Politics & Government

As Sonoma County Mulls Plastic Bag Ban, Court Upholds SF Ban Law

A law banning plastic bags in San Francisco was challenged by a manufacturers' group. Local governments are weighing bans.

A state appeals court has upheld a San Francisco law banning the use of non-compostable plastic bags at checkout stands in retail stores and grocery markets.

The 2012 law, an expansion of an earlier measure, prohibits most single-use plastic checkout bags and requires stores to charge 10 cents for paper or compostable plastic bags.

The ordinance was upheld Tuesday by a three-judge panel of the state Court of Appeal in San Francisco. The court ruled on a challenge by the Los-Angeles-based Save the Plastic Bag Coalition, a manufacturers' association that has been battling plastic bag laws around the state.

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Among other arguments, the coalition claims paper bags are a greater burden to the environment than their plastic counterparts.

Supporters of the bans contend the laws reduce litter, waste, pollution of waterways and harm to wildlife.

Find out what's happening in Sonoma Valleywith free, real-time updates from Patch.

About 50 California cities and counties have versions of plastic bag bans. In the Bay Area, they include Alameda, Marin, Santa Clara and Santa Cruz counties, San Jose and more than a dozen cities in San Mateo County.

Rohnert Park, Petaluma and other cities in Sonoma County are considering a similar plastic bag ban, and may take either a city-by-city approach or a county-wide ordinance.

Rohnert Park's City Council was expected to take up discussion of the plastic bag ban at last Tuesday night's meeting, but did not, according to The Community Voice.

In upholding the San Francisco law, the appeals court cited decisions by the California Supreme Court in 2011 and by a different appeals court panel in October that affirmed laws in Manhattan Beach and Marin County.

The court rejected the coalition's arguments that San Francisco should have conducted an environmental impact study of its law and that the measure conflicted with state regulation of retail stores.

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