Growing Edges
alexa lopezArchive for environment
25 Years of Plastic
I worked as a courtesy clerk in 1985 when plastic grocery bags came on the scene.
No self-respecting courtesy clerk liked them; I hated those bags; they were so difficult to work with. Plastic bags didn’t have nice, rectangular bases and thick paper walls. The innovative plastic grocery bag really messed up my grocery-bagging rhythm…so much so that I began to loathe the job I very much enjoyed for over a year.
Yes, I really did enjoy that job…call me weird.
Brown paper bags were ideal for organizing the groceries as they came down the grocery checker’s conveyor belt. Now I suddenly had to give customers a choice: “Would you like paper, or plastic?” I should have asked what I really meant: “Would you like your groceries bagged quickly and neatly, or clumsily and disorderly?” Or better yet, “Do you want your groceries to remain bagged until you get home, or were you hoping to round them up off your car floor and re-bag them so you can get them into your house?”
Without the foresight to reason that these bags would become an environmental headache, my disdain for them was purely about the potential mess each one would contain. Not even the convenience of the handles won me over.
I left that job for one at the mall.
Within a couple of years it was no longer the industry standard to offer the choice to the customer; the customer had to ask for paper bags specifically or leave with the plastic ones.
Everything has changed again and most stores have their own versions of the reusable shopping bag which offers the awesome practicality of rectangular space for packing AND handles for carrying. Yay!
In an effort to reduce the number of plastic bags spending eternity in landfills, cities across the country are considering per-bag charges for customers who choose them. Yay again!
Each time I see the same plastic bag in the ditch along I-5 , obviously caught on something because the wind doesn’t move it along, I feel doubly irritated…first at the unsightly litter, then at the reminder that our global addiction to convenience always costs far too much as to be worthwhile.
The reusable bags I bought have paid themselves off: not only do I not pay for using the stores’ plastic bags, I get a 5¢ “rebate” for each reusable bag I use on my grocery orders.
I can’t think of any reason to buck this new trend. I hope the plastic grocery bag goes the way of the 8-track tape.
© Alexa Lopez, 2009
Conflicted
I’m conflicted about whether renewing our annual membership with the Sierra Club is a wise thing to do, environmentally speaking.
Admittedly, my understanding about all things fiscal is limited, so I’m going only on what I see.
What I have seen during the year of membership is a lot of paper; the amount of mail I receive from the Sierra Club in my “snail mail” box irritates me. I receive much more paper mail than email from them and their affiliates.
It just seems to me that an organization that has my email address — which it does — would do less postal mailing and more electronic mailing. It dawned on me one day as I was putting junk mail through my paper shredder that much of my junk mail comes from the Sierra Club and from other like agencies who’ve gleaned my name from their membership roster.
So, I pondered this as I fed my shredder: Is my annual membership to help an environmental cause counterproductive if it means more paper mail? What is the cost to the environment when more paper — not less — ends up in the recycle bin? I mean, “Yea! At least it’s getting recycled and not thrown into the landfills.” But I remain conflicted…
What are the energy costs and what is the effect on the environment when the paper mailings are printed and processed? Or transported and delivered via the USPS? Or when they go through the recycling process? Out of concern for my family’s contribution to environmental health, I find myself thinking I’d rather spend my annual membership fee in a way that will, though micro-cosmically, directly benefit the Earth my children will inherit.
I may one day be okay with being a member whose membership renewal fee only helps to fund the fundraising effort. Right now, I’m not liking that idea so much.
© Alexa Lopez 2008


