baltimoresun.com

« Bright idea: Southern MD school goes solar | Main | Series chronicles Bay's pioneering oyster farmers »

December 3, 2010

Plastic or paper? Soft start for B'more's new bag law

 

Baltimore's new "plastic bag reduction" ordinance finally kicked in this week, almost without a peep. But clearly not everyone's on board yet.

Since Tuesday, all merchants in the city have been barred from putting customers' purchases in plastic bags unless they first ask if the flimsy sacks are wanted.

Supermarkets, restaurants and other places that sell food also are required to provide recycling bins on premises for any plastic bags they do give out.  And as an alternative, they must offer to sell customers re-usable shopping bags.

As of Wednesday, 1,058 food dealers had registered online to keep using plastic bags under the conditions set by the new ordinance.  That's less than a third of the 3,500 establishments licensed by the city health department to sell food.

Still it's an improvement over the snafus that botched the law's original start three months ago. City officials didn't get the online registration system set up until shortly before the ordinance was to take effect on Sept. 1, and many merchants complained they hadn't been able to log in so they could legally keep giving out plastic bags.  Others said they simply didn't know anything about what they were supposed to do.   An embarrassed City Council was forced to delay the law's startup.

Since then, City Hall has set up registration and even posted online the signs merchants are supposed to download and post in their stores and eateries advising customers that plastic bags are available only on request.  And the response has been smoother, if still not entirely happy.

"We're up and running," says City Councilman James B. Kraft, one of the chief architects of the plastic bag law.  Kraft, who represents Southeast Baltimore, says it's taken effect mostly "under the radar" - without much fanfare or fuss.

It's a relatively calm start to a compromise ordinance hammered out after prolonged and fierce debate, with environmentalists pushing to ban plastic bags outright or discourage their use by imposing a nickel fee on each. 

But the city's supermarkets and other retailers mounted stiff resistance, and ultimately prevailed in getting City Council to let them continue using plastic bags as long as they ask first and offer to recycle them. 

"I've not had a negative contact about this in the last 30 days," Kraft says, though he has fielded some querulous calls from merchants who didn't understand their options under the law.

One of those was from an executive with P.F. Changs, the Asian restaurant chain, Kraft relates.  But the caller hung up relieved after learning the establishments are exempt from the law because they only uses paper bags for carryout or leftovers.

"If you just switch to paper bags, you don't have to do anything - you don't even have to register," acknowledges Beth Strommen, manager of the city's Office of Sustainability.

Indeed, businesses that switch to paper bags don't have to post signs, recycle, or file reports every six months with City Hall on bag usage, as do merchants still giving out plastic.

Though not required to, about 45 businesses have emailed or telephoned to report they're switching from plastic to paper merchandise bags, Strommen says.  But it's likely many more have opted for paper over plastic.

Melvin Thompson, legislative director with the Maryland Restaurant Association, says he believes most city eateries are switching to paper, if they haven't been using it already.

"We primarily use bags only for those rare occasions where people may want a doggie bag or for our customers who order carryout," Thompson says.  Restaurants typically don't use nearly as many bags as a supermarket or even a corner grocery.   Thus, even though paper bags tend to cost a little more than plastic bags, Thompson adds, "for restaurants, it's just easier to swithc to paper bags, and that's what most of them have done."

Jeffrie Zellmer, lobbyist with the Maryland Retailers Association who helped write the law, says he believes that the chains and large stores that sell food have all registered so they can keep using plastic bags.  Requiring them to recycle the bags is no big deal, he adds.

"We were doing it anyhow," he says.  Still, he adds, the new law may not be noticeable instantly at every checkout counter. "It'll take some time to phase in (training) with the checkers to ask if they want plastic."

Violaters can be fined $250 for a first offense and up to $1,000 for a third offense in six months.  But Strommen indicated city officials plan to ease into enforcement, to give merchants time to get used to the new requirements. 

City health inspectors will be checking on compliance with the plastic bag law during routine visits to food dealers, she said, and apparent violators will get a warning letter or postcard.  Businesses likely will get a similar warning if consumers call 311 to complain they're not obeing the law.

Kraft says he expects it'll take a while to get corner grocers and other small businesses to fall in line with the new law.

"We're dealing with this as something that's going to take time," acknowledges Strommen.  "We're going to have to figure out ways to continue outreach."  But rather than fining merchants, she adds, "what we want is for them to educate people that they don't need a bag all the time."

For Kraft, the real measure of the law's success will be if the reporting required of food dealers over the next two years shows a drop in plastic bag use.  He originally wanted to ban them as a way of cutting down on the number of errant flimsy sacks trashing Baltimore's harbors, streams and trees.

Even if many merchants switch to handing out paper bags, Kraft says he'd consider that a victory of sorts, because they're easy for residents and businesses to recycle.  The city's single-stream recycling program, however, can't handle the plastic bags, so merchants using them now need to make their own arrangements to recycle. 

Noting that merchants had pressed for a chance to show that a voluntary approach can reduce bag use and litter, Kraft says it's on them now to step up.

"If it works and results in a significant reduction, I think the program will continue," he says. "If it doesn't, we'll have to look at alternatives."

(AP file photos)

Posted by Tim Wheeler at 6:32 AM | | Comments (10)
        

Comments

Confused - I thought the single-stream rules had changed so that you COULD include plastic bags. Is that right?

Personally I re-use them as my garbage bags.

TW: Plastic grocery bags are no longer acceptable to recycle under the city's single-stream collection. They apparently jam up the machinery that sorts recyclables. The city recommends recycling them at local grocery stores.

Here's the list of recycling do's and don't's for city residents: http://www.baltimorecity.gov/Government/AgenciesDepartments/PublicWorks/SingleStreamRecycling/AcceptableUnacceptableRecyclableMaterial.aspx

I wonder if the idiots at city hall realize that paper bags cost more than twice as much as plastic ones. Do they think these buisinesses are going to eat that cost or pass it on to the consumer? City hall has just made it more expensive to buy groceries in the city. People who can get to the county will shop in the county, and they will get plastic bags and return to the city. A more effective method of getting rid of the litter is to actually fine people for littering. If I am not mistaken it is a $50 citation.

Rexx says "People who can get to the county will shop in the county"

That is nonsense! Thats what they said about the bottle tax. Well guess what? They were wrong.

What? Really? The bottle tax is a failure?

Well, nevermind!

@Rexx:

If you had read the article, you might have seen the part that says that businesses can continue to use the plastic bags. They just have to offer recycling and ask each customer if they need a bag.

The whole point is to reduce bag use. Fining people for littering doesn't work unless you have people all over the place waiting to create the citation. Who's going to pay the salaries of the Littering Police?

This is a decent compromise, and I hope it works. I'm sick of cleaning up plastic bags from trees and the ground, as I'm sure many city residents are.

Why is it any of the government's (or anyone else's) business what I carry my groceries in or what kind of bag the store gives me?

what difference does it make when over half the city eats fast food anyway?

TW: The ordinance applies to fast-food places, too.

Just because they give you plastic bags for "free" at the grocery store doesn't make them free. How do you think they pay for those plastic bags in the first place? By marking up the cost of the rest of the items in the store.

And Heather, do you really think it's realistic for the city to enforce every single act of littering? The Baltimore police have a lot worse things to worry about, curbing people's access to these unnecessary items (buy reusable) is a step in t he right direction. Go to Europe where they charge for plastic bags, and you'll see a lot less of them on the street.

"Why is it any of the government's (or anyone else's) business what I carry my groceries in or what kind of bag the store gives me?"

Because the government is the one that has to clean up the trash from the streets, forests, beaches and rivers.

I love how conservatives want less government intervention in their lives, but then turn around and expect the government to clean up their mess.

This isn't fair for business owners who pay for traders licenses, to go to these wholesalers like b greens and jetro for them to charge high prices for these paper bags... I wonder... are liquor stores, bars with kitchens included in this law????

In the UK in many supermarkets people are encouraged to bring in their own bags by receiving extra points on their customer card.

Post a comment

All comments must be approved by the blog author. Please do not resubmit comments if they do not immediately appear. You are not required to use your full name when posting, but you should use a real e-mail address. Comments may be republished in print, but we will not publish your e-mail address. Our full Terms of Service are available here.

Verification (needed to reduce spam):

About the bloggers
Tim WheelerTim Wheeler reports on the environment and Chesapeake Bay. A native of West Virginia, he has focused mainly on Maryland's environment since moving here in 1983. Along the way, he's crewed aboard a skipjack in the bay, canoed under city streets up the Jones Fall from the Inner Harbor, and gone deep underground in a western Maryland coal mine. He loves seafood, rambles in the country and good stories. He hopes to share some here.

Contributor Christy Zuccarini has been blogging about the local DIY craft scene for a year for Baltimoresun.com. She brings her pespective on all things handmade to B'More Green, where she will highlight projects you can do yourself as well as crafters who are integrating sustainable methods and materials.
-- ADVERTISEMENT --

Most Recent Comments
Baltimore Sun coverage
  • Sign up for the At Home newsletter
The home and garden newsletter includes design tips and trends, gardening coverage, ideas for DIY projects and more.
See a sample | Sign up

Charm City Current
Stay connected