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ENVIRONMENT: Alesi wants to ban plastic bags

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San Francisco has banned the use of non-biodegradable plastic bags by large grocery stores and pharmacies. Could New York State be next?

State Senator Jim Alesi is drafting a law that would require businesses to phase out the bags.

What may be most curious about the New York proposal is that Alesi is the one making it. Some environmentalists have criticized his voting record. During the 2006 election season, Environmental Advocates of New York gave Alesi a score of 68 out of 100 on environmental issues, ranking him lower than all other area Republicans and Democrats.

Alesi says his inspiration for the proposal came from talks with environmentalists about the state bottle bill. The discussions often touched on bottles lying along the side of the road. But, he said last week, he has noticed the same things about plastic bags. The bags, he said, could be a far worse form of pollution.

"All you have to do is look around almost anywhere, in trees, bushes," Alesi said.

Alesi's proposal would require businesses to use 50 percent fewer plastic bags by 2010, and he'd like to see their use eliminated by 2012.

There would be no penalties for businesses not meeting the 2010 goal, but the state could pursue "cease and desists actions" for businesses not meeting the 2012 requirement. He'll work with industry groups to draft the bill, he said.

Under his proposal, biodegradable synthetic bags would be an option for businesses, Alesi said. Those are more expensive than traditional plastic bags, he conceded. But, he said, the bags would help reduce oil dependence. Traditional plastic bags are made using petroleum.

Wegmans has been offering customers a choice between plastic and paper for years. Plastic's the most popular by far, says spokesperson Jeanne Collelouri. Chainwide, Wegmans customers use 74 million plastic bags a week --- and 338,000 paper bags. Wegmans has bins at its stores for customers to return the bags. They're sent to a central location, along with other plastic cast-offs (shrink wrap from delivery pallets, for instance). There, they're made into plastic guardrails, plastic plywood, and more plastic bags.

But Wegmans is trying to encourage customers to use reusable bags ---large shopping bags made of a synthetic material --- which it recently began selling for 99 cents with a Shopper's Club Card.

Wegmans officials haven't seen Alesi's proposal, Collelouri said last week, and couldn't comment on it. "At this point, we're offering the customers the three different options and letting them decide how they want to do their shopping," Collelouri said.

In San Francisco, stores will be allowed to use paper bags as well as a new type of corn-based plastic bags, which break down easier. Collelouri says Wegmans is aware of their existence but hasn't used them.

A spokesperson for Environmental Advocates of New York declined comment on the Alesi bill until it's drafted.

Comments for "ENVIRONMENT: Alesi wants to ban plastic bags" (1)

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Frank J. Regan said on Apr. 04, 2007 at 2:31pm

I am in favor of State Senator Jim Alesi’s “proposal [that] would require businesses to use 50 percent fewer plastic bags by 2010”. But, I also think Wegmans has a good argument—customers reusing shopping sacks. Even better, reusing biodegradable sacks, where customers would bring back their bags each time they shop and reuse the same bag, would go far in eliminating the majority of debris surrounding our city. Plastic bags are an ever-present eyesore that gets blown into our trees, the ground, along our trails, on yards, on power lines, you-name-it.

But, the best solution, reusable shopping bags is gong to take a change of habit for American shoppers and that will probably take a major publicity campaign. Mostly, we want our cake and eat it too. We want to have our way of life and keep our environment friendly also, but sometimes you just have to change your habits in order to do that. I think the shopping bag argument, which environmentalists have been chewing over for years, is unsolvable if we want a product, even a biodegradable one that has to be produced in the billions and then thrown away. A reusable biodegradable shopping bag, is the best solution, though in t

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