LOL, great graphic.
Pre-Covid, the state of California was on a drunken frenzy to ban the evilness of plastic grocery bags, it was an effort that began sometime around 2010 (or before) and eventually evolved into ballot measures and legislation. All of that screeched to an immediate halt when Covid struck, and all of a sudden no one and nothing could touch anyone or anything, so plastic grocery bags were restored to their former status in society and held up as heroic methods of protection from human contact with other humans and the things that humans touch. The same villain that threatened the environment was completely ignored in its insipid plot to ruin oceans and fauna.
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Plastic bags were banned here years ago. Stores got around the ban by making a "thicker" plastic bag and labeling it as "reusable" (supposedly up to 100 times). {Of course, they can't be recycled either as it's virtually impossible to recycle ANY kind of plastic in this state.} When Covid hit, reusing any type of bag was strictly forbidden. Within a few months, no store had any plastic bags, and ALL stores began to charge .10 for paper bags (an option in the law that banned plastic bags). Stores and warehouses that had leftover "banned" bags quickly brought them back (who's going to challenge them?), and charged for them as well (even ones with holes that broke halfway to the parking lot). I now have several large bins filled with paper grocery bags (barrel size) sitting out in front of my garage.
Now they want to ban the bags one uses for produce and meat, or make them "compostable" - which simply means they break down to microplastic particles one can't see (if you can't see it anymore, it no longer exists).
I use plastic grocery bags as garbage can liners for used cat litter. Same thing as using a Hefty trash bag, except this way the grocery bag gets used twice. Paper bags aren't great for used cat litter, and Waste Management won't take used cat litter if it's not "contained".
"As of March 1, 2020, all plastic carryout bags (other than an exempt bag) became banned from distribution by anyone required to collect New York State sales tax..."
We had a sufficient amount of notice that this law was coming. It was more important to me than most folks since I do all my grocery shopping on line, and delivered (due to disabilities). In the interim, most of my grocery store contacts didn't know how those home delivery orders would be handled. My suggestion at that time was to use the method that was used in the '50s, deliver groceries in the cartons that products were delivered to the store in. That's how my family's groceries came (there was no supermarkets in my town at that time). No, they couldn't (wouldn't) do that. I suspect that they resell the cardboard.
Since then I've been paying .15 per brown paper bag (.10 state tax, .05 store fee). I don't really pay for all of them, the store shopper has mercy and only charges me for about half. I started saving all the bags since I had paid for them. Eventually, they filled a whole closet so I've had to dispose of them in the recycling.
I'm all for reducing plastics in our environment. Like Element's original posting, I've wondered how long it will take society to address that list he posted. Back in the (ancient) '50s, everyone in our neighborhood burned the household trash in barrels in the backyards. In the '60s, I lived in an apartment building that has a trash chute to the furnace in the basement. There was no plastic in the trash then. How on Earth did we live like that?!
In UK, not a ban as such, rather a nominal charge for each plastic bag used with an exception for food retailers such as butchers. At one stage, the charge applied to paper bags as well.
There is some pressure to reduce the plastic items in your list, but it does not appear to be very effective.
This post was edited by Malizz at November 30, 2022 11:45 AM MST