Los Angeles Times

Recycling bins won’t save us

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Re “The plastic bottle ban at SFO,” editorial, Aug. 9

Thank you for the editorial on the single-use plastic bottle ban at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport and the innovative measures designed to reduce inconvenie­nce to travelers.

But therein lies the root cause, as you identified: our desire for convenienc­e that too often overrides all other factors. At least water bottles can be recycled, though too few are.

Consumers need to understand that plastic items such as straws and utensils are rarely recycled because they are too small or fragile for recycling processing equipment, or of little or no value. Recycling bins cannot resolve our consumptio­n excesses.

Even more problemati­c are delivery food containers. Most paper versions have grease-resistant coatings that studies have linked to health problems. Paper beverage cups are not 100% paper — they’re lined with polyethyle­ne. When discarded in a landfill, the container’s paper portion, which is an organic material, generates the greenhouse gas methane when it decomposes.

The the only solution is to abandon our single-use disposable ethic. California’s recently enacted AB 619 allows customers to bring their own food containers, so encourage your favorite eatery to offer a discount when you arrive with bowl or plate in hand. Jennifer Pinkerton

Glendale

I lived the first 50 years of my life without the availabili­ty of bottled water. When I went camping I brought a canteen. When my family went on a picnic we brought a jug.

Now, a generation that is supposedly more conscious of the environmen­t is dropping tons of plastic on the world, apparently because they can’t go an hour without a sip.

If we must pamper the public with plastic, let’s tax the heck out of it to pay for its complete removal from the face of the Earth. Don Tonty

Los Angeles

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