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HOME: DECEMBER 28, 2007: NEWS
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Should Austin Sack Plastic Bags?

BY DANIEL MOTTOLA



Whole Foods customers Chris and Kate Schmidt stand outside holding their new 80%-post-consumer-recycled better bag reusable grocery sack. Whole Foods gave away 1,000 reusable better bags to help kick off a new citywide campaign to reduce plastic-bag use.
Photo by Daniel Mottola

Trying to get out of a store these days without a plastic bag is like trying to leave Grand­ma's house as a kid without getting a kiss. It's nearly impossible, and you often receive more than one without giving your consent. But lots of locals are working to change that, motivated by the blight plastic bags cause as litter, their tendency to cause floods by clogging sewers and to scourge wildlife, not to mention their petroleum composition and the fact that they take a millennium to decompose. First came the local Bag the Bags Coali­tion push for a City Council-enacted ban on plastic bags at large grocery stores and pharmacies. Then last week, Austin-based Whole Foods Market made headlines by announcing the elimination of plastic bags at its two metro stores as part of a new educational outreach campaign – led by local nonprofit Keep Aus­tin Beautiful in association with the city's Solid Waste Services Depart­ment and the Texas Retailers Association – intended to popularize reusable bags and raise awareness about plastic-bag recycling.

For the time being, an Austin plastic-bag ban seems to be off the table. Solid Waste Services staffer Melissa Martinez said the aforementioned stakeholder groups have agreed to compile baseline data detailing how many bags are used and recycled locally. With data in hand, they'll give the public outreach campaign one year and then evaluate its results. City Council Member Lee Leffing­well, who co-sponsored an April resolution calling for ways to limit plastic bags used locally, said he'd like to see a 50% reduction in plastic-bag use or "significant and measurable progress."

Nationwide, plastic-bag recycling rates are estimated to be as low as 0.6%, with as many as 100 billion bags ending up in landfills each year. Making the bags consumes about 430 million barrels of oil annually, and littered bags are blamed for the death of more than a million birds and 100,000 mammals and turtles each year. Based on estimates by the city of San Francisco – which officially banned plastic bags last month – each bag represents a 17-cent local expense for cleanup, disposal, and lost recycling revenue.

Leffingwell commended Whole Foods' announcement, saying, "We don't always need a new ordinance or a new bureaucracy to achieve a critical environmental goal." He said their decision should "encourage all merchants in Austin to take dramatic steps to reduce plastic-bag use." As part of Whole Foods' effort, the company will double a 5-cent rebate already given to customers who bring their own bags and allow patrons to donate that sum (which they'll match) to Keep Austin Beautiful. Whole Foods now also offers 99-cent reusable "better bags" made from 80% post-consumer recycled bottles and brown paper sacks made from 100% recycled content.

Rick Cofer heads up the Bag the Bags Coalition, the main advocates of a local plastic-bag ban. He stressed the importance of measurable standards for reducing bag use and said, "It's my expectation that we probably won't see the type of results most people desire with a voluntary program," at which point a ban will be more of an option.

"Bans never make sense," said Donna Dempsey, managing director of the Progres­sive Bag Alliance, which represents bag manufacturers. The alternative they force – the use of more paper bags, which she says require more energy and water to produce – outweighs a ban's eco-benefits. She said the alliance supports the mandatory recycling efforts proposed in New York City, where stores more than 5,000 square feet in size must offer plastic-bag recycling, in addition to training workers not to use excessive bags, ensuring reusable bags are displayed at checkouts, and raising awareness about recycling at stores.

According to a September study for the Cap­ital Area Council of Governments, most plastic bags recycled in Texas are actually down-cycled – combined with sawdust and transformed into Trex, a decking product. The report also recommended a local recycling ordinance similar to New York's and said cities should consider including plastic bags in curbside and drop-off recycling programs. The city of Austin doesn't recycle plastic bags.

Keep Austin Beautiful Executive Director Brian Block said, "One of the goals of our program is to create a cultural shift in Austin toward much more widespread use of reusable bags." As for recycling, Leffingwell said, "We're putting the ball in the retailer's court." You can drop off stockpiles of plastic grocery and newspaper bags, as well as dry-cleaning bags and shrink wrap, in receptacles in front of local Whole Foods, HEB, Wal-Mart, and Randalls stores. For more info, see www.bagthebags.com, www.keepaustinbeautiful.org, and/or www.progressivebagalliance.com.


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COMMENTS
12
 
Getting rid of plastic bags? guest Dec 27, 2007 - 01:35 pm
On the surface, I think reducing and eliminating the use of plastic bags is a great idea. I'm even going to Whole Foods to buy their reusable bags for my HEB trips, which as far as I know won't result in a refund. I do, however, wonder where my supply of bags for cat-litter scooping and dog poo picking up will come from. Will I have to resort to purchasing plastic bags for these activities? That doesn't seem to eliminate plastic waste in landfills. So I wonder if anyone advocating for this movement has ideas along those lines.


plastic bag stateegery poo bag hoarder Dec 27, 2007 - 02:19 pm
Do what I do, go to an Austin city park and grab a big handful of the courtesy poo bags near the gate entrance.

Supposedly, they're biodegradable and once more, they're free.

Yes, free poo bags! Your tax money is going to something useful for once.

For groceries, I think the best thing is a backpack. I ride my bike a lot so I always have one on, but what's funny is that whenever I go into a conveinience store, I am almost always offered a plastic bag... hello? what do ya this backpack thingy is for?

The only solution I have for the cat-litter scooping, is to get rid of your cat. The easiest way to do this is to feed the cat to your dog..

then you can use the free doggie-poo bags to pick up the mess.

Hope this helps.



guest Dec 27, 2007 - 02:46 pm
Poo poo bag hoarder, you are a moron. While your idea of using the park bags is creditable, your use of proper, grammar, punctuation, and spelling is atrocious. You also show sincere lack of mental ability and/or a sick sense of humor. Do us a favor and put a plastic bag over your head and take several long, deep breaths. Good boy.


Some more strateegery for you bag 'o poo Dec 27, 2007 - 04:27 pm
ahh.. the poor grammar nazi got her feeweengs hurt.

I didn't know it was necessary to use a comma between the word "proper" and "grammar" either.

Sick sense of humor? Perhaps. I think you're just offended because you own a filthy feline. Silly thin-skinned cat owners are all the same, whiney and pathetic.

I just hope you're not one of these weirdos that owns 3 or more cats. If that's the case, there's no need for a plastic baggie over the head, because you're already dead and in hell, you just don't know it yet.



from one guest to another guest Dec 27, 2007 - 05:11 pm
You, lady, are a douchenozzle.


PeeWee's secret word of the day le douche Dec 27, 2007 - 05:33 pm
Douchenozzle has such a pleasant ring to it. I'm afraid to say that I'm going to have to steal that word and make it my own.


Options to the dreaded plastic bag austinite Dec 28, 2007 - 10:23 am
I implored Whole foods to get rid of plastic bags 15 years ago. This was back when they weren't being recycled but customers thought they were (the staff knew me and filled me in). Anyway - too little too late if you ask me. I found some pretty cool reusable mesh shopping bags that scrunch up into their own little pocket and fit great in a purse - I can fit two and they hold up to 25 lbs. I got them online reusablebags or something like that.



BioBags guest Dec 29, 2007 - 12:14 pm
You can buy biodegradable bags made of cornstarch, vegetable oil and other renewable resources. BioBags makes lawn and leaf, kitchen compost, and poop-size bags! They decompose in about 30 days. Wonder why Whole Foods and other stores don't use these or a similar biodegradable bag?


Should Austin Sack Plastic Bags? K Dec 30, 2007 - 12:54 pm
No, Austin should not.Unless they make Paper/"green" bags that are environment friendly and just as (or more) handy current plastic bags (handles, various sizes, durability).


We re-use ours bags guest Dec 31, 2007 - 04:28 pm
We re-use our HEB plastic bags as garbage bags. We never have to purchase plastic garbage bags. If we had to use paper bags, then we would throw the paper away AND the plastic bags. It would cause us to litter twice as much.


OMGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG! HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII¬ May 19, 2008 - 06:11 am
BUD LIGHT!

REAL MEN OF GENIUS!



MY SONG TO YOU, MY FANS!!! guest May 19, 2008 - 06:13 am
DO YOU LOVE MEE? DO YA LOVE ME?

DO YA LOVE ME DO YA LOVE?

NOW THAT I LOVE PASTIC BAGS.

HEY HEY, OH WORKING BABY!

HEY HEY, YEAH HE PLASTIC BAGS ARE DRIVING ME CRAZY!





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Bag the Bags Coali­tion
Whole Foods Market
Keep Aus­tin Beautiful
Texas Retailers Association
Melissa Martinez
Lee Leffing­well
Rick Cofer
Donna Dempsey
Progres­sive Bag Alliance

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