Should There Be a Fee for Plastic Bags? 

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Americans use billions of plastic bags each year for things like carrying their groceries, lining garbage cans, and picking up after their dogs. But recently, several U.S. cities, including Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., have banned stores from giving them out or required people to pay for them.   

Last spring, New York City became the latest place to join the fight against plastic bags. The City Council passed a law that will require most retailers to charge customers at least 5 cents for every disposable bag they get from the store—paper or plastic. 

Supporters of plastic bag fees say they help reduce waste by encouraging people to haul groceries in reusable bags. Environmentalists note that many of the plastic bags Americans use end up in landfills or waterways, where they take centuries to decompose. They say that some cities that have implemented fees have seen a sharp decrease in plastic bag usage. 

Opponents of bag fees say they hurt low-income shoppers who are already struggling to make ends meet. A 5-cent fee may not sound like a lot, but it can add up over time. Critics also point out that tens of thousands of Americans rely on plastic bag manufacturing or recycling for their livelihoods. Laws that discourage the use of plastic bags could put those jobs in jeopardy. 

Should there be a fee for plastic bags in New York City and other places worldwide? Two experts weigh in.

YES

Americans go through a lot of plastic bags—more than 100 billion each year. These bags get caught in trees, clog storm drains, and harm wildlife. Birds, fish, sea turtles, and other animals get tangled in plastic bags or mistake them for food and choke. Plastic bags also waste taxpayer funds. In New York City, it costs an estimated $12.5 million to ship 91,000 tons of plastic bags to landfills each year. Plus, plastic bags often jam recycling equipment, leading to expensive repairs. 

That’s why New York City has joined cities across the country and around the world in trying to reduce our use of plastic bags. Our new law will require stores to charge at least 5 cents for each paper or plastic bag.  

But the goal is not to collect the fee. Instead, we want this small charge to encourage people to use reusable bags. We bring a backpack when we go to school, and keys when we leave the house. We can all remember to bring reusable bags when we shop. In other places that have adopted fees for bags, that’s exactly what people have started to do. 

Fees discourage people from using plastic bags, which harm the environment.

It’s hard to believe that a small charge could have such a big impact on protecting our environment. But according to research, fees have already proven effective in reducing plastic or paper bag use in a number of places, including Washington, D.C.,* Los Angeles, Germany, and England. Some experts predict that a 5-cent fee will lead to a 60 to 90 percent reduction in the use of plastic bags in New York City.

We want to make this new law work for all New Yorkers. That’s why low-income residents who buy their groceries with food stamps will be exempt from paying the fee. We’ve also committed to giving away tens of thousands of reusable bags at events across the city so everyone will be ready for the change.  

—Brad Lander, New York City Council Member

NO

To achieve real, sustainable environmental progress, we need to focus on proven programs that encourage all citizens to reuse and recycle plastic bags. Unfortunately, the new law in New York City ­requiring stores to charge at least 5 cents for each bag won’t help us achieve our ­environmental goals. Furthermore, the fee amounts to a tax that will make life more difficult for families who are struggling to make ends meet. 

Other communities that have taxes and fees on plastic bags have seen little, if any, environmental progress. This is partly because plastic retail bags make up a tiny portion—less than 0.3 percent—of the U.S. municipal solid-waste stream. That makes it impossible for such policies to achieve a meaningful reduction in overall waste. A recent study suggests that the total number of plastic bags used in Washington, D.C.,* has actually increased since 2010, when a 5-cent fee went into effect.  

Bag fees also have negative environmental side effects. This is because alternative products, such as reusable bags, produce more waste and consume more resources than plastic bags. The popular thick plastic reusable bags generally imported from China, for example, are made from oil and often end up in landfills because they are not recyclable. Most plastic retail bags, on the other hand, are recyclable, highly reused, and produced in America from natural gas. 

Fees hurt low-income Americans who are already struggling.

The bag fee in New York City is particularly troublesome because the money collected will not go toward environ­mental programs. Hundreds of millions of dollars will be taken out of the pockets of low- and middle-income residents—who already struggle to pay for groceries—and given to retailers. 

Worst of all, taxes and fees threaten jobs. Plastic bag manufacturing and recycling companies support more than 24,600 employees and their families across the U.S.

The best way to improve environ­mental efforts in New York City and elsewhere is to focus on proven initiatives that encourage folks to reuse and recycle plastic bags.

—Lee Califf, Executive Director, American Progressive Bag Alliance 

*Studies about the effectiveness of the bag fee in Washington, D.C., have found different results.

CORE QUESTION: What are two facts and two opinions from each expert?

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