The Board of Supervisors finds and declares:
(A)
The County of Santa Cruz has a duty to protect the natural environment, our economy, and the health of its citizens.
(B)
Products made from expanded polystyrene foam (commonly called styrofoam) are not biodegradable, returnable or recyclable. Polystyrene foam easily breaks up into smaller pieces and, because it is lightweight, is carried by the wind even when it has been disposed of properly.
(C)
As litter, polystyrene foam is highly durable, persisting and detracting from the appearance of an area longer than any other type of litter. There is a prevalence of polystyrene foam debris littering our parks and public places, streets and roads, waterways, storm drains and beaches. This litter ultimately floats, or is blown, into the Monterey Bay. This litter exists at a financial cost to residents and an environmental cost to our natural resources.
(D)
The County of Santa Cruz is situated at the edge of the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Marine animals and birds often confuse polystyrene foam pieces as a food source, which, when ingested, can impact the digestive track which often leads to death.
(E)
The U.S. EPA has stated that the physical properties of polystyrene foam are such that "the material can have serious impacts on human health, wildlife, the aquatic environment and the economy." According to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, there is medical evidence to suggest that styrene, a primary component of polystyrene foam, leaches from polystyrene foam containers into food and drink. The general public, especially the non-English speaking community, is not typically warned of any potential hazard from styrene. A 1986 EPA study detected styrene in the fat tissue of every man, woman and child tested.
(F)
Discarded polystyrene constitutes a significant portion of the County of Santa Cruz waste stream. Laws, policies and regulations pertaining to this material, which is difficult to recycle, have become a vital component in the efforts to reduce the amount of disposed waste.
(G)
It is not economically feasible to recycle most polystyrene in Santa Cruz County. Eliminating the use of polystyrene foam and other noncompostable and nonrecyclable items will maximize the operating life of our landfills and will lessen the economic and environmental costs of waste management for businesses and citizens of Santa Cruz County.
(H)
Food waste, including food related packaging, makes up more than 30 percent of the County of Santa Cruz waste stream, and the County of Santa Cruz has adopted a policy and program goal of establishing municipal level composting to manage this portion of the waste stream. Countywide composting will help the County to achieve its zero waste goal, including 75 percent landfill diversion by the year 2010. If polystyrene foam is found within compost feedstock, the compost is rendered unmarketable and unusable because the application of such compost degrades the soil.
(I)
At the present time, over 50 businesses in the County of Santa Cruz engage in organics recycling, and it has been demonstrated that the use of biodegradable or compostable food service ware can reduce waste disposal costs when the products are taken to composting facilities as part of an organics recycling program rather than disposed in a landfill. Compost produced from biodegradable products can be used as a soil amendment for farms, landscaping and gardens, thereby moving towards a healthier zero waste system.
(J)
Biodegradable/compostable and recyclable take-out food packaging such as cups, plates, hinge containers, cutlery and straws are made from organic materials such as paper, sugarcane stalk, corn waste and potato starch. These products are available locally and are competitively priced.
(K)
According to local environmental organizations, despite the passage of the County's environmentally acceptable packaging materials ordinance in 2008, polystyrene foam is still one of the most abundant types of litter found during beach cleanups.
(L)
According to the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle), polystyrene's overall environmental impacts were the second highest of any product, behind only aluminum.
(M)
Styrene is a suspected carcinogen and neurotoxin, which potentially threatens human health.
(N)
Alternative products exist for almost all uses of polystyrene foam.
(O)
Due to these concerns nearly 100 cities have banned polystyrene foam food service ware including several California cities, and many local businesses and several national corporations have successfully replaced polystyrene foam and other nonbiodegradable food service ware with affordable, safe, biodegradable products.
(P)
Restricting the use of polystyrene foam products will further protect the public health and safety of the residents of the County of Santa Cruz, the County's natural environment, waterways and wildlife, would advance the County's goal of limiting greenhouse gas impacts, and contribute toward the County's goal of zero waste.
(Ord. 4920 § 2, 2008; Ord. 5122 § 2, 2012)