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Cities Look to Malibu as Leader in Effort
to Ban Foam
BYHANSLAETZ
When the Malibu City Council banned foam
carry-out containers and cups last year, more than a few
eyes rolled in nearby cities, and in the restaurant trade. The
groundbreaking ban was viewed by food industry experts, and
some local shopkeepers, as impractical.
But now, as Malibu takes its first belated
steps toward enforcing the ban, the groundbreaking rules
are being looked at by other nearby cities. Santa Monica and
Calabasas are among the municipalities around the country that
have begun the steps to ban the familiar white, Styrofoam-like
containers.
A shortage of staff has kept Malibu from
enforcing the ordinance until now, said Jennifer Voccola, the
Public Works Department’s environmental programs
coordinator. Letters will be going out soon, she said, telling
business owners that the time to comply is on the next order of
disposable items.
But that’s not soon enough for one
small business owner, who complains that the city’s
ordinance is being obeyed by small locally-owned stores but is
ignored by large chain operations. Diana Nielsen, owner of
Malibu Yogurt, says she spent about $30,000 over 12 months to
comply with the law.
“I complied immediately because
that’s what you do,” she said. “So did Malibu
Seafood, Coogie’s and that wonderful little Malibu Mutt
hot dog stand.
“But if you go to
McDonald’s, you get foam. At Ralph’s, if you
buy a soda from the deli, foam. At Subway, the drinks are in
foam,” she said. “Malibu is being horribly
unfair.”
Voccola said the lack of staff to enforce
the ordinance will be a nonissue once outside contractors, who
currently conduct annual stormwater runoff inspections, are
trained to also enforce the anti-foam ordinance.
“We’ll start with the letter,
and tell people they have to start complying, but we’ll
hold off until they do their next buying cycle,” she
said. Voccola said city staff wants to work cooperatively with
businesses and the Chamber of Commerce to create an entire
green-oriented plan for businesses.
Down the beach in Santa Monica, the city
council is looking at enacting Malibu’s ban, with an eye
to extending it to cover all non-recyclable, disposable goods.
“We were looking at the City of
Malibu’s ordinance, and when I saw that we were falling
behind in Santa Monica, I said, ‘Let’s look at
what’s happening up in Malibu’,” said Santa
Monica City Councilman Kevin McKeown, who authored the bay
city’s ordinance.
“At first, we got resistance from all
the predicable places. But now the businesses are talking to
their suppliers, and seeing there are practical, cost-effective
alternatives,” he said. “Now, the only people who
are opposed are the people who manufacture the foam products
themselves.”
Calabasas is also looking at a similar
ordinance. Voccola has been asked to address the city council
there to explain Malibu’s successes—and
delays—in banning the foam cups and boxes.
Even facilities owned by the City of Malibu
are being placed under scrutiny, including the tiny snack shack
at the Bluffs Park little league field. Councilmember Pamela
Conley Ulich asked city parks director Robert Stallings to
ensure that no Styrofoam-style cups are used at the
“sugar shack.”
The ordinance took effect 15 months
ago, and those companies that applied for an emergency
exemption saw their official permission to continue using foam
expire three months ago, Voccola said. “The time has come
for the rules to be enforced.”
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