Bag It Again News and Comment

Some news stories from around the world about the environment and sustainable living.
Tags >> reusable bags

Here's a video from Capitol News Service.  The report tells us that Florida could be the first state in the nation with a plastic shopping bag ban.  Their Department of Environmental Protection has developed a five year plan that would either ban the bags or charge a fee for their use.

Good segment about the free market influence; a local food coop removed plastic bags as an option in order to raise awareness.


Got Your Bags?

Posted by: johnny_a in MyBlog

Press Release

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 29 /PRNewswire/ -- Today non-profit, government and business groups joined together to kick off the "Got Your Bags?" campaign - a public education and outreach effort aimed at encouraging Californians to use reusable bags for shopping and bring plastic bags back to the store for recycling.


CVS pharmacy has come up with a clever program to encourage shoppers to cut down on the use of single-use plastic bags. They've introduced the GreenBagTag which pays back their ExtraCare program members for declining plastic bags when making a purchase. The GreenBagTag is available for purchase at any CVS store, all of which participate in the program. There's no charge to join the ExtraCare program, which gives 2% back on most store purchases.

Here's how it works: The GreenBagTag, which costs 99 cents, is scanned at checkout along with the ExtraCare card every time a customer uses a reusable bag (or carries out without taking a plastic bag).  On every fourth scan, the tag holder receives a $1.00 credit that can be used on most store products.

"CVS/pharmacy is committed to improving the lives of the people and communities we serve, and that includes helping all our customers adopt more eco-friendly practices," said Bari Harlam, Vice President of Marketing for CVS/pharmacy. "We have a long history of rewarding our customers with incentives that are both convenient and beneficial to their well-being. Our new GreenBagTag program provides an easy way for shoppers to take a small step in going green, while also receiving Extra Bucks as a 'Thank you!' for joining us in making an impact in the fight to reduce waste from disposable plastic bags."

Another laudable aspect of the program is the fact that the GreenBagTags are made with corn-based material and 100% recycled silicone.  It's also packaged in 100% recycled paper. 


We'll be joining Bialas Farms again at their annual pre-Thanksgiving open house in their barn on Celery Avenue in New Hampton, NY.  The Bialas' are kind enough to open their Winter CSA pick-up days to some other local farmers and vendors twice each season. 

The Thanksgiving open house will be held on Sunday, November 22 from 10:00 am until 4:00 pm.  We'll be offering our natural jute and cotton shopping bags, jute back packs, and our new jute wine bags.  We'll also have some of Bialas' heavy extra large CSA bags, which we produced for them earlier this year.


Had savetheplasticbag.com put forth only reasonable and provable arguments in support of plastic shopping bags, the site would be more helpful to those that wish to make good decisions in the "paper vs. plastic" debate.  But then, we'd be deprived of the tragi-comic relief that it provides us with through its faulty logic and incomplete assumptions. That the nature of the site is based solely on the "paper vs. plastic" issue leads us to question whether it is built on ignorance, distraction, or both.  

The problem with the question of "paper or plastic" is that it's a false dilemma; the assumption that one must choose from two alternatives, when in fact there are other viable options. In their Table of Advantages page, the exclusion of reusable shopping bags as a choice renders the comparisons practically unusable. Of course savetheplasticbag.com has an agenda, as do we. But it's intellectually dishonest to dismiss in full the reusable bag. And no, stating that plastic shopping bags are reusable doesn't count!

In future posts, we'll analyze the Table of Advantages line-by-line, including the reusable bag alternative.

Strike up another victory for the plastic bag lobby.  The city of Seattle was to begin a 20 cent fee per non-reusable plastic or paper bag distributed at the checkout counter beginning January 1.  The deep-pocketed Progressive Bag Affiliates, which "promotes the responsible use, reuse, recycling and disposal of pastic bags" (huh?), pumped $1.4 million into a campaign to bring the issue to a referendum.  The law was voted down by the people today.  

Progressive Bag Affiliates and savetheplasticbag dotcom (I won't link to them here) have been chasing down proposed "plasti-taxes" and bag bans across the country, helping to get many of them overturned. "Save the Plastic Bag" has launched  a strange-logic campaign based on comparisons between plastic and paper bags, with little or no mention of reusable bags in their analyses.  


Fairfield CT Weighs Plastic Bag Ban

Posted by: johnny_a in MyBlog

Tagged in: reuse , reusable bags , Plastic Bags

 Plastic bag ban update:

 The Hartford Courant recently reported that Fairfield is a step closer to enacting a ban on plastic shopping bags.  The town board will be voting next week on an ordinance that was passed unanimously by the Reusable Bag Ordinance Committee.  


Press Release, Dec. 13 2008

Governor David A. Paterson today announced he has signed legislation to increase the collection and recycling of plastic carryout bags. Under the new law, A.11725 (Sweeney)/S.8643-A (Marcellino), which will require collection and recycling to begin on January 1, 2009, retail establishments with more than 10,000 square feet of retail space, or those that are part of a chain with more than five stores (each with more than 5,000 square feet of retail space), must provide bins for the collection of used plastic carryout bags, recycle the returned bags, and keep records for three years describing the amount of plastic bags collected and recycled.


The folks at Bialas Farms were kind enough to invite me to set up a table to sell some reusable shopping bags at their Thanksgiving open house. The event ran on November 26, and I had an opportunity to meet several other local vendors while my daughter ran around taking an interesting photo journal of the day (see this article on the home page of Hudson Valley Voices).

As a Community Supported Agriculture, or CSA member of Bialas' winter program, I got to refill my fridge and potato basket with my bi-monthly share of vegetables. I also got a chance to share stories and purchase items from several other local vendors. Here's a list of local businesses that set up shop for the day:

We also got a chance to meet a 3 day old Holstein calf thanks to Mr. Bill Johnson of WTBQ's "Farm Talk" radio show.


The Société des alcools du Québec (SAQ), the state-owned corporation responsible for the trade of alcoholic beverages in the Canadian province of Quebec, moved ahead today with its plan to charge customers for single-use bags in its outlets. Customers who now ask for a paper or plastic single-use bag will have to pay five cents for a one-bottle bag, ten cents for a two-bottle bag, and fifteen cents for a four-bottle bag.

According to SAQ, in a press release dated August 28, this measure marks the beginning of a transition phase that will prepare its customers for the total elimination of single-use bags in January 2009. SAQ adds that proceeds from the sale of the bags will be donated to an organization that works in the field of sustainable development.


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