CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE:
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“THE SELF-SERVING PLASTIC BAG PROPS”
Every few years, an industry for
self-serving reasons tries to exploit California’s loose rules for putting
propositions on its ballot. This doesn’t usually work, even though industries
that have tried this tactic when all else political had failed them generally
outspent opponents by factors of at least 50-1.
So it was about 20 years ago, when the
tobacco industry fielded an initiative aiming to remove all local smoking
restrictions and substitute a much looser statewide standard allowing tobacco
use almost anywhere. That effort lost badly and remains a classic in the annals
of misleading names for campaign committees. Big Tobacco’s campaign moniker:
Californians for Statewide Smoking Restrictions.
So it is again this fall with
Propositions 65 and 67, as the plastic bag industry tries to reverse an almost
total ban of its products from California grocery stores that passed the
Legislature in 2014 and was quickly signed by Gov. Jerry Brown. The bag makers’
committee name isn’t quite as misleading as Big Tobacco’s, but the tag (the
same as that of an industry-wide trade group) still obscures its purpose:
American Progressive Bag Alliance. What’s a “progressive” bag?
Even with many local bans in place and
applying to most of the state’s biggest cities and almost half its population,
Californians still dump a reported 11 billion plastic bags into landfills
yearly. Countless others still “decorate” highways. These do not disintegrate
or decay in water, like paper products, so they could be around for centuries.
Plastic bags also are made from petroleum; their use contributed to America’s
energy dependence on foreign sources, some of them unsavory.
Altogether the bag makers raised well
over $4 million before the fall campaign, compared with barely a
quarter-million for supporters of the bag ban. Most cash backing the ban has
come from grocery chains like Albertsons Safeway (including Vons), Ralphs and
Raley’s.
That caused a bag industry attempt to
penalize grocers – who originally opposed banning plastic bags – for switching
sides and helping cost the bag makers hundreds of millions of dollars yearly.
Eastern and Southern companies like Superbag, Hilex Poly, Formosa Plastics and
Advance Polybag lashed out by placing Proposition 65 on the ballot in an
attempt to deprive grocers of even breaking even on the paper bags they sell
for 10 cents each under the state’s 146 local bans on plastic bags.
Claiming the grocers only switched
sides because they discovered the small bag fees add up to a big new source of
revenue, the bag alliance wrote an initiative earmarking all money spent on bags
for environmental projects supervised by the state Wildlife Conservation Board.
Trouble is, many supermarkets say they
actually lose money on paper bags. One board member of the Sacramento Natural
Foods Co-op reports “Our paper bags cost us 14 to 15 cents each. It’s
inaccurate to suggest it’s a revenue stream when it is still a major expense.”
Meanwhile, large grocery chains say
they’ve converted to the anti-plastic side in large part because that’s what
their customers want. “Early polling is that consumers are adapting to no
plastic bags,” Ronald Fong, head of the California Grocers Association
(contributor of about $210,000 to the pro-ban side), told a reporter. “It’s
really unfortunate that out-of-staters are sinking millions of dollars into telling
us we’re wrong here in California.”
But the bag association predicts it
will win and overturn the statewide bag ban. “We believe voters…will make their
voices heard at the ballot box,” the group’s president, Lee Califf, said in a
statement. The statewide ban, he added, threatens thousands of jobs and will
have “no meaningful effect on the environment.”
If jobs are threatened, of course, not
many are in California. Big plastic bag makers don’t manufacture much here.
Any jobs threatened by a statewide ban
are shaky anyhow. That’s because the existing local bans covering Los Angeles,
San Francisco and 144 other locales would not change if the No-on-67 side wins
and overturns the statewide ban.
No matter how obviously self-serving
their two propositions may be, this is still likely a lose-lose proposition for
the bag makers. The bottom line for them is that they stand no chance of
restoring California to its former status as their largest market.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough,
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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