Support
Grows for R.I. Plastic Bag Ban
By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI.org News staff
PROVIDENCE — Efforts to pass a statewide ban on plastic check-out bags recently intensified, as support swells for the proposed legislation.
At a
March 20 Statehouse hearing, a range of supporters, from high-school students
to veteran environmentalists, pressed a sympathetic House committee to curtail
the use of an everyday item they say fouls neighborhoods and threatens natural
places, most notably Narragansett Bay.
“There is a change coming,” University of Rhode Island
senior Margaret Martino said. "We can be the first to make that change and
have the Ocean State be the first state to ban plastic bags statewide.”
So far, more than 100 municipalities across the county,
including all of Los Angeles County, have placed restrictions on plastic bags.
Hawaii, also has a bag ban, but it was enacted island by island rather than
statewide.
Last year, a similar bill calling
for a statewide ban died in committee. The latest version would ban all
check-out plastic shopping bags but would exclude so-called "barrier
bags," such as in-store bags used for produce and meat. Dry cleaning bags
and traditional garbage bags also would be excluded. Stores would be allowed to
charge for paper bags.
Fines
would range from a written notice to $300 for a third offense. Enforcement
would be decided by each city and town. Last year's bill tasked the state
Department of Environmental Management (DEM) with enforcement.
Rep. Maria Cimini, D-Providence, the lead sponsor on the
bill, received applause after her testimony. She said reducing plastic bags
would help tourism and wildlife, and inspire local companies to make reusable
bags.
“I think we've given plastic bags their due for a couple
of decades of work," Cimini said. "We've seen that they are not ideal
for the environment.”
She said she spoke with many municipal leaders who
support a ban but would prefer that the mandate be enacted at the state level.
The bill
clearly had support from the House Committee on the Environment and Natural
Resources, including Chairman Arthur Handy, D-Providence. Opposition was less
vocal than in 2013, but lobbyists from the Rhode
Island Hospitality Association and
the American
Progressive Bag Alliance spoke
against the bill. The Rhode Island Food Dealers Association and Rhode Island Retail
Federation, which represents Walmart and other national chains,
submitted written testimony in opposition to the bill.
Terrance Martiesian of the Rhode Island Hospitality
Association said seniors and diners want plastic bags for takeout food.
“Plastic is strong, durable, it doesn't break," he said.
The longevity of plastic was a matter of concern.
“Plastic never biodegrades. It does break apart into tiny
pieces over time” said Channing Jones of Environment Rhode Island, the
principal advocacy group behind the Barrington bag ban and the call for a
statewide ban.
Jones and his group submitted more than 10,000 signatures
from Rhode Islanders, including 150 business owners, in favor of the ban.
During his testimony, Jones described how tiny pieces of plastic bags absorb toxins
when they are suspended in waterways such as Narragansett Bay. The toxic
plastic is then ingested by marine life.
Chris Clarendon, owner of Seapowet Shellfish in Tiverton,
said plastic in the Sakonnet River is a health risk. “Plastic
micro-particles are very bad for my oysters,” he said.
Support
also came from the Environment Council of Rhode Island, Progressive Democrats
of Rhode Island, the Rhode Island Chapter of the Sierra Club and Clean Water
Action. The legislation also drew support from groups absent from last year's
campaign, such as the Audubon Society of Rhode Island and Save The Bay.
Barrington
Town Council Vice President Kate Weymouth and Cynthia Fuller, head of the
town's Conservation Commission, said the state's first bag ban has been a
success. “In 15 months, I have yet to receive a complaint,” Weymouth said.
Two high-school students from the East Bay MET School in
Newport also spoke in favor of the legislation. “Oceans of mass plastic and
waste are slowly being created,” Carly Mello said. “It's happening for our own
selfish benefit.”
High-school teacher Trish Garland compared plastic bags
to the ban on indoor smoking. “Fifteen years from now people will be amazed
that when we went to the store to buy a plastic jug of laundry detergent, that
it was placed in a plastic bag so that we could carry it 50 feet to our car.”
The bill was held for further study. A hearing has yet to
be held for the Senate bill (S2314).