(A)
The purpose of this chapter is to protect the health, safety and welfare of the public and of the environment by reducing the use of single-use plastic products, while encouraging product design that minimizes negative impacts on human health and the environment at every stage of the product's lifecycle.
(B)
The County of Santa Cruz has an obligation to protect the environment, the economy, and public health. As of the date of adoption of the ordinance codified in this chapter, the County of Santa Cruz has an official zero waste goal, which is to be reached by waste reduction, reuse, recycling, and composting. The County of Santa Cruz makes the following findings:
(1)
The County of Santa Cruz is situated at the edge of the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. Plastics which are littered or otherwise deposited improperly in the County can find their way into the Monterey Bay where they can negatively impact the marine environment and sea life.
(2)
As litter, plastic is highly durable, persisting and detracting from the appearance of an area longer than other types of litter. There is a prevalence of plastic 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.
(3)
Plastic can take hundreds or even thousands of years to break down in the environment. It is not just the accumulation of plastics that harms the environment—it is also the fragments and toxins released during photo-decomposition that pollute our soil and water.
(4)
Studies by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health and the National Institute of Environmental Health have found numerous health risks from routine use of plastics. People are exposed to chemicals from plastic multiple times per day through the air, dust, water, food and use of consumer products.
(5)
Plastic buried deep in landfills can leach harmful chemicals that spread into groundwater.
(6)
Chemicals present in plastics which leach out into the environment have been shown to affect reproduction and development in animals. Studies show direct links between exposure and adverse health outcomes.
(7)
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Toxics Release Inventory found that significant releases of toxic chemicals from plastics into the environment include trichloroethane, acetone, methylene chloride, methyl ethyl ketone, styrene, toluene and benzene.
(8)
According to the EPA, plastics make up more than 12 percent of the municipal solid waste stream, a dramatic increase from 1960, when plastics were less than one percent of the waste stream.
(9)
Only about eight percent of plastic used in the U.S. is recycled.
(10)
The plastics industry rarely uses recycled plastics in the vast majority of their products.
(11)
Most plastics which are recycled are "downcycled" into lower-grade, single-use products which cannot be recycled in turn.
(12)
As much as one-third of plastics recycled in the U.S. was previously sent to China for processing. The recent ban on most recycled commodities by China has left the U.S. with 1.4 million tons of plastic each year that is struggling to find an outlet. This amount is expected to increase.
(13)
After decades of progress in recycling, the recycling rate in the State of California is going down for the first time.
(14)
Many jurisdictions, including the City of Santa Cruz, have begun landfilling plastic due to the difficulty of recycling it.
(15)
Billions of tiny bottles of shampoo, lotion and other products are thrown away every year by hotels and motels. Many chains, including Marriott and Hilton, have already begun switching to wall-mounted dispensers to reduce waste and be more sustainable.
(16)
Santa Cruz County has been a pioneer in the reduction of plastic pollution, being among the first to adopt bans on plastic bags, Styrofoam, plastic straws and other nonrecyclable items.
(17)
Despite these efforts, plastic debris continues to be a growing problem in the public spaces of the County, requiring further action to protect public health and the environment.
(Ord. 5287 § 1, 2018)