The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Pandemic deals blow to plastic bag bans, plastic reduction

- By Gillian Flaccus

PORTLAND, ORE. » Just weeks ago, cities and even states across the U.S. were busy banning straws, limiting takeout containers and mandating that shoppers bring reusable bags or pay a small fee as the movement to eliminate single-use plastics took hold in mainstream America.

What a difference a pandemic makes.

In a matter of days, hard-won bans to reduce the use of plastics — and particular­ly plastic shopping sacks — across the U.S. have come under fire amid worries about the virus clinging to reusable bags, cups and straws.

Governors in Massachuse­tts and Illinois have banned or strongly discourage­d the use of reusable grocery bags. Oregon suspended its brand-new ban on plastic bags this week, and cities from Bellingham, Washington, to Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico, have announced a hiatus on plastic bag bans as the coronaviru­s rages.

Add to that a rise in takeout and a ban on reusable cups and straws at the few coffee stores that remain open, and environmen­talists worry COVID-19 could set back their efforts to tackle plastic pollution for years.

“People are scared for their lives, their livelihood, the economy, feeding their loved ones, so the environmen­t is taking a back seat,” said Glen Quadros, owner of the Great American Diner & Bar in Seattle.

Quadros has laid off 15 employees and seen a 60% decline in business since Seattle all but shut down to slow the pandemic. For now, he’s using biodegrada­ble containers for takeout and delivery, but those products cost up to three times more than plastic — and they’re getting hard to find because of the surge in takeout, he said.

“The problem is, we don’t know what’s in store,” Quadros said. “Everyone is in the same situation.”

The plastics industry has seized the moment and is lobbying hard to overturn bans on single-use plastics by arguing disposable plastics are the safest option amid the crisis. California, Connecticu­t, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, New York, Oregon and Vermont have statewide bans on plastic bags, and Oregon and

California have laws limiting the use of plastic straws.

New York’s statewide plastic bag ban is on hold because of a lawsuit.

The Plastics Industry Associatio­n recently sent a letter to Alex Azar, head of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and asked him to speak out against plastic bag bans because they put consumers and workers at risk. And the American Recyclable Plastic Bag Alliance is doubling down on its opposition to plastic bag bans under a preexistin­g campaign titled Bag the Ban.

Grocery worker unions, too, have joined the chorus. The union that represents Oregon supermarke­t workers is lobbying for a ban on reusable bags, and a Chicago union called for an “end to the disease-transmitti­ng bag tax.”

Critics argue people with reusable bags don’t regularly wash them.

“If those bags coming into the store are contaminat­ed with anything, they get put on the conveyor belt, the counter, and you’re putting yourself in a bad spot,” said Matt Seaholm, executive director of the American Recyclable Plastic Bag Alliance. “It’s an unnecessar­y risk.”

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A shopper leaves a grocery store with food packed in a paper bag last week in Seattle, where the dime-per-bag fee has been waved during the coronaviru­s outbreak. Just weeks earlier, cities and some states were banning straws, limiting takeout containers and mandating that shoppers bring reusable bags or pay a small fee. Grocery clerks are nervous that the virus could linger on reusable fabric bags and their unions are backing them up with demands to end plastic bag fees and suspend bag bans.
ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A shopper leaves a grocery store with food packed in a paper bag last week in Seattle, where the dime-per-bag fee has been waved during the coronaviru­s outbreak. Just weeks earlier, cities and some states were banning straws, limiting takeout containers and mandating that shoppers bring reusable bags or pay a small fee. Grocery clerks are nervous that the virus could linger on reusable fabric bags and their unions are backing them up with demands to end plastic bag fees and suspend bag bans.

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