No it's not.If you had some environmental consciousness you would understand that plastic bags are very bad for the environment. The average life of a plastic bag is no more than 20 minutes and takes decades (if not centuries) to decompose. And 3¢ is a joke. It should definitely be higher. I say 1$ would be perfect because then people will buy reusable bags instead. See this link : http://www.reusethisbag.com/25-reasons-to-go-reusable.asp
Question: What do most people do with plastic grocery bags? I think most, like me, use them to line our under the sink garbage bins. So without those grocery store bags what happens? You buy "under the sink" plastic name brand trash bags to line with. So where is the savings? You can't use paper bags for obvious reasons.
So are we really saving anything? Are people just buying trash more trash bags? I think this movement is largely for show and has yielded minor plastic savings at best.
Here in Quebec, Canada, some grocery stores tax 5¢ for each plastic bag, though it's up to them. People here tend to bring reusable bags which are a lot more durable and contain more stuff.
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 30.9 ms ] threadQuestion: What do most people do with plastic grocery bags? I think most, like me, use them to line our under the sink garbage bins. So without those grocery store bags what happens? You buy "under the sink" plastic name brand trash bags to line with. So where is the savings? You can't use paper bags for obvious reasons.
So are we really saving anything? Are people just buying trash more trash bags? I think this movement is largely for show and has yielded minor plastic savings at best.