OLYMPIA – Washington’s ban on single-use plastic bags goes into effect Friday, Oct. 1. The law forbids food service businesses, restaurants, retail, small and temporary vendors, and grocery stores from providing single-use plastic carryout bags to customers.
Customers are encouraged to bring their own reusable bags, but may purchase a compliant paper or reusable bag from the merchant. The law requires merchants to charge at least 8 cents per bag to help them recover the costs of the more durable – and reusable – compliant bags and as incentive for customers to bring their own bags.
The 8-cent-charge is not a tax. It is a sale kept entirely by the merchant.
Food banks and pantries are not required to charge their customers for compliant bags. Individuals receiving food stamps, WIC (Women, Infants, Children), SNAP (Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program), or other government food assistance programs are not subject to the 8-cent charge.
Single-use plastic exemptions:
Some types of single-use plastic bags are exempt from the law, including film plastics used to wrap meats and produce, small film bags for prescriptions, newspaper and dry-cleaning bags, and packaged bags sold in stores like trash bags, pet waste bags, and sandwich bags. Customers who receive these bags should dispose of them properly in the garbage or at recycling collection drop off locations handling this material: https://www.plasticfilmrecycling.org/recycling-bags-and-wraps/find-drop-off-location/.
BYOB – bring your own bag:
Investing in reusable bags to carry out groceries and food from restaurants helps reduce waste and the degradation of our environment, but it is important to keep reusable bags clean and in good condition.
“The businesses this law affects are required to allow customers to use their own bags,” said Laurie Davies, Ecology’s Solid Waste Management Program Manager. “If a merchant doesn’t want its employees handling customers’ reusable bags, it can implement a policy requiring them to bag their own purchases when customers bring their own.”
Public can report violations:
Enforcement of the ban relies on the public to report observations of non-compliance. Beginning Oct. 1, anyone may submit an observation by using the online reporting form on Ecology’s Bag Ban website: https://ecology.wa.gov/Waste-Toxics/Reducing-recycling-waste/Waste-reduction-programs/Plastics/Plastic-bag-ban. Ecology will use the information provided by the public to contact businesses, determine their level of non-compliance, and ensure understanding of the new law. Initial outreach will focus on education. Repeated non-compliance may result in penalties.
Outreach toolkits available in 17 languages:
Ecology developed an outreach toolkit in 17 languages to help inform merchants, their staff, and customers about the new law. The public is encouraged share the toolkit widely. It includes flyers, bring-your-own-bag and point-of-sale signs, and web graphics, and is downloadable in PDF and InDesign formats.
The problem with plastic bags:
Plastic bags are a source of pollution that threatens human health, wildlife, and the environment. They are also a major contaminant in Washington’s recycling system that clog sorting machines and put worker safety at risk. Reducing their use will protect the state’s rivers and streams, help its recycling system run more efficiently, and contribute to a growing culture of waste reduction and reuse.
Visit ecology.wa.gov/bag-ban for more information, tools and resources, and a complete listing of compliance requirements for Washington’s statewide ban on single-use plastic bags.
– Dept. of Ecology
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By Morf Morford
Tacoma Daily Index
Welcome back to reusable bags
Way back in 2019, diligent shoppers carried their reusable bags into grocery stores and stores were just beginning to charge a fee for paper or plastic bags.
And then a pandemic arrived with unspecified means of transmission and reusable bags were discouraged or even prohibited.
I don’t know about anyone else, but I certainly noticed more plastic bags where they shouldn’t be – like stuck in bushes or blowing across the street.
Reusable bags are a nuisance to use, keep clean and remember, but I’ll take them over plastic bags in our trees or in Commencement Bay any day.
It will take some getting used to, but I’ve seen too many plastic bags clogging drains or choking animals.
Other states or even entire nations have had single-use plastic bag bans for some time now.
It will be difficult, but somehow our grandparents, and every other previous generation of human beings did just fine without single-use plastic bags, so I think that we just might survive.
And future generations just might be glad we finally came up with a way to eliminate, or at least reduce, the sight of single-use plastic bags blowing in the breeze and hanging in our trees.