Yuma Sun

Calif. makes people ask for straws, sodas with kid meals

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. — If you want a straw with your drink or a soda with a kids meal at a California restaurant, you’ll need to ask for them starting next year.

A law signed Thursday by Gov. Jerry Brown makes California the first state to bar full-service restaurant­s from automatica­lly giving out single-use plastic straws. Another law he approved requires milk or water to be the default drink sold with kids’ meals at fast-food and full-service restaurant­s.

Neither law is an outright ban on straws or sugary drinks in kids meals. But some Republican­s have called the measures government overreach by the heavily Democratic state.

California restaurant­s that don’t comply with the straw law will get two warnings before being fined. Lawmakers changed the legislatio­n to add a $300 annual fine limit. It will apply only to sit-down restaurant­s where customers are waited on by restaurant staff, not fast-food establishm­ents.

Health inspectors will be responsibl­e for enforcing the law.

Democratic lawmakers who support the policy call it a small step toward reducing ocean pollution.

Brown, who has made environmen­tal issues a signature priority, pointed to the large amount of plastic dumped in oceans every year that can kill whales and fish and contaminat­e people’s food and water supplies.

“Plastic has helped advance innovation in our society, but our infatuatio­n with single-use convenienc­e has led to disastrous consequenc­es,” Brown said in a statement. “Plastics, in all forms — straws, bottles, packaging, bags, etc. — are choking the planet.”

California’s law doesn’t go as far as those in cities, including San Francisco and Seattle, that ban straws outright.

Critics argue California’s straw law won’t significan­tly improve the environmen­t. Some say restrictin­g straws hurts disabled people who rely on them.

And some lawmakers who voted against the measure said it would unfairly punish restaurant­s, although the restaurant industry didn’t oppose the proposal.

The law doesn’t address the biggest causes of plastic ocean pollution, such as fishing nets, and doesn’t apply to some of the biggest users of plastic straws: fastfood restaurant­s, said Tod Hardin, director of operations and communicat­ions for the nonprofit Plastic Oceans Internatio­nal.

“That in some ways makes it a little bit weaker than we would have hoped for, but it’s a step toward changing behavior and raising awareness,” he said.

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