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When will it go into effect?

Grocery Bags

California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill banning plastic bags from grocery store check outs, including the thicker, “reusable” bags that stores switched to following a previous ban.

“We deserve a cleaner future for our communities, our children and our earth,” California Assembly member Rebecca Bauer-Kahan, one of the principal coauthors of the bill, said in a statement. “It’s time for us to get rid of these plastic bags and continue to move forward with a more pollution-free environment.

Single-use plastic bags have been banned in the state of California for nearly 10 years, but on Sunday, Newsom signed a bill that would make the ban stricter.

The previous bill “allowed stores to sell customers thicker plastic carryout bags that were considered reusable and met certain recyclability standards,” according to a statement published on Sen. Catherine Blakespear’s website. Blakespear introduced the new bill.

“However, the truth is almost none of those bags are reused or recycled, and they end up in landfills or polluting the environment.”

Before, grocery stores would offer patrons plastic or paper bags. Now, the new bill, SB 1053, will make it so that anyone who does not already have a reusable bag with them will be asked if they want a paper bag, instead of being given the choice between plastic or paper.

“This straightforward approach is easy to follow and will help dramatically reduce plastic bag pollution,” said Blakespear in a statement.

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When will the bill be enacted?

The bill goes into effect on January 1, 2026.

Grocery BagsGrocery Bags

Grocery Bags

Redefining ‘recycled paper bag’

The previous ban, SB 270, enacted July 1, 2015, made it so grocery stores, retail stores with a pharmacy, convenience stores, food marts and liquor stores could only use reusable plastic bags made with recycled content or recycled paper bags, according to CalRecycle.

However, the new bill will change the definition of a “recycled paper bag” and require all bags using that label to be at least 50% post-consumer recycled materials starting January 1, 2028.

Why did this bill get proposed?

According to the press release, the bags stores switched to after the previous ban were:

Difficult to recycle

Rarely recycled

Rarely reused

In 2004, Californians used 147,038 tons, or around 8 pounds of plastic per person, according to a different statement published on Blakespear’s website. By 2021, the number grew to 231,072 tons, roughly 11 pounds per person.

Do plastic bans reduce plastic waste?

In January, a study found that New Jersey tripled its plastic consumption despite the state’s 2022 plastic ban meant to address the “problem of plastic pollution,” according to USA TODAY’s previous reporting.

When consumers in New Jersey started searching for alternatives and purchasing plastic reusable bags, the state saw plastic consumption triple, largely because of the material used in the alternative bags, the the Freedonia Group found in its report.

“Most of these alternative bags are made with non-woven polypropylene, which is not widely recycled in the United States and does not typically contain any post-consumer recycled materials,” the report states.

Single-use plastic bans are a way to curb the pollution and emissions created by the production of the material, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

However, the search for alternatives to carry groceries and other products from the store leads to the purchase of products that increase the pollution caused by manufacturing reusable bags.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: California bans plastic grocery store bags: When it goes into effect

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Publish date : 2024-09-23 05:13:00

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