FILE PHOTO: A plastic bag sits along a roadside in Sacramento, Calif.
Rich Pedroncelli / The Associated Press
FILE PHOTO: A plastic bag sits along a roadside in Sacramento, Calif.
Rich Pedroncelli / The Associated Press
(Harrisburg) — Plastic straws, plastic bags, and Styrofoam food-takeout containers could be on their way out in Pennsylvania if some Democratic state lawmakers get the change they want.
The group has announced a package of 13 bills that tackle environmental and health problems posed by waste, litter and single-use plastic. The bills aim to alter the behavior of what they call a âthrowaway societyâ with bans and taxes to punish use of plastic items that can be used only once, while pushing for incentives for recycling and waste reduction.
âWhen your food comes to you and itâs in a Styrofoam container, youâre unlikely to say, âNo, I donât want it anymore.â Theyâre not going to give you the food in your hands, but youâre stuck,â said David Masur, executive director of PennEnvironment, who pushed for the bills. âSo we need laws to balance out and have check and balances in a marketplace that often has us putting consumption over the things that are better for [our] planet, our health, our quality of life.â
The âZero Waste PAâ legislative package is led by State Rep. Tim Briggs of Montgomery County. In February, he introduced a bill that prohibits restaurants and stores from dispensing their food in plastic plates, cups, or any other polystyrene container, including Styrofoam â and he wanted to broaden the scope to try to solve the bigger waste and litter issue.
âRecycling is broken in Pennsylvania,â Briggs said at a news conference Wednesday morning in Harrisburg. âIf itâs e-waste, if itâs what we recycle [at] the curb going to incinerators, going to the landfills ⊠The whole system needs to be reworked.â
The package includes a bill from Montgomery County Rep. Mary Jo Daley that would prohibit plastic straws from being distributed, except at the request of a customer. Another measure, from Philadelphia Rep. Donna Bullock, would increase fines on illegal dumping. A 2-cent fee on non-reusable plastic bags at big grocery stores was presented by Philadelphia Reps. Brian Sims and Jared Solomon.
A bottle bill that gives 5 cents per container returned was announced by Bucks County Rep. Wendy Ulman. Legislation that would prohibit the distribution of products with packages made with non-recyclable plastics, unless the company selling the item takes the packaging back, was proposed by Chester County Rep. Melissa Shusterman. And a measure that puts a 20-cent deposit on cigarette packs was offered by Philadelphia Rep. Chris Rabb.
âCigarette litter, 30 percent of all of our litter, is among the most toxic of all commonly littered items, containing a multiple of chemicals,â Rabb said at the news conference. âThese chemicals casually tossed into our environment zip into our soil and our water supply. They contaminate our crops, our drinking water, and the animal and fish that we eat.â
Bucks County Rep. Perry Warren announced a bill that would reduce the number of plastic water bottles sent to landfills by requiring newly constructed state buildings and those undergoing renovations to water and pipe infrastructure to install water-bottle filling stations.
Another set of bills presented by Reps. Danielle Friel Otten, Parry Kim, Mary L. Isaacson, and Elizabeth Fiedler seeks to reduce waste by improving recycling and composting, or by increasing the disposal fees at landfills and incinerators.  And a bill from Rep. Mike Zabel of Delaware County calls for implementing best practices for electronic-waste recycling.
Fiedler, who represents a district in South Philadelphia, proposed increasing the disposal fee at municipal waste landfills to $8 per ton from $4, to reduce the amount of trash imported into the state from New York and New Jersey.
âIt is important that we address the waste and trash that we produce, and some of these societal norms that we have that result in us producing more and more,â said Fiedler, a former reporter at WHYY. âAs we all know, there is no Planet B, so we better take care of the one we have.â
The American Progressive Bag Alliance, representing the plastic-bag industry, has been actively lobbying in Pennsylvania and New Jersey to push back against bans and fees. Its representatives say plastic-bag taxes donât reduce waste and litter, and instead make groceries more expensive for lower-income communities.
PennEnvironmentâs Masur said that even though fees may increase the cost of some items by a few cents, taxpayers also pay the cost for cleaning streets and waterways.
âA lot of the bills weâre talking about today have been test-driven in other states or municipalities,â Masur said. âAnd I think Pennsylvania can tap into that to ensure that these laws are successful and follow that same track record of reducing our waste in our throwaway society.â
The legislative package is the first step in a journey that could last many years, Masur said. His organizationâs next steps are to work for bipartisan support of the bills in the State House, getting partner legislation in the State Senate, and having public hearings that would lead to votes on the existing bills.
WHYY is the leading public media station serving the Philadelphia region, including Delaware, South Jersey and Pennsylvania. This story originally appeared on WHYY.org.Â
StateImpact Pennsylvania is a collaboration among WITF, WHYY, and the Allegheny Front. Reporters Reid Frazier, Rachel McDevitt and Susan Phillips cover the commonwealth’s energy economy. Read their reports on this site, and hear them on public radio stations across Pennsylvania.
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StateImpact Pennsylvania is a collaboration among WITF, WHYY, and the Allegheny Front. Reporters Reid Frazier, Rachel McDevitt and Susan Phillips cover the commonwealth’s energy economy. Read their reports on this site, and hear them on public radio stations across Pennsylvania.
Climate Solutions, a collaboration of news organizations, educational institutions and a theater company, uses engagement, education and storytelling to help central Pennsylvanians toward climate change literacy, resilience and adaptation. Our work will amplify how people are finding solutions to the challenges presented by a warming world.