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County Seeks to Limit Single-Use Plastics At Its Own Facilities

Published on Wednesday, May 5, 2021 | 10:29 am
 

On the heels of the Pasadena City Council giving customers a choice in opting out of receiving paper napkins, plastic knives, spoons, and forks when they order take-out or delivery food from local restaurants, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday voted to ban single-use plastics at county facilities.

Supervisors Sheila Kuehl and Hilda Solis co-authored a motion to have a number of county departments collaborate on a board policy to eliminate single-use plastics in county workplaces and buildings to the extent feasible.

“This problem has grown during the COVID-19 pandemic, as restaurant and grocery deliveries have increased exponentially and the use of reusable beverage containers and grocery bags was discouraged or disallowed early on,” the motion states.

The supervisors envision the county switching to reusable foodware or compostable or highly recyclable alternatives.

The change would also make it easier to compost and reduce the
county’s organic landfill waste in order to comply with Senate Bill 1383, which calls for a 50% reduction by 2020 and 75% by 2025. The state put California counties front and center in managing toward meeting those goals.

In October 2019, Kuehl and Supervisor Janice Hahn championed a more ambitious plan. On their recommendation, the county asked researchers at UCLA’s Luskin Center to provide a report on managing waste and set a goal of
developing an ordinance by March 2020 to reduce single-use plastics throughout unincorporated areas of the county.

The UCLA researchers found that plastic food service ware is rarely collected for recycling — primarily due to size, potential food contamination and undesirable materials — bolstering the argument to cut down on use.

Then COVID-19 struck and the ordinance was never brought up for review.

Now Kuehl and Solis say it’s not the time to impose new rules on restaurants, even though researchers think the transition to reusable or sustainable materials would be cost neutral or slightly cheaper in the long run.

“The county believes this transition should be done in partnership with restaurants when they have the capacity to fully participate in conversations about these policies and determine how to implement any required changes,” the motion reads.

The proposal was unanimously passed without discussion by the board, although at least one member of the public called on the supervisors to do more.

“Please, it doesn’t go far enough,” said Lynne Plambeck, president of the Santa Clarita Organization for Planning and the Environment. “Plastic is just filling everything up. It’s filling up our river(s). It’s filling up our landfills.”

Plambeck urged the board to consider adopting an ordinance similar to one recently approved by the Los Angeles City Council, and to also bring back the plastic bag ban, another casualty of the pandemic.

In April, The Pasadena City Council unanimously voted to have the City Attorney prepare an ordinance that would give customers the chance to opt out of receiving paper napkins, plastic knives, spoons, and forks when they order take-out or delivery food from at local restaurants.

“It puts the power in the consumer’s hands,” said Vice Mayor Andy Wilson when the item came before the council.

The item garnered unanimous support when it was being considered by the council’s Municipal Service Committee. The city of Alhambra passed a similar ordinance in March.

A report from the International Waste Association estimated that the amount of wasted single-use food ware and accessory items increased about 250% to 300% during the COVID-19 pandemic, as more people pick up food and dine at home.

The Pasadena ordinance is similar to a straws-on-request law that went into effect on April 22, 2019. The county and state earlier enacted similar laws banning restaurants from automatically giving customers plastic straws.

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