Mayor Adams Proposes Plastic Bag Ban
Portland Mayor Sam Adams this week presented the city with a draft ordinance to ban single use plastic bags in Portland. His office says that according to a recent poll, 2 out of 3 Portlander’s support a ban.
The Mayor released a statement to the public on Friday afternoon, July 16th:
“When the city of Portland banned polystyrene foam (Styrofoam) in January 1990, it drew immediate attention from the environmental community and the business world. In response, businesses and customers had to learn a new behavior and they did, adapting to the new policy as cities around the nation took notice.
“According to a poll conducted last week, two-thirds of Portlanders surveyed support banning single-use, carry-out plastic bags and a 5-cent charge on paper bags.
“Today, I’m introducing for public comment a draft ordinance to ban single-use plastic bags in the City of Portland. The ordinance, along with a Frequently Asked Questions document, can be found online at www.mayorsamadams.com/bagban. The ordinance spells out all the important details – which industries are included, when it will go into effect, and what we’re doing to make sure the transition is smooth and successful.
“The four key pillars of the ordinance are:
- Banning plastic bags, prohibiting large grocery stores and retail pharmacies from distributing single-use plastic carryout bags to their customers at point of sale;
- Setting a mandatory 5-cent charge on paper/compostable plastic bags, regulating the distribution of paper bags and compostable plastic bags to encourage consumers to use reusable bags, and helping defray the cost to stores;
- Requiring stores to make reusable bags available, either for purchase or at no cost;
- Calling for an outreach campaign that includes a public-private partnership to provide reusable carryout bags to interested Portland residents; and working with service providers to distribute information and reusable carryout bags to interested senior and low-income households.
“The policy is a smart, pragmatic approach to a real and seemingly insurmountable problem. It’s an approach shaped by a coalition of businesses, environmental groups and city staff and informed by lessons from cities and nations that have already taken action. Efforts are underway to ban plastic bags statewide in the next legislative session. I support those efforts. Portlanders are prepared to lead the way to a statewide solution.
“In Portland, and in all of Oregon, single-use plastic bags are an eyesore, getting into our waterways and our storm drains. Plastic bags are a nuisance, jamming up recycling facility machines and costing those facilities tens of thousands of dollars a month in maintenance and labor to fix the mess. And plastic bags are an indicator – of an old way of thinking where an item is designed to be used once and live on in a landfill forever.
“But globally, plastic bags are far more than a nuisance or an eyesore. They are part of an environmental crisis – from the oil needed to manufacture and transport bags around the planet – to the massive plastic islands of trash destroying our oceans and intoxicating our marine food web.
“Banning the bag in Portland will not solve all these problems. But failing to ban the bag will only perpetuate the status quo, where Portland is not part of the pollution solution, but part of the problem.
“Portland and Oregon have always led the nation on smart environmental policy. Portland’s economic prosperity is being built on our creativity, our innovation, our expertise in sustainability, and our heritage of great manufacturing. By taking action now, we’re continuing our city’s leadership in sustainable urban living and making an investment in our city’s future.”
A PDF of the proposed law can be viewed and downloaded at Docstoc.com.



This is the important pressing issues that politicians work on?? Plastic bags? wow, good thing that taxpayers are paying thier salaries to handle such crisis…
When you consider the larger picture, the amount of plastic we use and waste should be a huge concern for everyone. If you think we can continue to throw billions of plastic bags into landfills and never run into any problems you are mistaken. I am so glad to see Portland catching on.
Portland…what a little statist freak show. These people should be run out town on a (light) rail.
Plastic bags (their disposal is very costly and space consuming) is a legitimate issue, pricks!
Hey Sam , Remember when we brought the" Wind Bags" in for you to look at??? Well we still make them. We still live totally off the electrical grid so remember we are green green.I don't know if we are still on your blog page. WE are recyclers of feed bags and make them into totes. We now are in Tigard and Gresham farmers market almost every weekend.
We are very much behind you in the removal of film plastic bags. Any help that you can send our way would be deeply appreciated. Please note email change.We are now Windbags 2@gmail.com…….GO SAM GO!!!!!
Faye Barnes Wind Bags
They should ban both plastic & paper bags after all neither is environmentally friendly option. Instead encourage people to either BYOB(Bring their own bag) or buy @ time of sale.
Why ban paper? It is such an incredible, renewable resource. The bags decompose quickly and forests can be replanted easily. Just takes a bit of management.
I personally really wonder about the reusable bags. Sure, they get multiple uses but what resources go into making them, how long do they last and what happens to them when they are at the end of their usable life?
You can’t replant a synthetic reusable bag.
You’ve got to be kidding me. If you’ve got the authority to ban plastic bags then you have the authority to make them use the plant fiber compostable plastic bags instead of banning all plastic bags. And what is this charge of 5 cents for paper and compostable plastic bags?? ‘To help them out’. HUH? Isn’t what we pay for products supposed to include all upkeep for the stores’ operations? The reason why a lot of stores have such jacked up prices? Oh yeah, poor corporations, we have to ‘help them’ with the cost of providing US with a means of carrying THEIR products that we paid for out of their stores. Give me a break.