Of Menus and Bags Revisited

Jeff Alworth

A couple of days ago, I posted on Jeff Cogen's proposal to require restaurant chains to label their menus with calorie information.  Yesterday, the Multco Commission passed the measure on a 4-1 vote. 

Other than county staffers, nearly 30 people testified at the hearing, from parents to dieticians to officials from the American Heart Association. The testimony was overwhelmingly in favor of the rule.

Only five spoke against it: a McDonalds lobbyist, an Oregon Restaurant Association lobbyist, officials from Shari's and Burgerville, and Alan Shaffer, who owns a Wing Stop franchise in Southeast Portland.

Chalk one up for transparency! 

That leaves the other "nanny-state" agenda item still bubbling along: incoming-mayor Sam Adam's proposal to asses a surcharge of 5-20 cents on grocery bags.  In my last post, the menu labeling idea was getting a lot of love from commenters, but the bag proposal ... not so much.  So let's hear from you--a good way to reduce garbage and our carbon footprint, or a bad solution to a real problem?

 

[Post edited.  In the original version, I mentioned Floyd Prozanski's bike-helmet proposal, but Kari, writing simultaneously, mentioned it in his post below.  I deleted it here.]

  • Emily George (unverified)
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    Jeff,

    Your poll and description is flawed. There isn't a tax on grocery bags. There's a tax on plastic and paper disposable bags. Anybody who wants to bring in their own bags won't be charged a cent.

    This is a great idea, like the bottle bill, using a small, but real, economic incentive to give people a choice that takes into account the costs to society of disposal/litter created by paper/plastic.

    I usually use my cloth bags, but could use the economic push as a reminder.

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    Emily, you're totally correct. I have changed the wording of the question. Thanks!

  • Sam Geggy (unverified)
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    Jeff: the form is not loading correctly. Your buttons appear, your verbiage does not.

    Surcharge a good idea. Cloth bags are ubiquitous, suggestions that schemes be constructed to assist SES-challenged people in acquiring nice cloth handle bags could become an obstacle to action; they/we could conceivably use the also-ubiquitous backpack. We do not all need to carry chic canvas bags to be enviro-shoppers.

    An alternate idea, used by some coffee purveyors - five cents off on purchase if own mug is produced.

  • Miles (unverified)
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    I think it's great. There was discussion on your first post about whether $.05 - $.20 is the "appropriate" economic penalty given the resulting economic cost of disposable bags. While that's an interesting question for an economist to look into, it's not actually relevant in setting the public policy. The policy is not designed to offset the cost, it's to change behavior. And as such, I think $.20 is the way to go. It's not much different than, say, a library fine for late books. Who knows what the actual "cost" is of an unreturned book to the next reader who wants it? The point of the fine isn't to recoup the cost, it's to get you to return the book.

    The proposal includes subsidies to purchase reusable bags for low-income folks, so equity concerns should be taken care of. In terms of the "convenience" factor that some people raised, it's no less convenient than having to return your bottles to get your deposit back. Yes, some people will forget their bags and have to pay $1 or even $2 for disposable bags. But over time our habits will change, just like they did with bottle deposits.

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    I suspect that adding a small fee won't actually work to reduce usage much -- a few percentage points, maybe.

    I think Portland should do for plastic bags what we did years ago with styrofoam. Just ban 'em. They're unnecessary.

    (And I don't see what the problem is with paper bags. They're perfectly biodegradable.)

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    While I will comfortably live with either proposal enacted into law, both are, to my tastes, a bit of a overreach by government. Yes, the dreaded "nanny" state, and I don't like it. Both may do some good and cause little harm or inconvenience, but I do not need the government to help me count calories. And how can restaurants so standardize the dishes that calorie estimates would be at all reliable? And what about various salad dressing options? Or the amount of ketchup (or catsup, to some), or gravy or butter? Please!

    More seriously, there are "opportunity costs" for our public officials spending time on these issues. They could be spending time on more important matters. And I won't mention my favorite!

  • RichW (unverified)
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    I think an outright ban is also more effective. A surchase will simply add to the cynicism and will probably not have much effect.

    However, I, like many others cannot discern which is worse, paper or plastic. Should both be banned?

    Cloth bags can sequester bacteria after a few uses. They can also build up other harmful residues like pesticides. If cloth bags become prevalent, the public will have to understand the need for sanitation. Otherwise there may be unintended consequences. (observe how most food checkers clean the checkout surface quite regularly)

    Perhaps another solution is to use the corrugated boxes that are used to ship product to grocers. This used to be the norm in the 50's when I was a grocery delivery boy. I shop at a Cash-and-Carry store for many of my groceries and not a bag, paper or plastic, is in sight there. But we use the boxes to carry out our groceries. Since Portland recycles these boxes anyway, they get one additional use before being retired.

  • Eric Parker (unverified)
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    "And I don't see what the problem is with paper bags. They're perfectly biodegradable"

    That is because Sam Adams has drank too much of the eco kool-aid and belives what the other ecozealots are feeding him. Now that he will be mayor, he belives this entitles him to force a lot of the eco agenda upon the masses as he sees fit.

    It would be a lot better idea if Ecozealot Sam wasn't behind it. Phased in over time, this idea would be good. Forced down our throats like Sam wants it to be is not good. Already some people are regretting their vote of this smarmy ecozealot into office.

  • Miles (unverified)
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    I suspect that adding a small fee won't actually work to reduce usage much -- a few percentage points, maybe.

    Didn't a nickel deposit change behavior dramatically? Isn't the nickel from the 1970s worth about $.20 now? If the average trip requires five plastic bags (I have no idea if that's true, but it seems reasonable), I think an extra $1.00 is enough to get people's attention.

    Banning plastic bags is problematic because the impact of paper bags isn't much less, and arguably is a little worse. It will require more timber to be cut, but more importantly paper requires more fuel to transport. Didn't I read in the Oregonian that it's five times as much fuel?

    We need people to utilize reusable bags, and the best way to do that is with a penalty.

  • Leo McDonald (unverified)
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    Good Job Jeff. Now maybe, you should move to banning toilet paper? Think of how many trees we'd save. Just use a rag or bidae, Let's save the trees and planet together. Everyone join hands and hope for change. Peace.

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    If you are going to deal with this situation, than ban them outright. Better yet, before you do that, make sure that inexpensive (and by inexpensive, I don't mean the $5-$10 bags I've so far found available) cloth bags are already available, and perhaps the first couple even supplied (Let's not forget that folks on the Trail card can't use it to BUY the cloth bags to begin with).

    I have two cloth bags and when I went to the store the other day on a "not completely stocking-up trip" I still needed two additional bags.

    Has anyone here ever tried to carry home a load of groceries on the bus in just paper? Good luck.

    Taxing the bags is regressive.

    We need people to utilize reusable bags, and the best way to do that is with a penalty.

    Before you decide to start throwing penalties around, you better make sure you aren't setting people up for failure.

  • Kurt Chapman (unverified)
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    A totally off-based solution to a real problem. Like the ubiquitous bottle bill it is a snarky view that people must be charged to do something good. Maybe back in the 70's charging a bottle deposit wa a good idea to change folks. Nowadays it is just plain stupid. take all that wasted time, energy and other resources and pt it into a meaningful curbside recycling initiative. Ditto the bags

    Now, rather than just condemn, I'll offer a capitalist, libertarian alternative.

    Rather than getting people to change by avoiding the disincentive of charging for outer plastic bags (I assume that the plastic bags inside that are used for fresh fruit, veggies and met are "good" bags because they protect from e-coli, salmonella and other bad stuff); creat an incentive to use cloth re-useable bags.

    Set up a small, inner city cooperative that hires inner city folks to manufacture the bags. Societal good from jobs, revenue, tax base increase. Product made right in Portland for people in Portland. Partner w/Frddies, Safeway, Albertsons whomever to creat Logo bags. When the consumer shows up at "their" store w/the logo bag they get 0.05% off total purchase and are doing an environmental good by avoiding those nasty one use only bags. We'll worry about all the residual dog poop that is no longer picked up later. :-)

  • Sam Geggy (unverified)
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    Kurt, I like what you say. Could be a good use of the money raised charging tossaway users in subsequent planning. A follow-up strategy once the intention to act on this issue is more than speculative badinage. Too bad it's too late for this go-round as, apparently, something regressive is already in the works. The infrastructure exists within the non profit and manufacturing/small business development sector for such a scheme. And a sensible scheme it is.

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    Nowadays it is just plain stupid. take all that wasted time, energy and other resources and pt it into a meaningful curbside recycling initiative.

    Whoa! Let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater. Bottle bills work:

    The nation’s 10 deposit states recycle 490 containers per capita per year, at an average cost of 1.53 cents per container, while the nation’s 40 non-deposits states (which rely solely on curbsides and drop-offs) recycle 191 containers per capita per year, at an average cost of 1.25¢/container. In other words, deposit states produce bang for the buck: at an additional cost of only 1.5 cents per six-pack, their recovery rates are more than two and a half times higher than states without bottle bills.

    You may be right that the way to incentivize the issue is by paying people to use their own bags (although, since many grocery stores already do offer a nickel and it barely affects anything, I think you'd have to up it to a quarter or more). But the bottle bill isn't a waste.

  • RichW (unverified)
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    But the bottle bill works for a different reason. There is a bounty on bottles/cans that are incentives for third parties (not buyer or seller). One need only look at the automated refund machines at the supermarkets to see that they are used primarily by the bottle gleaners.

    I personally find it more trouble/time than its worth to get back my deposit and usually give my cans/bottles to gleaners who come through the neighborhood.

  • Jesse (unverified)
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    I think that this video by GOOD magazine makes a pretty good case at why we might want to enact Portland's first carbon fee on any item.

    That said, I think a phased ban could work.

  • Terry Parker (unverified)
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    Many chain restaurants and eating establishments are locally owned small business franchises. Any law that requires menu labeling needs to be all encompassing and apply equally to all eating establishments, or not at all, By targeting only the nationally known brand name eating establishments, menu labeling reeks of social engineering, is discriminatory, and if the Oregon Constitution is taken literally as was the probable intent when authored and adopted, the targeting is unconstitutional.

    Article I, Section 20, “Equality of privileges and immunities of citizens” in the Oregon Constitution states: “No law shall be passed granting to any citizen or class of citizens privileges, or immunities, which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all citizens.” This article is routinely ignored by the social engineering politicians that want to exercise controls on the populace.

    If there was really an interest in providing more rather than less choice for the people of Multnomah County, the discussion would have centered around requiring ALL eating establishments and restaurants, so-called healthy or otherwise, to offer dollar/value priced menus. That would also be a form of social engineering, but far more acceptable than just labeling menus in the hopes that some consumer and low priced menu choices offered by fast food chains would eventually be dropped and disappear. .

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    Trader Joe's gives you a ticket to enter a drawing for a $25 gift certificate if you bring your own bag(s) (cloth or reused disposable).

    New Seasons knocks 5¢ off your total purchase for each bag you bring that's used.

    Fred Meyer promotes reusables that are like what Oregonian37 wants. Not exactly sure of their composition but not "tote bags," cheaper, also square bottomed & presumably designed with grocery packing in mind. Not exactly sure of how the promotion works but I think they are subsidized.

    The other day on the previous thread, Paul G. posted a link to a fairly superficial NYTimes story on "stuff you don't really need to worry about," some of which you actually do, and I responded with relatively strong criticism including of the story's misrepresentation of one of its links, to an EPA cite, which criticism I stand by.

    However, the other link contains more substantial arguments about the overall superiority of plastics to paper compared over the production life-cycle. It comes from the libertarian Reason magazine, and when I wrote the author about sources, her answer left me unsure about possible industry conflicts of interest. Also I am not persuaded about the disposal end of the cycle as it presently exists -- the argument is partly that plastics take up less landfill space but the recycling rate is so much lower for them at present that they probably still remain a bigger problem even if all reported is true.

    Even so, I think the article is fairly useful in outlining most of the range of issues we might want to consider, including energy use in different phases, relation to greenhouse gases, and relation to other pollution (paper does poorly here), as well as solid waste volume and recyclability & reusability, including an interesting point about Ireland's ban leading to a massive rise in purchase of plastic trash bags. Biodegradability is not well dealt with, nor the question of the bags themselves as a form of pollution ("litter" minimizes the consequences).

    The other link, to a New England Regional EPA consideration is less systematic, less consistently favorable to plastic, & poses some interesting trade-off thoughts not in the Reason piece. Above all, it comes down stressing re-use and reusables.

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    It would be a lot better idea if Ecozealot Sam wasn't behind it. Phased in over time, this idea would be good.

    Holy non sequitur, Batman!

    Uptight about Sam Adams much, Eric?

    It would be the same idea regardless of who proposed it. The question of how to implement it is a good one but would arise regardless of who proposes. Adams is one vote of five.

    If the question of phasing it in (not sure what that would mean) is as important to whether it's good or bad as you suggest, which it might be, it would be a lot more helpful to hear about the whys and hows of that.

    Re-iteration of the fact that you don't like Sam Adams, made in the form of unevidenced namecalling, which everyone knows and has seen before & is low value added to the discussion.

    It also detracts from your substantive point. Care to elaborate on how phasing in would work and why it would be good?

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    OK, I'll take a tote bag to the grocery store, or any other store I expect to buy something that would be put in a bag. But how do others handle their trash. Currently I use bags, usually grocery store paper bags, to collect the various types of garbage around the house. That is one bag for paper-recyclable garbage, one bag for non-recyclable garbage and a container for transporting materials to our compost. We also use plastic liners in waste can around the house. I think I need to cease using these liners and bags as well. But the option of having container could be messy.

  • Greg D. (unverified)
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    Ban plastic bags if they are harmful. A twenty cent fee is too small to change the behavior of the majority of shoppers. Yes there are a few folks to whom a twenty cent per bag fee is significant, but I would wager they are a tiny and statistically insignificant minority of the Portland metro population.

    If you pass a law that effectively requires shoppers to provide their own reusable bags, I wonder how long it will be until J Crew begins offering custom reusable bags with genuine ivory inlays, spotted owl feather trim, and baby seal fur grips. Not long, I imagine.

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    I always want to laugh when people talk about how stores give away bags or whatever and that should make things affordable for low income people. And then names like Fred Meyer, New Seasons, and Trader Joe's are thrown out.

    The stores most used by low income people are stores like Food 4 Less, Winco, and Grocery Outlet. And sometimes Safeway, since they regularly have really good meat sales.

    I know some people may feel like I beat this topic to death, but I have to be a voice of reason among people who don't know what it's like to have less than $4 a day to feed a family.

  • Kurt Chapman (unverified)
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    Jeff, I read your comments wiht interest describing bottle bill success. While I can not fault your figures, I do wonder how much they are scewed simply because of the huge number of fundraising groups that use the bottle bonanza in order to support their groups (little league, scouting, neighborhood watch groups, HS teams, cheerleaders, etc) Go by any store with the machines on a Saturday and count the group versus individual returns.

    Further to the argument please review the Eugen Register editorial.

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    @Dave and Terry:

    I tried already, but the machine is primed and ready to deflect your arguments. Still, you argue much better than I did. Perhaps you can help the Multnomah County Commission avoid ridicule!

    The calorie thing is:

    • a way that Portland can be trendy like New York City;
    • an attempt to force seven (7) chain restaurants who do not already comply, to comply by directive instead of just calling each of them, an effort that by the way. would have wasted less time than crafting the rule and getting it enacted.
    • an assistance for about ten (10) people who use calories only to regulate their dietary intake, but who cannot be bothered to ask for the nutrition sheet. Those of us who count sugar, fats, fiber, cholesterol or other nutrients will rely on the same printed information we always did.
    • in no way an imposition on "independent" eating establishments such as the Lucky Lab, Voodoo Doughnuts, or anybody selling pho around SE 60th: we like those.
    • none of your business. The staff will brook no debate.

    I wish you the best of luck. Does Multnomah County have an official mushroom yet?

  • Sam Geggy (unverified)
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    Jenni:

    YES! YES! YES! Thank you.

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    Jenni, Our Winco is in clackamas, I think, so I expect we'll be unaffected and still be able to use our paper bags to collect our recycling, handle the kittie litter, load my paper recycling that I am concerned about (credit card solicitations, etc).

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    Jenni,

    I was not citing those stores as a reason to support anything about bags, one way or another, or as proof that somehow this wouldn't be an economically regressive measure. I was just responding to someone upthread who had raised the issue of incentives.

    Bags cost Winco money too. The New Seasons practice is in part to save them money on bags. It probably works less well in that setting than in one where if you have six bags you'd save 30¢ out of your $4 (or more if more bags), I'd think.

  • Sarah C (unverified)
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    As I wrote in the other related thread - it is much easier to pack the bags like you can get at Fred's than it is to pack the plastic ones. More fits into them and it fits better. I personally have found that it is easier to carry the same amount of groceries in these types of bags than the plastic ones. When a store gives me five cents for using one of my bags they really should be giving me three times that because it is very likely saving at least three bags.

    The last time I was at Winco (about a month ago in Tigard) I saw a lot of people using reusable bags - either the kind you buy or bringing plastic and paper ones to reuse. People who are looking to save as much as possible are willing to bring bags to save a dollar or more. When I lived in Ohio I used to shop at the Cub Foods (which I think is related to Winco in some way) - Cub Foods charged for bags 15 years ago. It was a way to save everyone some money.

  • Sam Geggy (unverified)
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    Chris:

    I believe Jenni is trying to say that the consciousness of those touting this bag charge as a wonderful thing and not regressive are perhaps out of touch with the reality of those who will never be found in Trader Joe's or New Seasons. They will certainly scrounge immediately for reusable bags, in the very least from a primarily financial requisite. This is not to say that those of us working with limited means are not environmentally-conscious too. Watch those stereotypes... but I believe I read her comment as a consciousness-raising effort - to remind you that your very reference points indicate you may not really understand the significance of the pain of even a dollar lost from one's economy when lived at the level she cites. Could be wrong, of course.

    On a different note: did I miss the description of the planned dispersal of cloth bags to SES-challenged? Will these be store-logo products provided at shopping sites or disseminated from a site that typically vets clients for economic status? Will these be simple bags for conveyance or adverts? What do the focus groups have to say about how a lower-income person will feel to be "branded" Winco whilst rubbing taters with someone else with a chic New Seasons on their arm? Having worked with Medicaid recipient focus groups, it actually seems to matter...

  • Lee (unverified)
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    Many retail businesses are very suspicious of shoppers carrying around bags, especially opaque bags that increase the ability to shoplift. I can easily predict that shoplifting in Portland will increase, thus increasing the net cost to shoppers even more.

  • ws (unverified)
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    The problem with paper bags is that just like any other bag a store provides their customers with, people use too many of them inefficiently. I used to go to the store, bag the groceries, take them home, un-bag them, fold up the bag and toss it in the cupboard. I tried, but it never really worked to take a used bag with me back to the store to shop with; no handle, paper's kind of fragile. Soon, I'd have big stacks of almost perfectly good paper bags in my cupboard, many more than I could ever use to recycle newspapers and so forth.

    Then one day, out on the street, I found an unbranded version of one of those plastic shopping baskets some stores have...that Winco's used to have for its customers until they all mysteriously disappeared into peoples homes to store everything under the sun. Since that day, the plastic basket goes with me to the store for shopping, and very rarely do I use a bag from the checkout counter. Plus, Winco knocks 6 cents off your purchase price for every bag(basket) you bring in to load your groceries.

    One hitch to the plastic shopping basket, is that it takes up a fair amount of space in the car, so it took a little planning to remember to take it with me the day I decided to stop into the store after work and so forth. I didn't have a cloth bag I liked, which would have been something I could have folded and tucked behind the seats.

    Then one day, downtown, folded up nicely and sitting on a trash container, was an elegant, black, heavy paper shopping bag with twisted rope handles, imprinted with the name of apparel store, Mario's on Broadway. I recycled it by taking it home with me, at the time, just because the bag was so beautiful (if you think I'm kidding, the NY Times did a story some time back about the lengths department stores go to hire designers to create elegant complimentary shopping bags). Not long after, it dawned on me that the Mario's bag would be perfect for quick trips to Winco's, plus, the bag would fold up and fit perfectly behind the seats.

    Bags of this type have a cardboard bottom. They'll hold 10-15 lbs easily, and they're good for many repeated uses. With a little better care than I've given mine, it's lovely finish won't get scuffed up. (Sorry Mario's!, but thanks also!)

    Maybe Starbuck's cups should be the next throwaway container to carry a deterrent use charge.

  • David English (unverified)
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    Here in Korea, they do charge for plastic bags at the supermarket. They are about 50KRW or 5 cents. They also allow people to recycle them by returning them to the store to get their deposit back.

    We make sure we take two or three bags with us everytime we go shopping and reuse them until they are well worn.

    Background: I am an Oregonian who has been living in Korea for the past 4 1/2 years.

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    I was saying that listing that those stores give bags away doesn't do the average low income person any good - they're not shopping at those stores. Those stores are dealing with a higher income crowd, and it's in their best interest to do things like give away bags or incentives for bringing your own.

    Low income people are shopping at stores like Winco, Food 4 Less, and Grocery Outlet. These stores are working extremely hard to keep every thing as cheap as possible (including having you bag your own stuff) because they know their target crowd is those at the lower income levels. Handing out free bags increases their costs, which increases their prices - something their target audience can't afford.

    If a low income person is looking at $1 a reusable bag versus 5 cents per plastic bag, they're more likely going to go plastic. Sure, it is more expensive in the long run; however, low income people often have to look at the cost today.

    I'm sure there will be a number of free bags handed out, but as I've said before, I've been low income and these programs can never meet the demand.

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    Sam, I took Jenni to be replying to me and I have never said this is a wonderful thing. In fact my first response was to wonder about it's regressive implications. Because I happen to be a single divorced man who is not living on quite that margin doesn't mean I'm oblivious to other people's situations -- you should mind the stereotypes too.

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    And, reading ws up above, it seems that the New Seasons approach also is used by Winco & not irrelevant to Winco, that I was right about them wanting to save money, but I was ignorant that they already are "with the program" so to speak. Maybe NS got the idea from Winco.

  • Samn Geggy (unverified)
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    Dearest Chris: the reminder to mind stereotypes was "note to self". And the reference points do speak volumes in a well-thought-out post. I still am not clear on who will decide how to get the bags to the poor. Got a link to the original document that I can veiw? Was reflecting this morning that posting about the larger political issues just seems like an incredible time waster to me, as the possibility of having any effect is slim to none for such as myself. But watching someone piss away resource on a poorly-thought-out piece of local social engineering, while being embarrassingly lowbrow to go on and on and on and on about... is at least accessible to a local nobody such as me.

    I think this'll be my "ciao" to posting, I'll go back to peeking. I'm not an insider, don't pretend to unbiased and insightful abilities. And feel less-than-useful in much of anything I can offer up here. My specialty is in social research and outcomes and quality. Seems not to have any application here.

  • Bob Tiernan (unverified)
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    Chris Lowe:

    Bags cost Winco money too.

    Bob T:

    Winco takes off six cents from your tab when you use your own bag. I've been using a cloth bag I was given at a Beaver game at PGE Park, but have only started using it at stores other than Wild Oats, Trader Joe's etc.

    I used to being my own bag into Natures in Gresham, and they told me once that they didn't like me filling it up while shopping because it looked like I was shoplifting. No other store made such a complaint.

    Bob Tiernan

  • ws (unverified)
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    The other night, I had to return a defective pair of long johns to Fred Meyer, so I carried them over in the Mario's shopping bag. Afterwords, I realized I needed to shop for Hershey's chocolate...it's priced more favorably at Target, a short walk away. So I walked over, collected my items in the Mario's bag, went to the checkout counter, and lo and behold...an observant Target checker knocked .05 cents off for using my own bag.

    "I used to being my own bag into Natures in Gresham, and they told me once that they didn't like me filling it up while shopping because it looked like I was shoplifting. No other store made such a complaint." Bob Tiernan

    I don't see a problem here. You carry your receipts with you for any purchases made prior to entering the store. Security is free to check your bag if there's really cause for suspicion. If there's a concern about what is going into your personal bag while shopping in the store, a store could request that customers use store carriers while shopping and transfer into personal bags at the checkout counter. I just use the shopping bag for shopping in the store because it's easier than dragging around a cart for what I usually need to buy. No store has ever questioned me about it.

  • Bob Tiernan (unverified)
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    ws:

    I don't see a problem here. You carry your receipts with you for any purchases made prior to entering the store. Security is free to check your bag if there's really cause for suspicion. If there's a concern about what is going into your personal bag while shopping in the store, a store could request that customers use store carriers while shopping and transfer into personal bags at the checkout counter. I just use the shopping bag for shopping in the store because it's easier than dragging around a cart for what I usually need to buy. No store has ever questioned me about it.

    Bob T:

    I didn't say there was a real problem here - just an observation. It was one person telling me that, and only once, and in a way that made me not want to go back to that particular store. One point is that those hand baskets you refer to aren't always available, such as at a few Winco (where they want people to fill up the regular large baskets). I don't push those things around for three things. But then, Winco has never told me that they don't like it that I "look" like I'm shoplifting.

    Bob Tiernan

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    That's funny - I've taken my own bags into both Target and Winco and have never received a discount on my purchase (I've actually never received such a discount anywhere). I'll be sure to bring my bags in when I go shopping over the next few days and if I don't see a discount, I'll ask them about it.

    And I'd have to say that I almost always get stopped when I am in a store and am carrying a bag - and that's without adding anything to it. I was even stopped from bringing in a diaper bag into some stores when I had an infant. Some stores have been quite hesitant about me bringing in my reusable shopping bags, sending around an employee to watch me to ensure I wasn't stealing.

    As I've gotten a bit older, this hasn't happened as much. But it happened a lot when I was in my 20s and happens regularly to my younger sister (who is 25).

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