NEW YORK (AP) — Every minute of every day, usually without thinking, thousands of New Yorkers reach across the counter at shops and supermarkets and accept a disposable plastic bag. The city’s sanitation department estimates that 10 billion bags a year are tossed in the trash — roughly 19,000 bags per minute.
Now, city officials are poised to test whether a 5-cent charge can wean New Yorkers from the convenient but environmentally unfriendly sacks.
The City Council is scheduled to vote Thursday on a bill that would require most merchants to charge customers at least a nickel for each bag. Technically, the fee isn’t a tax. Stores will get to keep the money they collect.
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