Bills

AB 2236: Solid waste: recycled paper bags: standards: carryout bag prohibition.

  • Session Year: 2023-2024
  • House: Assembly

Current Status:

Failed

(2024-08-29: Assembly Rule 77 suspended.)

Introduced

First Committee Review

First Chamber

Second Committee Review

Second Chamber

Enacted

Version:

Existing law prohibits a store, as defined, from providing a single-use carryout bag, as defined, bag to a customer, customer at the point of sale, with specified exceptions, including an exemption for bags used to contain unwrapped food. Existing law requires a reusable grocery bag sold by a store to a customer at the point of sale to defines a single-use carryout bag as a bag made of plastic, paper, or other material that is provided by a store to a customer at the point of sale and that is not a recycled paper bag or a reusable grocery bag that meets specified requirements, including that the bag be made by a certified reusable grocery bag producer and to meet meets specified requirements with regard to the bags durability, material, labeling, heavy metal content, and, with regard to reusable grocery bags made from plastic film, recycled material content. Existing law prohibits a producer of reusable grocery bags made from plastic film from selling or distributing those bags unless the producer is certified by a third-party certification entity, and provides proof of that certification and a certification fee to the department, Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery, as specified. Existing law also prohibits a store from selling or distributing a recycled paper bag at the point of sale unless the store makes that bag available for purchase for not less than $0.10. Existing law defines recycled paper bag, in part, as a paper carryout bag that contains a minimum of 40% postconsumer recycled materials, except as provided, and meets other requirements. Existing law allows a retail establishment to voluntarily comply with these requirements, if the retail establishment provides the department with irrevocable notice.

This bill would, commencing January 1, 2026, revise and recast those provisions to, among other things, revise the single-use carryout bag recast the definition of a single-use carryout bag to a carryout bag, and would revise the definition to mean a bag made of plastic, paper, or other material that is provided by a store to a customer at the point of sale for the purpose of carrying purchased goods and that is not a recycled paper bag. The bill would create a carryout bag exception to include a bag provided to a customer before the customer reaches the point of sale, that is designed to protect a purchased item from damaging or contaminating other purchased items in a checkout bag, or to contain an unwrapped food item, as specified. The bill would revise the definition of recycled paper bag to require it be made from a minimum of 50% postconsumer recycled materials on and after January 1, 2028, without exception. The bill would also prohibit a store from providing, distributing, or selling a carryout bag to a customer at the point of sale, except as provided. The bill would also repeal the provisions relating to standards for and the certification of reusable grocery bags, and would repeal a provision relating to certain obsolete at-store recycling program requirements. The bill would make related legislative findings and declarations and would make related conforming changes.

Discussed in Hearing

Senate Floor52SEC
Aug 28, 2024

Senate Floor

Senate Floor15MIN
Aug 28, 2024

Senate Floor

Senate Standing Committee on Appropriations1MIN
Aug 5, 2024

Senate Standing Committee on Appropriations

Senate Standing Committee on Environmental Quality24MIN
Jul 3, 2024

Senate Standing Committee on Environmental Quality

Assembly Floor3MIN
May 21, 2024

Assembly Floor

View Older Hearings

News Coverage:

AB 2236: Solid waste: recycled paper bags: standards: carryout bag prohibition. | Digital Democracy