ACTION ALERT: There are a number of very good amendments filed to the bad polystyrene (foam) bill- HB7007! Some of the amendments deal with polystyrene foam foodware and others deal with single-use plastic bags. This bill will be voted on by the full House Tuesday at 4pm- here's how you can help!
Plastic Bags:
Representative Richardson has filed a critically important amendment on the plastic bag preemption! It gives the Legislature until January 1st, 2017 to adopt rules for the regulation of single-use plastic bags. If the Legislature fails to do so, the preemption would be lifted.
Polystyrene Foam Foodware:
Representative Richardson and Representative Miller have also filed amendments to the proposed ban on local regulation of polystyrene.
- Representative Miller's amendment (712405) gives local governments until April 2016 to pass any polystyrene ordinances (instead of the original deadline of January 1st, 2016- which has already passed!). Click here to read the amendment.
- Representative Richardson's amendment (111591) goes even further and extends the deadline for the preemption until January 1st, 2017. Click here to read the amendment.
- Representative Richardson's other amendment (510403) provides an exemption for coastal communities from the preemption of polystyrene- meaning that any communities that touch the Gulf, Atlantic or a Bay would still be able to regulate or ban polystyrene foam foodware. Click here to read the amendment.
We need you to call your House member ASAP- the vote is Tuesday at 4pm! Click here to find your House member!
- Support ALL of Representative Richardson's amendments: delay implementation of the polystyrene preemption until January 1st, 2017, provide an exemption of coastal communities, and require the state to make a comprehensive statewide plan to deal with single-use plastic bags.
- Coastal communities are dependent on clean and healthy beaches.
- Because of its lightweight nature, foam containers frequently blow out of trashcans and garbage trucks, where they make their way to storm drains, retention ponds, waterways and our beaches.
- Polystyrene foam foodware is rarely recycled, frequently littered and never biodegrades.
Some communities have been working on foam ordinances for months and are ready to implement those policies. Give them the opportunity to protect their local communities and waterways! For the last six years, the Legislature has failed to take action on the DEP's
recommendations on plastic bags
-
. Require the Legislature to create a statewide policy to regulate single-use plastic bags, and if the Legislature fails to do so- give that authority back to our local communities!