The Los Angeles City Council voted Tuesday to ban plastic
grocery bags by 2010, unless the state imposes a 25-cent fee on the customers
who request them.
Council members said they hoped the ban would urge consumers
to begin carrying canvas or reusable bags with them, so that the amount of
plastic that pollutes the world’s oceans is reduced.
According to Los Angeles Times, Councilman Bill Rosendahl,
who represents such coastal neighborhoods as Venice and Playa del Rey, considered
the voting an important moment for the city, as the decision “to bite the
bullet and go with something that is more ecologically sensitive than what
we've ever done before,” was very brave.
In Seattle, the utilities committee also voted to ban foam
food containers, but decided to delay the ban until 2010.
The bag fee in the city will mean that all convenience,
grocery or drugstores must require 20 cents for each paper or plastic bag used.
The stores would keep 5 cents from each bag co cover costs associated with
administering the fee, while small stores that gain less than $1 million a year
will keep the entire fee.
The city will use $1.5 million of the estimated $10 million in
annual bag-fee revenue to provide each household with at least one reusable
bag.
Opponents of the decision warned that the new policy would
have a devastating effect on the region’s packaging companies.
Los Angeles City officials estimate that Los Angeles
consumers use 2.3 billion plastic bags each year, and, according to the city's
Bureau of Sanitation, an estimated 5% of plastic bags are recycled across the
state.
The ban was proposed by Councilman Ed Reyes, who called
plastic bags “the graffiti of the L.A. River,” the Times reported.
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