By
TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI.org News staff
The
ban would apply to plastic bags offered at point of sale, including take-out
food. The ban doesn't apply to produce and frozen-food bags, dry-cleaning bags,
newspaper sleeves or bags bigger than 28 by 36 inches. This year’s bill omits a
fee on paper checkout bags.
A
first-time violation would result in a written warning from local police or
other authority. A second violation would invoke a $150 fine and $300 for
subsequent violations.
Environment
Rhode Island was instrumental in helping pass a two-year bag ban in Barrington,
which began in 2013. About 100 communities in the United States have some form
of restrictions on plastic checkout bags.
Last
year, House and Senate versions of the bill died in committee. Supporters of
the ban say discarded plastic bags harm the environment, especially aquatic
habitats such as the Narragansett Bay watershed.
“Nothing
we use for five minutes should pollute (Narragansett) Bay for 500 years,” Jones
wrote in an e-mail.
Opponents
to the 2013 legislation included a restaurant owner, the Rhode Island Retail
Federation, American Progressive Bag Alliance and the Rhode Island Resource
Recovery Corporation, which manages the Central Landfill in Johnston.
The
latest bill heads to the House Committee on the Environment and Natural
Resources. No date has been announced for a hearing.