California lawmaker wants to prohibit restaurants from providing plastic straws unless requested

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fskimospy

Elite Member
Mar 10, 2006
84,812
49,499
136
Sounds like a lot, but I bet it's less than one-tenth of one percent of all the plastic we dispose of. Throw out your trash in a 30 gallon glad bag and you've probably landfilled the equivalent of more straws than you would use in a year. Also, the straws can be recycled.

To me it comes down to the fact that the amount is clearly non-trivial and it’s easy to do. Solving our waste problem is almost certain to be the result of a ton of small things so why not take the easy ones?

Also, can be recycled and are also probably often not.

I have no problem with this so long as the cost of enforcement is minimal. There are many things we can do for the environment which could have some real impact, like giving tax breaks for rooftop solar. This just isn't one of them.

My guess is the cost of enforcement is probably near zero, similar to plastic bag taxes. All this does is tell restaurants to stop littering their tables with plastic straws for no reason.

Tax breaks for rooftop solar are something I strongly support to, but those have clear and significant costs.
 
Reactions: Ns1

BigDH01

Golden Member
Jul 8, 2005
1,630
82
91
I'm not sure where you came up with this argument that you attributed to me. Here, let me go again:

1) I don't personally use straws. I have no use for them. I recognize (as earlier, and clearly stated) that other people do and they are seen to have a certain value.
2) The issue is about unnecessary plastic waste, not the mere existence of straws. I don't know why you attribute that confusion to me
3) restaurants will always carry straws, just as grocery stores carry bags, even when legislation is in place and society largely accepts the shared waste inherent in the need for these items.

I'm not misattributing anything to you, but it's not a credible argument to say that restaurants will *always* use straws in refutation to policy A but then argue in favor of policy B because it will cause restaurants to stop using straws. If that argument was valid for policy A, it's valid for policy B.

The penalty imposed on the restaurant either happens or it doesn't.

I'm not proposing a penalty, I'm proposing a pigovian tax so that the consumers/produces who produce the externality are the ones paying for it.

There is no cost in not violating the law. You understand? Placing the cost on the producers of the straw raises the price for providing free straws, and thus the total prices on the restaurant menu.

Not if the restaurant stops providing straws. I don't understand why a consumption tax is such a foreign concept to you.

All of that cost: napkins, cups, straws, salt, ketchup, etc is part of overhead. This essentially costs the restaurant nothing because they don't violate the law, the restuarant orders less straws because they have less need, and thus the problem works it way back to the manufacturer, as you so desire, with the same effect on them, in the end, but at less cost to everyone as well as a direct, economic effect on the consumer, in that behavior has been conditioned into being less of a wasteful pig human.

This is just getting incoherent.

everyone is happy. Like you, I'm not interested in sending anyone to jail for this. obviously that is nuts.

Then I assume you're opposed to the measure.

You haven't explained anything about your thoughts on bag bans, if they have been successful or not. You just defended your libertarianism as an absolute position that is impervious to challenge or the prospect of being updated in light of better data, "for reasons." You are defending your noble crusade of pure, soulless math as a black hole of facts and data. Only the position matters, never the results. This is terrible science. Actually, it isn't even science.

I disagree with bag bans. I'd much prefer a tax on bags (these do exist in some areas) with the proceeds going to clean up the bag pollution. That seems more morally responsible to me, just as a tax on straws seems more responsible than throwing a waiter in jail for a year for moving a straw to a table.

Do you think the bag bans have effectively reduced pollution in these places, that people who live in these towns are becoming less wasteful? Does the cost of these programs represents an unreasonable burden on the noble consumer? If you do, that's fine--I just haven't seen you defend this position with anything other than platitudes about noble libertarianism.

I'd say the jury is still out on the bag bans: https://www.wired.com/2016/06/banning-plastic-bags-great-world-right-not-fast/

Also, and I really don't understand why you can't get this, I'm perfectly fine with reducing environmental waste. In fact, the entire purpose of the tax I proposed is to either reduce waste or force the producers of that waste to pay the cost of it. Your deflection is another red herring because it assumes a position I'm not taking. Bans are bad, bans that throw waiters in jail even worse. Forcing parties to pay the true cost of their product, good.

You're like poor Polonius hiding behind that arras.

You don't seem capable of making an argument without resorting to insults. It's unnecessary and does not further your cause.
 
Nov 25, 2013
32,083
11,718
136
I mean I get it and honestly I'm ok with it too, just like I am with plastic bags. I think it's a drop in the bucket when it comes to waste generated by other means though (the bags do get everywhere though). I'd imagine the waste generated by Amazon alone in a single hour due to their shipping is far, far greater than straws or bags. As a society I wish we'd rethink some of this shit.

It seems to be a rather large "drop"

"Americans use 500 million drinking straws every day. To understand just how many straws 500 million really is, this would fill over 125 school buses with straws every day. That's 46,400 school buses every year!

Americans use these disposable utensils at an average rate of 1.6 straws per person per day. Based on national averages, this equates to each person in the U.S. using about 38,000 straws between the ages of 5 and 65.i Although straws are relatively small, that amount of waste really adds up!"

https://www.nps.gov/commercialservices/greenline_straw_free.htm

Life cycle of a plastic straw

http://blogs.worldwatch.org/plastic-straws-a-life-cycle/
 
Reactions: Ns1

Zaap

Diamond Member
Jun 12, 2008
7,162
424
126
Asking for a straw rather than a waitress handing them out to every person that sits down should be common sense. Why would an establishment even want to waste the money on unused straws anyway?

Fast food places (indoors) have those one-straw-at-a-time dispencers generally. Anyone who doesn't want one- then don't get one. Handing them out with every order (other than drive-thru) would be kinda stupid.

Even more than straws, I'd like to see a revolution occur in product packaging. There has to be a better way by now to protect items in stores from theft than bubble wrapping them in crap tons of plastic that will just get discarded three seconds after getting the product home.

A combo of much better bio degradable packaging materials, and much less of them.

Sometimes I buy something fairly tiny- like an MP3 player for my son recently, and the damn thing comes in a box 5x as big, with a couple different plastic trays and dividers, the product itself and most of the included accessories wrapped in more plastic. There has to be a better way.
 

woolfe9998

Lifer
Apr 8, 2013
16,189
14,102
136
It seems to be a rather large "drop"

"Americans use 500 million drinking straws every day. To understand just how many straws 500 million really is, this would fill over 125 school buses with straws every day. That's 46,400 school buses every year!

Americans use these disposable utensils at an average rate of 1.6 straws per person per day. Based on national averages, this equates to each person in the U.S. using about 38,000 straws between the ages of 5 and 65.i Although straws are relatively small, that amount of waste really adds up!"

https://www.nps.gov/commercialservices/greenline_straw_free.htm

Life cycle of a plastic straw

http://blogs.worldwatch.org/plastic-straws-a-life-cycle/

Americans evidently use an average of 68 Kilos (i.e. ~150 lbs) of plastic per person per year. How much of that 150 lbs is the 500 straws used by that average person? I'd be surprised if that many straws weighs more than a few ounces.

https://www.statista.com/statistics/270312/consumption-of-plastic-materials-per-capita-since-1980/
 

UglyCasanova

Lifer
Mar 25, 2001
19,275
1,361
126
I look at it this way: you reduce humanity's environmental impact through a lot of little improvements like this. Plastic straws from California probably don't amount to much, but combine that with a thousand other changes and you eliminate a lot of waste.


If it doesn’t do much don’t enact it then. Thousands of laws regulating this that and the other just makes for an insane beuracratic mess. I have no doubt this was enacted as a political stunt, the effects I’m sure in the grand scheme of things are probably nonexistent.

And I’m 100% for environmental regulations too, they just should be meaningful smart ones.
 

manly

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
11,353
2,363
136
Americans evidently use an average of 68 Kilos (i.e. ~150 lbs) of plastic per person per year. How much of that 150 lbs is the 500 straws used by that average person? I'd be surprised if that many straws weighs more than a few ounces.

https://www.statista.com/statistics/270312/consumption-of-plastic-materials-per-capita-since-1980/
Your argument is crock and amounts to "because the problem is so massive, we shouldn't even bother doing small, sensible things that help."

Source: https://www.treehugger.com/green-home/how-banish-plastic-straws-your-life-forever.html

Without doing the exact math, it amounts to a little over 3 pounds of straws per person in a year. So yes, a tiny part of total consumption; but the point is that on a national scale, the problem is actually not trivial as you keep trying to claim.
 

woolfe9998

Lifer
Apr 8, 2013
16,189
14,102
136
Your argument is crock and amounts to "because the problem is so massive, we shouldn't even bother doing small, sensible things that help."

Source: https://www.treehugger.com/green-home/how-banish-plastic-straws-your-life-forever.html

Without doing the exact math, it amounts to a little over 3 pounds of straws per person in a year. So yes, a tiny part of total consumption; but the point is that on a national scale, the problem is actually not trivial as you keep trying to claim.

I said I don't oppose this so long as it's cheap to enforce it, and it may well be. But I'm not backing down from the impact being tiny. The numbers we're discussing aren't actually that high on a national scale, and this law, if done on a national scale, would not eliminate all those straws, or anywhere close.
 

ch33zw1z

Lifer
Nov 4, 2004
37,995
18,344
146
This is fine, states rights to pursue such things. It's not on the top of my concern list, e-waste seems a more challenging peeve of mine, with what I see as bigger issue
 

OutHouse

Lifer
Jun 5, 2000
36,413
616
126
I wouldn't expect any conservative to understand because fuck the environment. MAGAMAGAMAGA bitch.

so i laugh at a stupid ass law and you equate that to not caring about the environment BUT FAST FOOD JOINTS ARE EXEMPT ??? lol.... yea what ever floats your boat bitch.

how about instead of adding another damn law on the books that is pretty much impossible to enforce and threatens to throw people in jail. why not make a PSA awareness program just to make people aware of the problem.
 
Last edited:

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
110,810
29,564
146
I'm not misattributing anything to you, but it's not a credible argument to say that restaurants will *always* use straws in refutation to policy A but then argue in favor of policy B because it will cause restaurants to stop using straws. If that argument was valid for policy A, it's valid for policy B.

Huh, your not mis-attributing anything to me, but you're claiming that I am arguing that the business will do something anyway, in refutation of a policy? Not once have I suggested this. Not once. You are having lots of trouble here. Neither policy bans restaurants from using straws, anyway, so that isn't even part of the discussion--not sure where you got that. The policy is to reduce wasteful use, it is not to eliminate it. Restaurants will dispense straws because people need them, regardless of policy. I am not arguing that they are or that they should stop doing this because of some possible policy.

I think you are having trouble here because you aren't reading.
 

yllus

Elite Member & Lifer
Aug 20, 2000
20,577
432
126
I was at a hotel in the middle of Canada and when I asked for a Coke in the hotel's restaurant, I was advised that the hotel chain had banned plastic straws from their properties. They had biodegradable straws coming in, but not available just yet. Drinking a Coke out of a glass with no straw was a little weird.

Creating a law for this is annoying - yet another law to run afoul of - but like the charge for plastic bags now in effect locally here, it'll probably be a very positive change. I'm on board.
 

Zaap

Diamond Member
Jun 12, 2008
7,162
424
126
Strawberry Twizzlers make for perfectly good straws anyway.
 

justoh

Diamond Member
Jun 11, 2013
3,686
81
91
I'd hate to be stupid enough to think this is "fine." It would never become reality anyway, so no big deal.
 

dank69

Lifer
Oct 6, 2009
35,597
29,300
136
so i laugh at a stupid ass law and you equate that to not caring about the environment.... yea what ever floats your boat bitch.

how about instead of adding another damn law on the books that is pretty much impossible to enforce and threatens to throw people in jail. why not make a PSA awareness program just to make people aware of the problem.
OutHouse has the solution everyone! A PSA!
 

sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
96,181
15,776
126
It seems to be a rather large "drop"

"Americans use 500 million drinking straws every day. To understand just how many straws 500 million really is, this would fill over 125 school buses with straws every day. That's 46,400 school buses every year!

Americans use these disposable utensils at an average rate of 1.6 straws per person per day. Based on national averages, this equates to each person in the U.S. using about 38,000 straws between the ages of 5 and 65.i Although straws are relatively small, that amount of waste really adds up!"

https://www.nps.gov/commercialservices/greenline_straw_free.htm

Life cycle of a plastic straw

http://blogs.worldwatch.org/plastic-straws-a-life-cycle/


Most of that is from fast food places no?

Still, almost two per person per day is a crapload.
 

OutHouse

Lifer
Jun 5, 2000
36,413
616
126
OutHouse has the solution everyone! A PSA!

its better than supporting a stupid law thats not enforceable and one that excludes fast food joints!!! fuck dude are you stupid? this law wont do shit other than just put a dumb law on the books.
 

dyna

Senior member
Oct 20, 2006
813
61
91
What if your handicap and need a straw but your embarrassed to ask because nobody else is getting one? Is that discrimination?

This politician needs more to do, he should go work on a cleanup crew on the side of the road and do something useful rather than coming up with this craziness.
 

dank69

Lifer
Oct 6, 2009
35,597
29,300
136
its better than supporting a stupid law thats not enforceable and one that excludes fast food joints!!! fuck dude are you stupid?
I'm not fucking stupid. I dumped her last year.


this law wont do shit other than just put a dumb law on the books.
*and stop people from throwing straws on tables, because jail time really isn't worth it.
 

Ns1

No Lifer
Jun 17, 2001
55,414
1,574
126
What if your handicap and need a straw but your embarrassed to ask because nobody else is getting one? Is that discrimination?

This politician needs more to do, he should go work on a cleanup crew on the side of the road and do something useful rather than coming up with this craziness.

or he can try using his position to reduce waste before they end up on the side of the road. Seems like a larger environmental impact in the grand scheme of things....
 
Reactions: ch33zw1z
Nov 25, 2013
32,083
11,718
136
Most of that is from fast food places no?

Still, almost two per person per day is a crapload.

As far as I know that's the case. When I was younger I remember home use of straws but not really since maybe the mid 70's? You certainly don't see many in stores anymore other than in the birthday party supplies section.
 

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
56,001
14,528
146
I mean I get it and honestly I'm ok with it too, just like I am with plastic bags. I think it's a drop in the bucket when it comes to waste generated by other means though (the bags do get everywhere though). I'd imagine the waste generated by Amazon alone in a single hour due to their shipping is far, far greater than straws or bags. As a society I wish we'd rethink some of this shit.

This mentality is why nothing ever gets done. As long as people excuse their own waste by claiming someone else wastes more, they will do nothing to limit their own.
 

umbrella39

Lifer
Jun 11, 2004
13,819
1,126
126
Asking for a straw rather than a waitress handing them out to every person that sits down should be common sense. Why would an establishment even want to waste the money on unused straws anyway?

This was a common practice even back at least as far as the 80's when I was a server in fine and upscale restaurants. If they didn't ask, we didn't give as instructed...
 

interchange

Diamond Member
Oct 10, 1999
8,022
2,872
136
I don't see this as any different with how municipalities have banned plastic bags and now you have to pay for them at many grocery stores, and even Targets now. This wasn't accomplished by social movement, but by a simple law. Some people bitched, thought it would ruin their lives, but nothing really came of that. People adjusted and it seems that most actually agree that this is better than the state of things before. waiting for a social movement would just see people bitching about it endlessly and nothing getting accomplished.

putting the law down and letting the angry minority rage for a day or two until they realize that they actually didn't care all along seems like the superior approach to these kind of minor behavioral adjustments.

My feelings about it are generally philosophical, but I'll think about it more given the practicality of what you say.
 
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