A Tax We Hope No One Will Pay!

Supriya07/Shutterstock

Supriya07/Shutterstock

Editor’s note: Since the goal of the Oak Park single-use bag fee is to dramatically reduce the use of both paper and plastic single-use bags, we hope it is one that will rarely be applied.  Many are already using reusable bags, and plans are underway to ensure that those who need reusable bags will receive them when the single-use bag ordinance goes into effect.

By Jodi Rosen Wine

The Village of Oak Park has unanimously passed an ordinance requiring stores over 5000 square feet to charge 10¢ a single-use bag. The new rule goes into effect on January 1, 2018, and will apply to both paper and plastic bags. The new 10¢ fee will be evenly split between the retailer and the Village, with the Village’s share earmarked for “environmental sustainability initiatives” which have yet to be named.

The path leading to this result was rocky, and underscores the power of people to effect local change. Initially, in April 2017, the Board passed a bill which made the bag fee completely voluntary—it was up to the store whether or not to charge it to customers. This “toothless” ordinance drew a noticeable outcry from residents who had spent years trying to get the Village to require retailers to charge for plastic bags. The Interfaith Green Network led the charge, placing a full-page letter to the Village Board in the local Wednesday Journal newspaper urging the Trustees to reconsider their decision. This May 8 letter—signed by the pastors, rabbis and priests of 16 local congregations—cited statistics that Chicago’s mandatory bag tax had resulted in a 42% reduction in its first month, and noted that the Village’s Environment and Energy Commission had studied the issue for three years before recommending a mandatory charge.

A Village Board meeting on May 15 drew impassioned comments from village residents, who made a strong case that the voluntary ordinance would be ineffective at reducing the estimated 17 million bags distributed in Oak Park annually. To drive home the point, local activist Sally Stovall attended the meeting wearing a dress made of 500 plastic bags—meant to approximate the average number of plastic bags used by every person in the United States each year.

Afterwards, the Village Board directed staff to rewrite the ordinance. The revised ordinance with the mandatory fee passed unanimously on August 7. Dick Alton, a driving member of the Interfaith Green Network subcommittee which took up the bag ordinance as a policy initiative, reflected that the experience “shows that the faith community can really make a difference when we get ourselves organized.”

This article also appeared on the gogreenillinois.org website and newsletter.