The Hindu 11.12.2018
Plastic ban comes into force in city
With the plastic ban of the Corporation coming into effect on Monday,
shopkeepers in the city have started giving goods in cloth bags and
paper bundles.
City Health Officer V. Satish Raghavan said at
least 6,000 commercial establishments such as marriage halls,
departmental stores, retail grocers, restaurants and eateries would have
to stop using single-use plastic goods.
Shopkeepers should not
keep or sell plastic carry bags, non-recyclable plastic ware and and
use-and-throw cups. The ban was also applicable to manufacturing,
storing and selling of plastic goods below 50 microns.
First-time
violators would be issued a warning by sanitary inspectors who would be
raiding shops in the four zones at random, he said. “We have been
issuing these instructions to eateries and bulk waste generators who use
plastic as packaging material over the last two months. If they have
already received notices, they would need to pay a fine ranging from Rs.
500 to Rs. 5,000. If they continue to defy the ban, their licences will
be cancelled,” he said.
Government offices stopped using plastic
goods from July 3. Corporation Commissioner S. Aneesh Sekhar had been
conducting awareness programmes in schools and administering pledge
against plastic use since September 15.
Despite these initiatives, the awareness about the plastic ban was low among city residents, shopkeepers said.
J.
Manimaran, a shopkeeper who welcomes the ban, said, “We spend about Rs.
1,500 each month on plastic bags. In order to reduce the dependence on
plastic bags, we have been urging our customers to bring cloth bags.
Some do, but many are still unaware of the ban,” he said. The plastic
ban could lead to a dip in sales initially, but people would soon adjust
themselvesby and by, he said.
End of a scourge
First-time violators will be issued a warning by sanitary inspectors
Raids will be conducted on shops in the four zones at random
Those who received notices already must pay a fine of Rs. 500 to Rs. 5,000