no longer offer customers disposable foodware.

- By Colleen Shalby

Francisco restaurant­s are no longer allowed to offer customers plastic utensils or disposable food accessorie­s with their orders.

If customers would like chopsticks, napkins, beverage lids and sleeves, stirrers or straws, they will have to request them with their purchase.

That goes for takeout, inhouse dining and delivery options, but self-service areas are still allowed to continue carrying those items.

The law took effect July 1. The Single-Use Foodware Plastics, Toxics and Litter Reduction Ordinance is stricter than a similar law approved by the Los Angeles City Council in April.

The L.A. ordinance prohibits restaurant­s from providing unrequeste­d disposable plastic straws. According to a September 2018 report, plastic straws were the sixth-most collected item on California Coastal Cleanup days from 1988 to 2016, behind cigarettes, food packaging, caps and lids, plastic bags, and plastic utensils and dishes.

In the Bay Area, the San Francisco Chronicle reSan ported that disposable foodware makes up two-thirds of the street litter in the bay and the ocean.

“Just adding the interventi­on of having people ask if you want utensils gets rid of the lowest-hanging form of waste — stuff people don’t even want,” Nick Lapis, director of advocacy at California­ns Against Waste, a Sacramento advocacy group, told the Chronicle.

The San Francisco Department of the Environmen­t posted printable cards for restaurant­s to inform customers that straws are available upon request.

Disability advocates have raised concerns over limiting plastic straw usage for those with a disability and have pushed for restaurant­s to carry plastic straws, as metal and silicon alternativ­es do not always meet the required needs.

 ?? Justin Sullivan Getty Images ?? PAPER straws at Fog Harbor Fish House in San Francisco. A new city law bars restaurant­s from offering patrons plastic utensils or disposable food accessorie­s.
Justin Sullivan Getty Images PAPER straws at Fog Harbor Fish House in San Francisco. A new city law bars restaurant­s from offering patrons plastic utensils or disposable food accessorie­s.

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