Sunday, March 03, 2013

The Conversation

  I enjoy reading the opinion pages in the local paper.  I write many letters to the editor in my head and a few actually get written and printed.  Generally, however, they're ignored.  Usually because some more exciting issue is being discussed.  (Once, it was the county's dealing with donkeys in Waikoloa.)

  The county passed a plastic bag ban last year.  They've been something of a litter problem.  Beginning this year, grocery stores and others can't give away plastic bags, although they may sell them for a nickle.  Next year they'll be completely banned.  So when I ran into a couple of articles about a study by a couple of law professors suggesting that a spike in food-borne illnesses and deaths in the San Francisco area might be attributed to their plastic bag ban, I thought it would be fun to write a piece.  I wrote the following:

Dear Editor:
I noted with interest a couple of recent articles referring to a recent study by a couple of law professors for the Wharton School Institute for Law and Economics. They found a huge (46 percent) increase in food-borne-illness deaths in San Francisco after its plastic bag ban went into effect (a San Francisco Chronicle article can be found here: http://www.sfgate.com/opinion/saunders/article/S-F-s-plastic-bag-ban-may-be-unhealthy-4264075.php).

Once again, we see the unintended consequences of government regulation.

Perhaps the Legislature should think twice before passing a statewide ban. And maybe the County Council should consider lifting the ban on our island.

As many would-be regulators often say: “If even one life is saved, it will be worth it.”

Alternatively, maybe we need a new law requiring us to wash or otherwise sterilize our reusable bags after each use.


  I probably should have commented that some folks disagreed with the findings, but I just kept it short.  This time, my letter provoked a response:

 Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not to his own facts. 

 There is no causal link to the ban on plastic bags in San Francisco County, food-borne illnesses and deaths resulting from them in San Francisco County.
 
The gentleman cites a preliminary study that has no scientific basis, was not published nor submitted for peer review and was thoroughly discredited by the San Francisco Public Health Department, the Washington Post and numerous other sources.

A casual reading of this preliminary study shows that there is no scientific basis whatsoever for this claim.

You just can't take a political prejudice and combine it with unproven theories and toss it out in the public square as a valid argument for your position.

It is obvious the gentleman is opposed to the ban on plastic bags.  That's his right.  But, he has an obligation to check his facts more thoroughly.

He has no right to discredit our local politicians by the use of such ludicrous evidence.  The study he cited wouldn't get him a passing grade in seventh grade science.

Gary Hattenburg, Kailua-Kona

  I thought about doing a followup:  Something along the lines that the failure to prove a hypothesis does not prove that the hypothesis is wrong.  (The Chronicle article says the city health director found the hypothesis plausible, but thought the research sloppy.)  And since my letter, J. Lynn picked up a couple of reports from workers at the grocery stores about the awful, filthy bags that some customers have used since the bag ban went into effect.  Anyway, it was fun to see that someone read my letter.

  So if people start dropping like flies on the Big Island, check to see if there's a link to the ban on plastic bags!  (Ha-ha.)

7 comments:

David and Kris Taylor said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
David and Kris Taylor said...

We are committed personal bag users and recycle the plastic bags that inadvertently come into our lives.

You stick to your guns, though, if it makes sense to you.

D.

Briana said...

I think there can be some good plastic bag alternatives, but you are absolutely right that lots of people do it wrong. I've also read a couple of articles/studies about the DISGUSTING loads of dangerous bacteria found on people's reusable grocery bags. Makes my germ-freak cancer mom self SHUDDER. :) I think I'm paranoid forever, though, about all that.

So, I think you have a really good point. (Well, multiple good points - governement regulation questions, the germ issue, etc.) But people can do it right (back to the grocery bag/germ issue) if they are educated and careful. You've just got to know that it can be a problem and you've got to clean your freaking bags.

That's so cool that you write letters to the editor often - way to be involved and get other points out there for people to think about.

Bill Hastings said...

Point of clarification: I'm not anti-recycling when it makes sense. We reuse our plastic bags until they wear out (or get too dirty). Rather, I'm anti-regulation. Often there are unintended consequences to regulations. But more importantly, "liberty" becomes a meaningless concept if we can only do that which those who are smarter or more powerful think we should do.

Whitney said...

My favorite part of all that is your response to the guy's scathing comments: Well, fun to see somebody read my letter! P.S. I pretty much never wash my reusable bags. In fact, my favorite one isn't washable. Good thing I haven't died yet.

Anna said...

Hooray for plastic bag bans. But I like your points, even if I like bag bans.

test said...

i was listening to the radio about this stuff, how funny it is they target grocery stores for their bags when what they sell should be kept clean for people's health. but all other stores selling crap that we don't ingest don't get as much harassment. plus, i've seen lots of places with biodegradable plastic-type bags. not all are the devil. and i need some for dirty diapers and to line my bathroom trash can.
-christian