![]() |
A shopper with groceries in plastic bags walks in New York's Upper East Side neighborhood on February 28, 2020, ahead of the statewide ban on plastic bags (AFP Photo/TIMOTHY A. CLARY) |
New York (AFP) - Consumerist mecca New York targets its throwaway culture this weekend with a ban on single-use plastic bags that has been years in the making and is still rare in America.
New Yorkers
like to see themselves at the forefront of efforts to save the environment but
are used to receiving groceries in free plastic bags, often doubled up to
ensure sturdiness.
On Sunday,
that will change when New York becomes only the third US state to outlaw the
non-biodegradable sacks blamed for choking rivers, littering neighborhoods and
suffocating wildlife.
Environmental
activists welcome the new law but caution that exemptions will weaken its
effect, while some small businesses worry the ban might negatively impact their
profits.
At the
Westside Market in Manhattan, 66-year-old Janice Vrana, who says she has been
shopping with a reusable cloth bag for a decade, is delighted
"pervasive" plastic sacks are being banished.
"You
could drive over them 500 times with a Mack Truck and they probably wouldn't
break down. Whatever little I can do, I do," she told AFP.
Janine
Franciosa, a 38-year-old who works in advertising, said it is great people are
becoming more aware of how their "everyday purchases are affecting the
environment."
But not
everyone is happy.
Westside
Market manager Ian Joskowitz, 52, told AFP some customers were
"upset" because they use free plastic bags as garbage bags.
Fines
![]() |
California
and Oregon have statewide bans of plastic bags while Hawaii has a de
facto ban.
Four other states have bans starting soon (AFP Photo/TIMOTHY A. CLARY)
|
Fines
New York
uses some 23 billion plastic bags every year, according to the state government.
About 85
percent are thrown away, ending up in landfills, and on streets and beaches, it
says.
After
several failed attempts, lawmakers finally approved the ban in April 2019.
It bars all
retailers who pay state taxes -- such as department stores, supermarkets,
neighborhood corner stores and gas stations -- from providing plastic bags to
customers.
Violators
can expect fines of up to $500, although officials have said they will give
stores time to adapt to the new rules.
The ban
will "protect our natural resources for future generations," said
Governor Andrew Cuomo when he announced the legislation last year.
The law
allows New York city and counties to levy a five-cent tax on paper bags, with
part of the resulting revenue going to an environmental protection fund.
Kate
Kurera, deputy director of Environmental Advocates of New York, says the ban
will cause "a tremendous reduction" in plastic waste pollution.
She
laments, however, that food takeouts, beloved by the city's 8.6 million
inhabitants, are exempt.
Other
exemptions include bags for prescription drugs, plastic wrapping for newspapers
delivered to subscribers, and bags used solely for non-prepackaged food such as
meat and fish.
Kurera
wishes the government would make the paper bag fee mandatory to force customers
to bring their own carriers, noting that producing paper bags is intensive in
terms of oil, fossil fuels and trees used.
![]() |
A shopper
with groceries in plastic bags walks in New York's Upper East Side
neighborhood
on February 28, 2020, ahead of the statewide ban on plastic bags
(AFP
Photo/TIMOTHY A. CLARY)
|
'Live
with it!'
"Ideally
neither bag is preferable," she told AFP. "Behavior is slower to
change when people know they can get a free paper bag."
Greg
Biryla, New York state director at the National Federation of Independent
Business, says alternatives can cost up to seven times more than plastic bags.
"They
are proportionally more burdensome on small businesses who aren't ordering in
as big a quantity as their big business counterparts," he told AFP.
California
and Oregon have statewide bans of plastic bags while Hawaii has a de facto ban.
Four other
states have bans starting soon while Texas has prevented its cities from
outlawing plastic bags.
New York is
viewed as one of the most innovative cities in the world, but on the issue of
plastic it has some catching up to do internationally.
Ubiquitous
across the Big Apple are single-use plastic utensils such as cutlery, straws
and stirrers, which European Union countries have voted to outlaw by next year.
New York's
older residents note that plastic bags only became available in US grocery
stores in 1979, signaling how quickly habits can change.
"When
I was growing up we brought our own bags," shopper Denise Shaleaon told
AFP, adding of the ban: "The New Yorker will have to live with it!"
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.