Seattle is poised to join the ranks of San Francisco and Ireland by imposing restrictions on the use of disposable shopping bags. The City Council vote on the proposal—expected to pass by a wide margin—will occur this summer and would take effect at the start of 2009. While Ireland and San Francisco have banned plastic bags outright, Seattle's proposal will instead impose a twenty-cent fee on every paper or plastic bag used by consumers at the point of sale. (The proposal also bans styrofoam food containers.)
To Tundrasea, For accuracy's sake, this article does not say that "plastic will never degrade," as you have written. Rather, the article states that plastic "will never biodegrade...." The difference between photodegradation (which plastic undergoes) and biodegradation is an important distinction and the link below highlights why. http://www.popsci.com/environment/article/2008-04/why-trashing-oceans-more-dangerous-we-imagined
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