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NEW YORK LAWMAKERS PUSH BILL TO CRACK DOWN ON PLASTIC PACKAGING



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By
Rosemary Misdary

Published Feb 28, 2024

28 comments

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Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images

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By
Rosemary Misdary

Published Feb 28, 2024

28 comments

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Proposed legislation would dramatically reduce the amount of plastics in
shipments and on store shelves around New York state — and realize the promise
of a weakly enforced recycling mandate that went into effect more than three
decades ago, according to environmental advocates.

The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act, which passed the state
Senate's environmental committee on Tuesday morning, aims to make good on the
goals of New York’s 1988 Solid Waste Management Act that established mandatory
recycling programs. The bill passed the Assembly’s environmental committee two
weeks ago.

The legislation seeks to halve the amount of plastic packaging New York City
consumes over the next 12 years. The bill would require businesses to be charged
fees based on the amount of packaging created for their products. The bill also
bans toxic chemicals — such as pigments used for coloring — that make it
difficult to recycle some materials.

The legislation has the support of Mayor Eric Adams, whose representatives were
at a rally for the bill on Tuesday in Albany.

“The amount of waste that we are generating now far surpasses what we were
generating in the '80s and it's projected to triple by 2050,” said Kate Donovan
of the Natural Resources Defense Council. “The reality is that [we have a]
convenience culture.”

Recycling programs have been mandatory in New York City for more than 30 years,
and aim to divert 40% of all its waste from landfills and incinerators. But the
city’s diversion rate is currently just 17%, according to the sanitation
department.



“The hierarchy for managing solid waste really starts with reducing waste,”
Donovan said. “We haven't made much progress in terms of reducing and actually
following the waste management hierarchy, instead we spent most of our time
trying to figure out how to manage waste that exists as well as recycle it,
which we know has not been the most effective.”

Advocates estimate that single-use products or packaging make up about half of
plastic garbage.

The bill focuses on reducing that waste by shifting the burden to its producers.
While New Yorkers are still responsible for recycling, the bill would force
businesses that create throw-away items to pay a cost commensurate with the
amount of packaging they use. Under the bill, those fees would be established by
the state Department of Environmental Conservation.

The legislation would also require businesses to set up benchmarks to halve the
amount of plastic garbage they produce by either turning to reusable or
recyclable products or by reducing packaging.

The bill would allow state regulators to fine companies as much as $1,000 per
day for each violation of the law.

Representatives from Amazon and the Plastics Industry Association, a trade
group, did not respond to requests for comment about the legislation.



A 2022 report from the fiscal watchdog Citizens Budget Commission found it costs
the city $203 per ton of trash it throws out, while recycling costs $53 per ton.

And according to the nonprofit Beyond Plastics, New York City spent $448 million
in tax money in 2022 exporting solid waste to locations such as upstate New York
and Newark.

“This would be the first time at the state level in New York that we would have
environmental standards for packaging that drive down the generation of waste
and also gets rid of the most toxic chemicals, and make the polluter pay,” said
Beyond Plastics President Judith Enck. “Packaging companies who profit from
their products should be the ones that pay for the reuse, recycling, or disposal
of packaging, not just taxpayers.”




Tagged

new york state
Health and Science
sanitation
new york city
environment
Politics

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Rosemary Misdary


Rosemary is health & science reporter. Got a tip? Email
rmisdary@nypublicradio.org or Signal 646-544-9524.

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