Los Angeles Times

Plastic trash we can ban now

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Re “How we can fix our broken plastic recycling system,” Opinion, Feb. 21

Kudos to Sen. Tom Udall (D-N.M.) and Rep. Alan Lowenthal (D-Long Beach) for their op-ed article on our raging plastic waste problem. Mostly they discussed “profitable” or at least “self-sustaining” recycling, just one of the many heads of the plastic pollution monster.

Another head of the monster, and one I think easier to conquer, is polystyren­e, commonly known as Styrofoam. There is no profit or sustainabi­lity in recycling it because it is simply cheaper to make from new, raw plastic pellets than from recycled material. The lion’s share of appliances, furniture and toys come to us packed in this foam.

The solution? Simply ban throwaway polystyren­e. That would require outlawing the shipment of imports and domestic products using the material. If we refuse foam-packed shipments, China, South Korea and others will stop using it.

Change for the better isn’t always cheap or profitable, which is what’s keeping this from happening.

Roger Krenkler

Westlake Village

Thank goodness for Udall and Lowenthal and their recycling bill.

Sometimes I wonder where the recyclable­s in my green waste bin actually wind up. It occurs to me that in California, where property values and taxes are ridiculous­ly high, recycling should be a wellfunded government function. In my lifetime I have seen the reckless proliferat­ion of plastic packaging and containers.

I am glad this bill addresses the types of plastics used in recycling, but seeing that industry lobbyists are pulling lawmakers’ puppet strings, I don’t foresee manufactur­ers assuming ownership of recycling responsibi­lities.

Our taxes are going to have to help save us from this, and as consumers we need to champion the use of additional public funds for recycling technology too. Let’s both reduce plastic packaging and create a real recycling system in this country.

Bethia Sheean-Wallace

Fullerton

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