Key Senate Cmte Takes Action to Eliminate Polystyrene To-Go Food Containers

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Bill Must Pass Full Senate, House Cmte and Full House Before Session Ends May 3rd

CoPIRG

On Earth Day, Senators Mike Foote, Rhonda Fields and Lois Court voted to pass SB19-243 out of Colorado’s Senate State, Veterans and Military Affairs Committee and onto the full Senate. SB19-243 would eliminate the use of to-go food containers made of polystyrene, commonly known as Styrofoam. Senators Jerry Sonnenberg and Vicki Marble voted against the bill. 

The bill is sponsored by Senators Dominick Moreno and Mike Foote, and Representatives Jonathan Singer and Lisa Cutter. 

Polystyrene is a particularly harmful form of plastic pollution. It is lightweight so it can float down rivers or get blown hundreds of miles through the air. It breaks into smaller pieces, called microplastics, which absorb toxic pollution in the environment and are ingested by wildlife including fish, reptiles, mammals, birds and earthworms. Ultimately, polystyrene takes 500 or more years to completely break down in the environment, polluting Colorado for centuries. 

“Nothing we use once to transport a drink or food should be allowed to pollute our state for hundreds of years,” said Danny Katz, director of the consumer advocacy group CoPIRG. “This Earth Day, Senators Foote, Court, and Fields moved a bill forward to eliminate one of the most harmful and unnecessary forms of plastic pollution by voting yes on SB19-243.”  

Plastic pollution litters our communities, undermines recycling efforts, pollutes our waterways, harms wildlife, and endangers our health, and polystyrene foam cups and plates are a major contributor. Coloradans toss an estimated 1 million foam cups away every day. As a headwaters state, some of that lightweight foam is carried downstream. In the ocean, polystyrene foam is the most frequently observed plastic litter, and has been found in remote corners of the Arctic. 

Polystyrene is also extremely difficult to recycle. It is easily crushed and shredded, mistaken for paper, missed by manual sorters, and contaminates other parts of the waste stream harming and driving up the cost of other recycling efforts.

Numerous communities and companies have phased out polystyrene cups and containers including 119 cities in California, New York City, Montgomery County, MD. Major companies like McDonalds have also taken action and a representative from McDonalds testified in favor of SB19-243. The state of Maryland just passed a similar statewide polystyrene ban to SB19-243 that will go into effect in 2020. 

In places where polystyrene has been eliminated, it has had a real impact. From 2008 to 2012, after the California cities of Santa Cruz and Pacific Grove banned polystyrene foam food ware, polystyrene litter on local beaches decreased by as much as 71 percent. 

“Coloradans should not have to accept that the cost of taking a smoothie to go or ordering food to our home means we have to use a container that will last past the year 2519 – littering our communities, floating in our waterways, harming our wildlife and health, and driving up the cost of our recycling efforts. Centuries of negative impacts is not worth it. We do not need it. We must eliminate polystyrene containers today,” said Katz.