Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Bag Re-Use

There have been a lot of articles and attempted laws surrounding this issue lately.


The City of SF is trying to enforce a law that you must BYO Bag.


"As originally written, the legislation would have affected only grocery stores doing more than $2 million in sales a year.The law, if passed, would make San Francisco the first U.S. city to require merchants to offer customers only bags made of recyclable paper, plastic that can be turned into compost or sturdy cloth or plastic that can be reused."



They have also tried to tax people for using new bags


"It could cost grocery shoppers 17 cents a bag if they want paper or plastic in San Francisco, one of the first U.S. cities to attempt a grocery bag fee aimed at helping the environment.
City officials are considering a proposal that would put a tax on supermarket bags, and it's likely that many stores would try to pass the extra cost on to consumers. The measure is primarily being pushed by environmentalists who view plastic grocery bags as a menace, not as a modern marvel of convenience. "




The BiteHow 'bout neither. We use shopping bags for a few hours, but they can take lifetimes to decompose. New foldable nylon versions make it easy to BYOB wherever you go-whether it's clothes shopping, grocery shopping, or a drugstore impulse buy.
The Benefits
Oil and tree savings. In the United States, 12 million barrels of oil and 14 million trees go to producing plastic and paper bags each year.
Discounts. Stores like Safeway and Whole Foods offer a five-penny discount if you bring your own.
Being a role model. Other shoppers'll watch and learn.
Safety for sea creatures. Plastic bags are the fifth most commonly found item in coastal cleanups.
Personally SpeakingJen's brought her own since the days when loading up a canvas bag at the store wasn't so popular. She still gets weird looks from other shoppers, but that's for other reasons...
Wanna Try?
ACME Bags Workhorse - superlight nylon bags that fold into a tiny attached pouch, in four colors ($10).
Ecobags Organic Cotton String Shopping Bag - these simple bags fit in your purse or pocket. Also: reusable produce bags ($3-$7).
Posch - stylish bags created from vintage sheets and pillowcases ($40).
Biter Bag - our very own bags, made from recycled plastic bottles ($20).
"I'm Not a Plastic Bag" Bag - this bag spells it out for those who are slow on the uptake ($15).
If you must use a plastic bag, reuse it as long as you can, then tie it into knots before you toss it to keep it from ballooning up into the air and ending up as litter.

No comments: