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New York Becomes America's Third State To Ban Plastic Bags (yahoo.com) 215

An anonymous reader quotes the Associated Press: Gov. Andrew Cuomo and fellow Democrats who control the Legislature have reached a deal to make New York the third state with a ban on single-use plastic grocery bags as they worked to finalize budget agreements, officials said Friday. The ban would prohibit grocery stores from providing plastic bags for most purchases, something California has been doing since a statewide ban was approved in 2016. Hawaii has an effective statewide ban, with all its counties imposing their own restrictions....

New York's ban wouldn't take effect until next March. The plan also calls for allowing local governments the option to impose a 5-cent fee on paper bags, with 3 cents going to the state's Environmental Protection Fund and 2 cents kept by local governments.

Meanwhile, Tennessee's state House and Senate have passed a different kind of bill -- one that bans local Tennessee governments from regulating plastic bags, according to local channel WMC.

One Memphis councilman had proposed allowing the use of plastic bags, but with a seven-cent tax to support clean water initiatives. "But that won't happen if the governor signs the bill to 'ban the bans.'"
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New York Becomes America's Third State To Ban Plastic Bags

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  • allowing local governments the option to impose a 5-cent fee on paper bags

    And there it is, politicians funding their little pork barrel projects.

    • allowing local governments the option to impose a 5-cent fee on paper bags

      And there it is, politicians funding their little pork barrel projects.

      That was my first thought as well. What a racket! Charge a fee for paper bags, then make using anything else illegal!

      Though, to be fair, it's not just local governments. The State government gets 60% of the take from the paper bags, the locals the remaining 40%....

      Glad I don't live there, since walking my dog uses up a lot of (soon to be illegal) plastic bags

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by dryeo ( 100693 )

        You might be forced to use proper biodegradable dog poop bags, which might run a couple of bucks a month, pretty horrible.

    • by Jahoda ( 2715225 ) on Saturday March 30, 2019 @01:38PM (#58357794)
      And there it is, politicians funding their little pork barrel projects.

      Or, you know, maybe it's just incentivizing behavior with some harmless service fees that also help serve to cover the negative externalities of paper and/or plastic bags.

      Nah. It's just more naked corruption from all those greedy politicians. Good thing there's smart guys like you who REALLY see the truth through the lies.
      • Then make it a deposit, not a fee. Like we have deposits for bottles and cans, which you can recoup in its entirety when you return the bottle/can for recycling.

        That's what tells you if this is a surcharge to modify people's behavior, or an attempt by greedy politicians to grab more of your money. Deposit = behavior modification. Fee = greed.
    • by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Saturday March 30, 2019 @01:47PM (#58357822)

      That's what the local Republicans said here, too, before we passed this at a city level. LOL

      We made it illegal to use disposable plastic bags, and legal to give out paper bags, but you're required to charge 5 cents.

      See, the money doesn't go to the city. The store keeps the 5 cents. The purpose of the 5 cents to prevent the store from giving it to you unless you wanted it. If the owner of the store hates hippies and doesn't care about the environment, they're still not allowed to give out disposable bags.

      The customer won't tolerate being charged for things they didn't want, but if they forgot their reusable bags at home and don't want to buy more, they can still get the paper bag for 5 cents; in which case, they don't care about the 5 cents! It works well at both ends.

      • ...but if they forgot their reusable bags at home

        Wait...you mean stores where you live expect you to own and bring your own bags to the store each time you shop with them?

        I've never heard of such a thing.

        WTF do you live?

        Wow..that's just weird.

        I mean, here they usually ask you paper or plastic, but I"ve never seen a store that assumed YOU would provide your own bags to bring your grocery or other purchases home with....

        • My local Shoprite has three self checkouts just for customers that bring their own bags (you can buy those reusable canvas bags right there on the spot too). You only mistakenly go to those lanes once...
        • Wait...you mean stores where you live expect you to own and bring your own bags to the store each time you shop with them?

          Yep, that's the California Hair-shirt environmentalist dogma nowadays. Go to the store, forget to bring your bags, get to the checkout... oh sorry no bags, you'll have to either carry in your arms or buy the reusable bags we have at a 1000% convenience markup.

          Or just drop the stuff right there and walk out, which is what I'd do. But they probably made that illegal too.

          • If I can shop at a walmart that sells guns to teenagers, how about if you man up an deal with the plastic bags. Sound fair, snowflake?
          • If you can't afford reusable bags, or paper bags for 5 cents, I'm gonna call bullshit on the claim that you were "shopping."

        • I can't tell if you're being sarcastic or if you've really never travelled more than 500 km from your place of residence.
          • I can't tell if you're being sarcastic or if you've really never travelled more than 500 km from your place of residence.

            There are whole huge states where the stores have handy disposable bags at the ready. Some of these states are even contiguous.

            It would indeed feel quite weird to suddenly encounter stores demanding that you bring your own bags.

            • There are whole huge states where the stores have handy disposable bags at the ready. Some of these states are even contiguous.

              It would indeed feel quite weird to suddenly encounter stores demanding that you bring your own bags.

              Nobody "demands" you bring your own bags, but if you want bags at the cashier, you have to purchase them, they are not free. Hence, people buy sturdy reusable bags and sacs and bring them with them when they shop, in order to avoid having to purchase new (often flimsy and easily breakable) bags each time. It's quite normal.

            • There is no "demand" to bring your own bags in the requirement to charge 5 cents per bag. It is merely that it forces customers to think about the bags, and when they think about the bags and make a choice, the obvious high quality choice for the consumer to own a bunch of reusable bags.

              Reusable bags improve the shopping experience. They're higher quality bags. You can trust the handles. You can trust the bottom. They cost between 50 cents and $2.50, with the standard plastic ones typically selling for 99 c

          • I can't tell if you're being sarcastic or if you've really never travelled more than 500 km from your place of residence.

            I"ve lived in several states here in the US, and have never encountered this type of thing, no.

            I"m guessing since you used "km" as a measure of distance, you are not in/from the US, so, it isn't really a matter for you to argue in the first place now is it?

        • It's similar in the UK. Wales and Scotland made the switch almost a decade ago, England followed a few years later. You can still buy a disposable plastic bag for 5p, but you don't get one for free. Plastic bag usage dropped 85% since that law was introduced [theguardian.com]. Here, most people take reuseable bags (not the low-quality ones that shops sell at the checkout, something a bit more sturdy). A lot of companies have realised that this is a good marketing opportunity and now hand out sturdy canvas bags at recrui
    • in my experience. Certainly not in my city. Around here taxes like this are meant to be regressive. In other words, they disproportionately impact the poor and working class so that the wealthy don't have to pay taxes for the services they use. It lets states cut income taxes for top earners without sacrificing services that either go to those earns or that are too popular/essential to cut.

      Lotteries, Sales Tax, flat Vehicle Taxes (and flat taxes in general, like alcohol tax) are all good examples of reg
  • by Kernel Kurtz ( 182424 ) on Saturday March 30, 2019 @12:18PM (#58357530)

    I use plastic bags I get from the stores for kitchen waste, for scooping the cat litter, occasionally to carry packed lunches, and various other things.

    So if stores stop giving them out, then I need to buy them instead. The folks who sell (admittedly better quality but also more expensive) bags are probably laughing all the way to the bank.

    • Someone was selling those stores plastic bags before. The total amount of plastic going into bags goes way down. Do you think that there are two unrelated plastic bag industries?

      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        The total amount of plastic going into bags goes way down.

        Goes way up you mean. All the Glad trash bag commercials brag about how thick and strong they are. And how you can carry bowling balls and other crap around in them. If all I need is something to contain dog poop, I'd rather not reach for the super heavy duty bags.

    • So if stores stop giving them out, then I need to buy them instead.

      Good. Then maybe you'll make an informed purchase and buy some bio-degradable bags or proper trash bags that don't break down into fine particles as soon as they see a sunny day unlike the shitty thin shopping bags that are given out at stores which are pretty much the worst for the environment.

      • So if stores stop giving them out, then I need to buy them instead.

        Good. Then maybe you'll make an informed purchase and buy some bio-degradable bags or proper trash bags that don't break down into fine particles as soon as they see a sunny day unlike the shitty thin shopping bags that are given out at stores which are pretty much the worst for the environment.

        I'll buy whatever is cheapest to do the job. Ebay direct from Shenzhen works for me.

        Maybe we will soon need bag police at the borders.........

        • I'll buy whatever is cheapest to do the job. Ebay direct from Shenzhen works for me.

          Maybe we will soon need bag police at the borders.........

          An excellent explanation why polluting products need to be taxed to become more expensive and therefore convey their full environmental cost, passing that cost (and information about it) on to consumers (who can then choose to buy something cheaper). The price mechanism at work.

          • Excessive taxation drives underground markets. So good luck with that.

            • Excessive taxation drives underground markets. So good luck with that.

              That is a retarded argument. You clearly haven't seen the cost difference between a biodegradable bag and a standard plastic bag. There is no underground market opportunity to derive profit on something worth next to nothing.

            • Excessive taxation drives underground markets. So good luck with that.

              For flimsy plastic bags? Lolz. It's not booze, or cigarettes. Also, charging 5-10 cents per bag is not "excessive", and even if it were, there are inexcessively priced substitutes.

              • You would obviously be surprised the things one can buy "under the table".

                • You would obviously be surprised the things one can buy "under the table".

                  Look, I come from (and lived in) a country where at one point "under the table" was the only way to buy pretty much anything at all. I am well-versed in how black markets work.

                  However, in advanced and rich Western societies (like the one I'm typing this from now), such things are marginal. Where I am right now booze and cigarettes are heavily taxed (booze is a government monopoly, 80 cents out of each dollar spent by the consumer on legal alcohol purchases goes to the government one way or another). Does a

                  • Well, speaking from Canada, I have bought black market booze in the past, but not recently. Still, I could get black market booze, cigarettes,and all sorts of drugs within 24 hours easily. Things like guns might take a few days and would entail more risk. Before we legalized MJ last fall it was trivial to find.

                    I'm not saying there will be neighborhood bag pushers - it will be more like I said, online from Shenzhen. I just put some non-DOT approved light bulbs in my car recently (the horror!) The mail s

        • I'll buy whatever is cheapest to do the job. Ebay direct from Shenzhen works for me.

          Indeed but that's because you're don't externalise your costs. There will always be some arsehole putting convenience and direct cost above everything else (equal case with littering in the street), but there are enough people who actually care about this and by providing them a choice the problem is reduced. There are also enough people who now being put in a position to make the choice will make the right one.

          Maybe we will soon need bag police at the borders.........

          We have those. They are called regulations. Enjoy your bags while you can. God knows those extra

    • I don't understand why t hey don't just replace plastic bags with biiodegradable ones?

  • by Quantum gravity ( 2576857 ) on Saturday March 30, 2019 @01:29PM (#58357762)
    Here are some counties that have banned plastic bags:
    • Kenya
    • Vanuatu (will phase out plastic)
    • Taiwan
    • France
    • many Australian states,
    • Morocco
    • Rwanda
    • New Zealand (will phase out plastic bags)
    • China (plastic bags since 2008, and plastic disposable items since 2015 in Jilin province
  • Have lived in Europe, where you have to pay something significant for a single use plastic bag, and I got used to it. I don't think the single-use bag bans are going to make a substantial difference for the environment (they tend to promote moral licensing, as people feel entitled to buy a bigger car if they feel good about recycling, etc). But seeing conservatives and liberals using environmental policy as a club to beat each other with, or feel all victim-chic put-upon by, is getting kind of tiresome.
  • I'm all for banning plastic bags where it makes sense.

    But to do this at the same time?

    The plan also calls for allowing local governments the option to impose a 5-cent fee on paper bags

    This is just stupid. Why would you do this? Ban one item and tax the other? STUPID!

    Should be more like 25 cent tax on using a plastic bag and no tax on the paper bag. That would achieve behavior change. But this plan? I'm not sure what it's trying to do, ban one item and discourage use of the alternative?

    • Around here, people pay 5 cents per container of soda - $0.30 per six-pack - and no one says anything about it. What will happen is that people will buy reusable bags in which to carry their groceries, or they'll just pay the 5 cents per bag. Maybe they'll mumble something about bringing a reusable bag next time - and then completely forget so they have to pay 5 cents again.
  • "The ban would prohibit grocery stores from providing plastic bags for most purchases, something California has been doing since a statewide ban was approved in 2016."

    ^ As a California resident, I know that's a lie. Plastic bags are available in just about every grocery store for 10 cents. Even at self-checkout usually.

    That said, the bags you pay 10 cents for can be re-used hundreds of times -- I've been using the same 10 cent bags for years. So perhaps in that sense single-use bags that disintegrate after

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