Oregon Senate votes to ban single-use plastic bags

By June 12, 2019Blog Posts

The nation’s largest grocery chain, Kroger, will phase out the use of plastic bags in its stores by 2025. (AP
Photo/Rogelio V. Solis, File)

SALEM — The Oregon Senate voted Tuesday to prohibit single-use plastic shopping bags, joining a growing movement to reduce plastic pollution in oceans.  The Senate voted 17-12 to keep grocery stores and restaurants from providing such bags.
Stores would still be able to offer recyclable plastic and paper bags for a 5-cent fee, something opponents said punished consumers.
The bill will now go to Gov. Kate Brown for consideration. She previously spoke in support of the measure. If signed, the law will go into effect Jan. 1. Oregon would join California, New York and Hawaii in banning single-use plastic bags.  “Something we use once shouldn’t be able to pollute our environment for hundreds of years,” said Sen. Michael Dembrow, a Portland Democrat behind the measure.
The city of Bend passed its own plastic bag ban in December. That ban begins July 1.  6/12/2019 Oregon Senate votes to ban single-use plastic bags; Gov. Kate Brown has expressed support for bill https://www.bendbulletin.com/localstate/7224895-151/oregon-senate-votes-to-ban-single-use-plastic-bags 2/2 Democrats were stopped short of pushing through their full environmental agenda when the Senate rejected a ban on food containers made of polystyrene, also known as
Styrofoam.
Republicans were against both measures and argued that the bans stifled technological innovation. They also said lawmakers should let the free market come up with solutions to the plastic problem. Supporters said the bans were meant to reduce the ever- increasing amount of plastic pollution in the oceans.  Sen. Arnie Roblan and Sen. Betsy Johnson, two Democrats representing coastal areas, voted for the plastic bag ban and joined Republicans in rejecting the prohibition on Styrofoam containers.  Plastic bags and Styrofoam containers are some of the most common types of beach litter. Over 8 million metric tons of plastic enter the ocean each year, and the World Economic Forum projects that there will be more plastic than fish in the ocean by 2050.  Plastics can take hundreds of years to break down, and even then they break into smaller pieces of debris called microplastics, which never degrade and can pose a threat to aquatic life. The U.S. produced over 126 billion plastic grocery bags in 2015, according to EPA data.  Only 12.8% of those bags were recycled. Styrofoam food containers, meanwhile, are nearly impossible to recycle, and only one recycling facility in the state of Oregon accepts them. Maine and Maryland approved
statewide bans on the containers last month. The bills were part of a trio of measures aimed at reducing reliance on disposable
plastics, the third being a plastic straw ban that gained legislative approval in late May.