plastic bag ban

NJ Plastic Bag Ban Now in Effect: What You Need to Know

As of May 4, 2022, all grocery stores over 2,500 square feet are banned from giving out both the plastic and paper bags that have been staples at checkouts for decades. Styrofoam containers, like the ones used for take-out food, are also banned

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NBC10’s Miguel Martinez-Valle was at Cousin’s Supermarket in Camden Wednesday on the first day of New Jersey’s plastic bag ban. Cousin’s was selling reusable bags for cheap, while Wawa was giving them away. Shoppers still have questions about how it all works.

Paper or plastic? The answer to that question is neither.

That's because the state's plastic bag ban began Wednesday, and it goes beyond those single-use plastic bags at the grocery checkout.

All grocery stores over 2,500 square feet are banned from giving out both the plastic and paper bags that have been staples at checkouts for decades. Styrofoam containers, like the ones used for take-out food, were also banned as the nation's strictest plastics laws went into effect.

The ban applies to stores and restaurants, not consumers, who will still be able to buy plastic baggies, garbage bags and the like.

Plastic straws already became by request only last November.

New Jersey breaks down the new rules on its Get Past Plastic site.

Clean Ocean Action has been fighting for decades to ban the plastics that, lightweight as they are, amount to millions of pounds of trash every year, winding up in oceans and landfills without breaking down.

Stew Leonards' stores, like the one in Paramus, have been using environmentally friendly paper bags for thirty years, but next week, those too will be no more.

"You can still use it for meats, produce. I think it's a great way to take care of the environment, so New Jersey is trying to lead the charge on this and other states will follow soon," said the store's manager, Dane Morris.

The store has spent months prepping its shoppers for the change, offering half price reusable bags for the weeks leading up to and following the switch.

"We tell everyone because you don't want them to be unprepared next week — pack the stuff in the cart and take it out to their car," said cashier Vinny Serra. "We all tell them when the ban starts, got the sign right here, sign outside the store."

Ellie Smart is a professional cliff diver who was shocked by the plastic garbage she encountered on otherwise spectacular beaches around the world. After getting a plastic bag caught on her ankle while diving in Greece, she formed the organization Clean Cliffs, which now recruits dozens of volunteers to clean beaches and other sites around the world and raise awareness of the problem.

Some supermarkets may offer shopper reusable bags at affordable prices, like Cousin's in Camden.

It will certainly take some getting used to, but when shoppers go inside, be prepared to BYOB (Bring Your Own Bag, that is) because the cashier won’t have a bag to put groceries into.

Those who wish to continue using their own paper or plastic bags can do so if they bring them on their own, but the grocery stores themselves will not be able to provide them any longer.

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