Mustapha
Senior Member
I keep a plastic bag in my back pocket, always there...
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I support the 5c bag charge. I wish in fact that we had Germany's law, which is (as I understand it) you can unpack whatever you buy at the store if you like, and the store has to bear the cost of getting rid of the excess packaging. Quite a clever way to put pressure on those manufacturing products to get pressure from someone they actually will listen to (the retailers) to minimize their packaging.
And it makes sense - if you have something, that because of its fragility or size, that requires packaging, you'll be glad of it. If the packaging is superfluous, then leave it behind at the store. Separates the wheat from the chaff.
5c bags are only the beginning.
If they are charging 5$ for their 'eco' canvass bags, you could buy 500 regular bags before you break even. Somehow I doubt that the average eco bag lasts 500 uses before attrition kills it. So, providing recycled alternatives would be an improvement over trying to corral shoppers into more expensive bags.
I support the 5c bag charge. I wish in fact that we had Germany's law, which is (as I understand it) you can unpack whatever you buy at the store if you like, and the store has to bear the cost of getting rid of the excess packaging. Quite a clever way to put pressure on those manufacturing products to get pressure from someone they actually will listen to (the retailers) to minimize their packaging.
And it makes sense - if you have something, that because of its fragility or size, that requires packaging, you'll be glad of it. If the packaging is superfluous, then leave it behind at the store. Separates the wheat from the chaff.
5c bags are only the beginning.
100. You'd be surprised how strong those cloth bags are. I've been using them for a year or so and they're as good as new. Unless they're being dragged along the pavement there's no reason they shouldn't last years.If they are charging 5$ for their 'eco' canvass bags, you could buy 500 regular bags before you break even. Somehow I doubt that the average eco bag lasts 500 uses before attrition kills it. So, providing recycled alternatives would be an improvement over trying to corral shoppers into more expensive bags.
Good news. Wasteful packaging is a lot worse than wasteful bags, imo. And a lot harder to avoid.When the new City of Toronto Act was enacted, City officials mused openly about instituting such a system here in Toronto. I think it got bogged down in practical considerations (e.g. absent a change to provincial law, a product without its packaging may not be returnable, etc.). There were recently a spate of articles in the media respecting ongoing internal discussions at the provincial level intended achieve the same objectives. We should start hearing about new packaging rules sometime soon.
Anything that gets rid of clam shell packaging is a good thing in my books.
Yeah, I found that annoying as well. Those plastic LCBO bags were great - I got a lot of mileage out of them!When I wanted a 5¢ plastic bag, they didn't have any available anymore. Bring back the plastic bags at the LCBO! I'll still pay the 5¢, but bring them back.
we're probably going to be using the same amount of plastic.
Has anyone else noticed better quality and larger plastic bags as a result of this 5 cent charge? Metro now uses a larger and stronger bag, and Canadian Tire also uses better bags.
whether you get free bags (before) or buy garbage bags (after), yes, you still use pretty much the same amount of plastic.
There's no way that every shopping bag purchased was then used for garbage, etc. There are billions produced every year in Canada. Many of them are landfilled (not as bags, just balled up and thrown in the trash), and many more littered, comprising a large part of the plastic floating around in the oceans.