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Marin declares war on plastic forks, et al

July 13, 2021 by Marin Leave a Comment

The use of reusable utensils, such as those made of wood, are gaining in popularity as consumers try to avoid throwing away unrecyclable plastics into landfills.

After the great COVID-19 pandemic, which crippled Marin restaurants and businesses, Marin County has decided to press ahead with its war on reusable foodware, a move expected to drive up costs for restaurants and consumers.

While admitting that the pandemic has been hard on businesses, the county supervisors say it’s time to continue after a year and a half to consider a draft ordinance on reusable foodware used by food-related businesses. 

The issue “is ready for public discussion,” the county said in a press release. 

To that end, an online public workshop is set for today (6 p.m. Wednesday, July 14) when County of Marin government and its consultants will go over the draft ordinance and seek feedback from residents and businesses.  

The virtual session, expected to last 90 minutes, will be on Zoom. You can find more information on the county website.

Before the pandemic, the County conducted an online survey to explore a ban on single-use plastic food service products at retail businesses. There were 310 responses to the survey and 90% were in favor of requiring food vendors to use foodware that is reusable, recyclable, or compostable.  The ordinance would require the use of reusable and compostable foodware materials such as plates, bowls, cups, utensils, and trays at restaurants, grocery stores, delis, bakeries, carry-out vendors, minimarts, farmers markets, food trucks, and more food outlets. It would only affect such businesses operating in unincorporated Marin; but the county is counting on each town and city to follow suit and establish its own similar policy.

The draft ordinance is expected to be placed before the Marin County Board of Supervisors later this year or early next year. The Marin County Community Development Agency has worked hard on the ordinance, namely staff from the Sustainability Division and theEnvironmental Health Division.

Under current rules, only a limited amount of synthetic material can be composted in Marin; the rest goes into a landfill. The county’s largest waste product processor, the WM EarthCare Compost Facility at the Redwood Landfill & Recycling Center north of Novato, does not accept many commonly labeled compostable materials such as bio-plastics. Also, franchised refuse companies around Marin accept slightly different materials for recycling, composting, or hazardous waste disposal and have different strategies for outreach to the community.

Plastic waste is a large portion of the debris polluting rivers, streams, and the ocean. Reduction of plastics at the source by encouraging re-use and recyclable or compostable materials would reduce debris and improve environmental conditions. 

In 2009, the County banned polystyrene foam in food packaging by restaurants, retail food vendors, and County facilities within the unincorporated areas of Marin. Fairfax, San Rafael, Novato, Mill Valley and Sausalito subsequently adopted their own bans. The Environmental Health Division enforces the ordinances via its food facility inspection program.

An updated County ordinance would define alternative materials that would be acceptable for composting, include language about consistent implementation of the policy, and lay out a coordination plan with the local food service industry. The ordinance will use the hierarchy of reusables being the best to use, compostable fiber foodware being compliant, and single-use plastics being prohibited.

The county proposes that only “natural fiber” be used in Marin, which means a plant-based, non-synthetic fiber, including but not limited to paper, wood, wheat straw, or sugarcane. Natural Fiber does not include plastic of any kind.

Adoption of the ordinance could present adjustments for businesses, so County officials are intent on establishing a transition period to help affected vendors with technical assistance and compliance with new requirements prior to a site inspection. 

“We are aware that most food-related businesses are still in recovery mode from COVID-19 restrictions and other challenges, so we are proceeding thoughtfully and respectfully with the development of the ordinance,” said CDA Deputy Director Gregory Pirie, who leads the Environmental Health Division.

If the ordinance is approved, staff work with other municipalities to seek countywide adoption of the ordinance.

Filed Under: Local News

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