Posted: 02/23/2015 in the Huffington Post By Summer Ballentine
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — A
Missouri lawmaker who also leads an association of grocery stores is trying to
stop cities and towns in the state from restricting the use of plastic bags,
bucking a national trend toward banning their use to help the environment.
The move comes as the city of
Columbia, the home of the University of Missouri, considers a ban that would
prevent grocery stores from offering plastic bags and would impose a 10-cent
charge on paper bags.
Legislation by a state
representative, who also serves as a board member of the Missouri Grocers
Association, would stop that. A House panel is set to vote on the bill Tuesday.
Environmental activists have
successfully pushed plastic bag bans in cities across the U.S., including
Chicago, Seattle and Austin, Texas. Hawaii is also on track to have a de facto
statewide ban, with all counties approving prohibitions.
California in September became the
first state to enact a ban on single-use plastic bags in an effort to cut down
on litter and protect marine life, although opponents of the ban have submitted
signatures to the secretary of state's office to have a statewide vote on the
ban.
Republican state Rep. Dan Shaul of
Imperial, who sponsored the Missouri legislation, said state and local bans go
too far.
Shaul, who also is state director of
the Missouri Grocers Association, said it should be up to grocery stores and
consumers to choose what bags they use.
He said sponsoring the bill while
serving in the association is not a conflict of interest. The association's
website says it, "monitors industry related bills and is actively walking
the halls" of the state Capitol to represent members.
"It doesn't affect the
organization, it affects the consumer, it affects the industry," Shaul
said. "I mean sure, it could be a conflict if you want it to be. I don't
think it is."
University of Missouri School of Law
professor Richard Reuben said legally it may not be a conflict of interest.
"But from a standpoint of
public perception it makes him look pretty bad," Reuben said. Missouri has
relatively loose ethics laws for legislators compared to many other states, and
lawmakers are considering measures to tighten them this session.
So far Florida is the only state
that has halted local efforts to regulate the use of plastic bags, according to
the National Conference of State Legislatures. Similar efforts in 2013 failed
in Texas.
At issue is local control, said
Columbia City Councilman Ian Thomas, who is in favor of a ban on plastic bags
but said it might take time to gain more community support.
"The state ban on city bans is
an enormous overreach," Thomas said. "It's important for individual
cities that maybe have a different political outlook or a more progressive
tendency to be able to approve this kind of legislation."
___
Plastic bag bill is HB 722.
___
Online:
House: http://www.house.mo.gov
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