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Supes Could Approve a Countywide Plastic Bag Ban Model This Week

If approved, the ban would serve as a model for all other cities in San Mateo County - as well as some in Santa Clara County - to adopt their own city-wide bans.

Tuesday evening, San Mateo County will vote on whether to institute a model plastic bag ban. If it passes, 18 cities in San Mateo County and six more in Santa Clara County will have the opportunity to adopt the ban.

Vanessa Barrington, a public relations manager for Save the Bay, said the move is a monumental one. 

"This type of cross-county regional effort over such a large geographic area is unprecedented," she said. "With the Bay Area’s two largest cities, San Francisco and San Jose, having the strongest bans in the nation, this measure could be a huge boon for the Bay."

Barrington said the push is led by the San Mateo County Department of Environmental Health, and that the measure enjoys the support of The California Grocers Association and many area businesses, municipalities and environmental groups. 

Are plastic shopping bags polluting our bay?

According to members of Save the Bay, run-off pollution from local streets and neighborhoods - including plastic shopping bags, Styrofoam containers and other trash - is the single largest source of Bay pollution.

"Plastic bags and other trash kill wildlife, smother wetlands, and spoil water quality," reads a statement by Save the Bay sent out in advance of Tuesday night's vote. "Policies that encourage reusable shopping bags help clean up our communities and our Bay and save cities money."

In 2011, the City of San Jose passed a landmark ordinance that bans plastic bags and places a small charge on paper bags at all retailers, which went into effect in January of 2012. Other Santa Clara County cities, such as Sunnyvale, have since followed suit.

This year, San Francisco expanded its plastic bag ban to include all retailers - except restaurants, which will be subject to the ban soon - and to place a small charge on paper bags.

The City of South San Francisco adopted a "voluntary plastic bag ban" last year to encourage residents to use reusable bags more.

The average charge for a paper bag is 10 cents.

Currently, Save the Bay members say more than 50 percent of Bay Area residents live in communities that have banned plastic bags. Save The Bay works with cities and counties to enact policies such as bag bans and fees.

Supervisor Carole Groom told Patch she plans to support the model plastic bag ban Tuesday night.

"I'm really pleased by the way we brought industry groups and cities together to craft a regionally consistent set of regulations," Groom said. "We're well on our way toward eliminating a lot of litter from our environment."

 

PATCH WANTS TO KNOW - Do you support the ban of single-use plastic bags in San Mateo County cities? Tell us in the comments below.

 

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Bren May 19, 2013 at 06:49 pm
I see that I meant to type "...that connect us to the past," but I accidentally typedRead More "...and connect us to the past." I think my meaning came through, though. Yes, the world does not need another national chain retail store or restaurant, which is surely what they're planning to put in there.
CP May 19, 2013 at 02:22 pm
Yes Bren, agree with you....good point.....really what it seems to come down to is money vs. theRead More good of the community and richness of traditions. And all despite the Master Plan for that site in San Mateo that seems to require an ice skating rink or similar recreational facility AT THAT SITE, and all despite the fact the Ice Chalet would like to continue operations there. The Developer has made it difficult to impossible for any ice rink to operate there (tricky it seems)....so they can get a cookie cutter retail outlet in ? .....very, very sad for the youth of the community.
Bren May 17, 2013 at 10:09 am
I think the issue is much larger than whether children will experience stress. That ice rink is aRead More local institution, dating back at least to when Fashion Island was there. It's terrible for communities to lose so many landmarks and connect us to the past.
Anita Reimann April 29, 2013 at 11:43 am
Dear Ari, Thank you for your service to our community. It's wonderful that you are already making aRead More difference.