At a meeting tonight, the Edmonds city council will discuss its plans to prohibit plastic bags in retail and other commercial outlets in the city. The council's community development committee will consider the proposal later this month, and, on April 28, the council will hold a public comment hearing.
The move appears to be inspired by the Seattle city council’s vote last June to slap a 20-cent tax on plastic bags. But the plastic-bag lobby, the American Chemistry Council, swiftly gathered petition signatures—somewhat disingenuously—to put Seattle’s bag tax up for a referendum. The measure is on the primary ballot in August.
If Seattle's experience serves as a lesson, the same coalition of pro-plastic advocates will undoubtedly attempt to repeal Edmonds’s bag ban if it passes—particularly because this would be a ban, not just a tax. And the process will be far easier in Edmonds. Seattle required 14,374 signatures to qualify the bag-tax vote for the ballot; however, according to Edmonds City Clerk Sandy Chase, an initiative in Edmonds requires only 15 percent of registered voters to sign the petition to qualify for the ballot. The city has 26,746 registered voters; that's 4,012 signatures. Considering the American Chemistry Council spent more than $238,000 in Seattle, the plastic bag lovers will surely spend what it takes to gather the relatively few signatures it takes to challenge a bag ban in Edmonds.
The Edmonds council appears undaunted by the opposition. In February, the council “voted on, and approved unanimously" plans to pursue a plastic-bag ban.
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