Saturday, January 31, 2009

Court stops Manhattan Beach, Calif., from implementing bag ban

Good day Bloggers!

I have to stand up and sound off on this recent development! News articles like this are alarming and are of great concern to Bag The Planet!

For environmentally concerned consumers here in the South Bay the battle is not over yet, and the article below just shows us how strong the Plastics Industry is in our country, and the level of commitment they have to continue to profit by polluting our oceans and landfills with plastic products that do not degrade for 400 years on average. They continue to contribute to the average shopper consuming over 600 hundred of these deadly bags per year approximately, many of them winding up in the Great Eastern Garbage Patch (The swirling vortex of plastic in the Pacific Ocean). Until consumers stop being contributors to the problem by opting to request the non-biodegradable plastic bags; because it is either just convenient or they have not adopted to make a difference by using reusable bags as a part of their green lifestyle. Using reusable bags from Bag The Planet.com, and companies like ours, will send a message just based on supply and demand, will build awareness and brand identity in the community, this community, your community! They know they are losing the battle and are just refusing to not go down without a fight... However, with the support of the food chains, food manufacturers, and the public to support reusable bags, and promote products that meet or exceed the requirements for being environmentally friendly we can begin to effect change and shift the paradigm toward green consciousness, and help California finally become the model for environmental commitment in action! Reuse it or lose it! Save the world, Bag The Planet!

Michael Von Hulsebus
BTP- NEWS

See article below... by Mike Verespej, staffer with Plastic News

"A California court has granted a preliminary injunction to prevent Manhattan Beach, Calif., from implementing its ban on plastic carryout bags that was scheduled to go into effect Feb. 14.

But the pressure to ban or tax plastic bags continues elsewhere. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, in his executive budget released Jan. 30, officially proposed a 5 cent tax on plastic grocery bags that he said would add $84 billion to the state coffers on an annual basis. In addition, a number of California cities, and the state of California are considering bag taxes that range from 5 cents to 25 cents. Virginia and Michigan have proposals to ban plastic carry-out bags.

“The Mayor’s proposal to add more costs to the grocery bills of New York’s working families could not come at a worse time [and] would not help the environment,” said Sharon Kneiss, vice president of the products divisions for the American Chemistry Council in Arlington, Va. New York City has had a mandatory large-store plastic bags recycling program since last July, creating a stream of materials that can be made into plastic decking products.

Manhattan Beach would have been the third California city, along with San Francisco and Malibu, to ban plastic bags.

The Superior Court of California in the County of Los Angeles granted the request by the Save The Plastic Bag Coalition, which had argued that the city did not conduct an environmental impact review as required by the California Environmental Quality Act.

Meanwhile, the city of Santa Monica, Calif., has delayed action on a ban proposal. Save The Bag Coalition’s lawyer, Stephen Joseph, sent a letter to Santa Monica officials saying the group would file a lawsuit if the ordinance was enacted without an environmental impact review.

Joseph sent a similar letters on Jan. 26 to city councils in the California towns of Morgan Hill and Mountain View, which also are considering plastic bag bans.

Last year Joseph succeeded in getting the city of Fairfax, Calif., to make its ban temporary. However Fairfax voters in November re-approved a ban, which now is scheduled to go into effect in June."

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