FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
March 31, 2019

Approved SFY 2019-20 Spending Plan Includes Critical Measure to Reduce Plastic Pollution


Speaker Carl Heastie and Environmental Conservation Committee Chair Steve Englebright today announced the State Fiscal Year (SFY) 2019-20 Budget will protect New York's waterways and the environment by banning plastic carryout bags.

"The Assembly Majority knows that New York must lead the way in reducing plastic pollution," said Speaker Heastie. "The convenience of plastic bags is simply not worth the environmental impact. By reducing our state's usage, we will see less litter in our communities and less plastic pollution in our waterways."

"This critical measure in our state budget is a necessary step to reducing the billions of plastic bags New Yorkers use every year," said Assemblymember Englebright. "It is time we take a stand to protect our waterways and environment from plastic pollution, and ensure they are preserved for generations to come. My thanks to Speaker Heastie for helping to advance these measures."

Exceptions to the plastic bag ban include:

Counties and cities will be authorized to impose a five-cent fee on paper carryout bags by local law. If they choose to opt-in to the program, 40 percent of the revenue collected from the fee will be distributed to the county or city for the purchase and distribution of reusable bags, with priority given to low and fixed-income communities. The remaining 60 percent of the revenue will go to the Environmental Protection Fund (EPF).

Purchases made using the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) or the Women, Infants and Children (WIC) food and nutrition service will be exempt from any paper carryout bag fee.

Patrick McClellan, state policy director for the New York League of Conservation Voters said, "We thank Speaker Heastie, Environmental Conservation Chair Englebright, and all of the environmental champions in the State Assembly for their leadership in producing a budget full of green policies and investments. In particular we are grateful that action has been taken to ban plastic bags and allow local fees on paper bags after years of discussion. We are also thrilled that New York City will become the first city in North America to institute congestion pricing to improve mass transit for the entire metro region, reduce air pollution, and take a big step in the right direction to meet our greenhouse gas reduction goals. This win for the environment would not be possible without the Assembly's leadership."