Activists ask city to snuff out Styrofoam
June Casagrande
A Styrofoam coffee cup used today could plague future generations for
500 years, which is why local environmentalists have set their sights
on reducing it.
The city’s Coastal/Bay Water Quality Citizens Advisory Committee
has sent an ordinance to the City Council that would ban the use of
Styrofoam by city government, by vendors at city-sponsored events, by
charter vessels and by all events that receive a special event permit
in the city. The measure, modeled after a resolution adopted by San
Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Laguna Beach and Huntington Beach, is
expected to come before the council sometime next month, Assistant
City Manager Dave Kiff said.
“Styrofoam makes up a significant portion of trash that does not
biodegrade and ends up being both a visual and environmental blight
in the upper bay and along the beaches,” Kiff said.
Styrofoam is a trade name for poly styrene, the lightweight,
usually white substance used to make cups, to-go containers, ice
chests and other disposable containers, especially ones that hold hot
or cold substances. Some studies have shown that the substance takes
about 500 years to break down in the environment. In the meantime,
Earth Resource Foundation spokeswoman Stephanie Barger said, small
and large pieces of Styrofoam are building up in places like the
Santa Ana River jetty.
“You can sit working in a 5-foot by 5-foot space all day at the
Santa Ana River and not make a dent in picking up all the Styrofoam
there,” Barger said.
It plagues not just the natural beauty of local waterways, but it
also poses a significant threat to wildlife and possibly even humans,
she said. Animals such as fish, birds and turtles eat pieces of the
foam. Sometimes they end up malnourished because, while they’re
getting no nutrients from the foam, they feel full so they don’t eat
nourishing food, Barger said. When fish eat tiny pieces of the foam
it poses a danger to people who eat the fish and accumulate the
synthetic substance in their bodies.
The goal of the proposed ordinance is to reduce local government’s
contribution to this pollution problem by using ceramic mugs or
recyclable products instead of Styrofoam products.
“Hopefully, then you’ve got government setting an example for
businesses and individuals,” Barger said.
Councilman Steve Rosansky, who sits on the committee, said he
supports the measure.
“It sets the bar a little higher, and that’s a good thing,”
Rosansky said.
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