PRESS RELEASE
BELMONT PLASTIC BAG BAN
Plastic Bag Ban Proposed in Belmont
Following the The Board of Selectmen’s unanimous vote to put an article on the warrant prohibiting single-use plastic bags at the check-out line, a group who advocated for the ban is holding a forum on Tuesday, March 27 from 7-8:30 p.m. in the Assembly Room of the library. Speakers will include Belmont organizers as well as environmental activists. Citizens are welcome to attend, hear details of the proposed bylaw, and ask questions.
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The Belmont Bag Ban Group is hoping Belmont will join the 61 towns and cities in the Commonwealth and hundreds across the country and world that approved similar bans. One of the organizers, Terese Hammerle, is excited that Belmont is poised to be part of a growing list of districts moving towards a more environmentally sustainable future.
“Simple alternatives such as reusable shopping bags and biodegradable single-use shopping
bags are available everywhere and The Belmont Bag Group is working to ensure that
anyone who needs reusable bags has access to them,” Hammerle says.
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Paper bags, which biodegrade naturally, will still be available at no cost to the customer, Hammerle notes.
“Several stores in Belmont are already prepared because they operate in communities in which a plastic bag ban is in effect,” she states.
One trillion single-use plastic bags are used worldwide each year, harming wildlife and littering
our environment, making up the third largest type of litter from land-based sources found on
U.S. coasts. While plastic bags are convenient and cheap, the Sierra Club cautions the
environmental expense far exceeds the cost retailers pay to provide them. The flimsy material
harms wildlife as they are often mistaken for food in our waterways and are sometimes used as
nesting materials.
“Take a walk around town and see the bags caught in tree branches and
trapped on sewer grates; they are so aerodynamic that even when properly disposed of, they
blow away,” says organizer Mark Carthy. “And it takes an estimated 200 + years for plastic to photodegrade.”
“The forum will provide a good opportunity to hear from our community and provide educational materials. We’ll also have a number of items to raffle that encourage sustainability,” adds Linda Levin-Scherz, another organizer.
Residents are encouraged to bring extra lifetime bags that the Bag Ban Group will launder and distribute to those who might find purchasing a bag a burden.
If you would like more information please contact:
Terese Hammerle at teresehammerle@me.com
Mark Carthy at mpcarthy@outlook.com
Linda Levin-Scherz at llevinscherz@gmail.com