Politics

Battle of the (bag) bans

Bellingham ponders becoming the second city in Washington to outlaw plastic shopping bags.

Battle of the (bag) bans
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Bob Simmons

Bellingham ponders becoming the second city in Washington to outlaw  plastic shopping bags.

A  measure of how seriously Bellinghamsters consider their city’s environmental  policies: When The Bellingham Herald first reported  on a proposed ordinance to ban single-use plastic shopping bags a few  days ago, 343 readers had something spirited to say about it. That’s  in a newspaper with a weekday circulation of 20,000. The number of responses  may not be a record, says online editor Jim Donaldson, “but it’s  right up there in the top four or five” among Herald stories that  have opened up the comment stream.

If  the Bellingham City Council approves Councilmember Seth Fleetwood’s proposed ordinance, Bellingham will become the second city in Washington  to ban the distribution of single-use plastic shopping bags by grocers  and other retailers. (Edmonds adopted its own ban in 2009).

Fleetwood  filed the draft ordinance at the City Council office  earlier this month (read it here).

“I  think people who understand the ordinance will support it,” he said. “It’s a common-sense rule to meet a serious environmental  problem. We’re fouling our oceans and the Puget Sound landscape with  a very damaging throwaway product that we really don’t need.”

Now  the big Bellingham bag-ban battle begins with a newly formed organization, “Bag It, Bellingham,” in collaboration with the Associated  Students Environmental Center at Western Washington University.  Organizers Jill MacIntyre Witt and Brooks Anderson were moved by concerns  for the Pacific’s troubled marine life, plagued by a floating  plastic garbage dump twice the size of Texas, and by increasing  plastic-dominated pollution of the Puget Sound waters and landscape. Now that Bellingham has gathered national attention for its environmental awareness and its hundreds of thriving small,  green businesses, MacIntyre Witt says it’s time “to join a national  and world movement to ban single-use plastic bags in retail commerce.”

It isn’t just that Bellingham shoppers dispose of an estimated 22  million plastic bags each year; Bag It Bellingham envisions a growing  movement beyond the Bay, at the state and regional level.

The  proposed ordinance has drawn support from the Northwest Grocery  Association, a trade group of large chain stories such as Fred  Meyer, Safeway, and Albertson’s. The NWGA’s president, Joe  Gilliam, offered this on the new organization’s website: “The core  principles of the draft ordinance bring forth some very promising ideas,”  he said. “The NWGA applauds the efforts of Bag it Bellingham and the  concept they are putting forth.”

Not  so the dominant grocery company in Bellingham, Haggen Food Inc., a privately  owned company with 30 Haggen’s and Top Food stores in Washington and  Oregon. Haggen’s of Bellingham had not gone public with its stand  on the bag ordinance as of mid-March. But Haggen spokeswoman  Becky Skaggs referred questions to the Washington Food Industry  Association. And WFIA President Jan Gee says her association  strongly opposes local governments banning plastic bags.

“This sort  of thing should be done statewide,” Gee said. “We  don’t want our member stores to have to meet one set of restrictions  in one city and a different set in another."

Sure, a statewide ban on throwaway bags would be desirable, MacIntyre  Witt says. “I’d like a statewide ban too,” she told Crosscut,  “but we all know that won’t happen until cities begin passing it.”

The  Bellingham proposal differs sharply from the ordinance that stirred  so much political anger in Seattle a couple of years ago. Seattle  voters rejected a 20-cent fee on plastic and paper bags in 2009, after  the American Chemistry Council, representing the  plastic bag industry, spent $1.4 million to bankroll a referendum against  it.

The  Bellingham draft ordinance closely resembles a proposed statewide law  being debated by the Oregon legislature. In addition to banning plastic bags, it would require retailers to  collect 5 cents per paper shopping bag to cover the cost of providing  them. You avoid paying the nickel when you bring your own shopping bag.  The ordinance would not affect plastic meat and produce bags, or bags  containing prepared takeout food.

Fleetwood  says he hopes citizens will become informed about the ordinance before  choosing sides. That may be too much to ask. One of the more vociferous  of the Herald’s comment writers took aim at the nickel fee, wrongly  describing it as a tax and a new revenue source for the city. The Herald corrected the misleading letter the same day and pointed out that the  nickel goes to the retailer, not to the city.

In Edmonds, resistance to the bag ban seems to have faded in the 10  months since the City Council approved it on a 5-to-1 vote. Its lead sponsor, Councilmember Strom Peterson, said, “We  may get an email every two months or so objecting to it. But overall  we’re very pleased with the public reaction. It’s been a much easier  process than I thought it would be.”

Edmonds took its time in enforcing its ordinance, providing  what Peterson called “an extended implementation period” during  which no one was cited for providing the prohibited bags, while the  city worked with retailers to make compliance as easy as possible. “We also spent a lot of time with the unions involved,” Peterson  said. “Their members are the ones up front, hearing the resistance  if there is any, and they understood and supported what we were trying  to accomplish.”

Edmonds  is generally viewed as a conservative community that might have been  expected to oppose government action of this kind, yet it avoided the  political furor that defined Seattle’s reaction. Bellingham is twice  the size of Edmonds and widely seen as more politically liberal.

But  when it comes to a plague of plastic, Peterson thinks the two cities  have a lot in common. “The Sound is so very important to both communities.  We both have strong environmental concerns, and depend heavily on a  healthy Puget Sound and ocean.”

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Bob Simmons

By Bob Simmons

Bob Simmons is a longtime KING-TV reporter who has been writing news for print and television for 65 years.