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Bill > HB1902


VA HB1902

VA HB1902
Expanded polystyrene food service containers; prohibition, civil penalty.


summary

Introduced
01/08/2021
In Committee
02/16/2021
Crossed Over
02/19/2021
Passed
02/26/2021
Dead
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
03/18/2021

Introduced Session

2021 Special I

Bill Summary

Expanded polystyrene food service containers; prohibition; civil penalty. Prohibits the dispensing by a food vendor of prepared food to a customer in a single-use expanded polystyrene food service container, as defined in the bill. The bill requires certain chain restaurants to stop using such containers by July 1, 2023, and sets the date for compliance by all food vendors as July 1, 2025. The bill exempts nonprofit organizations from the definition of "food vendor" and provides a process by which a locality may grant consecutive one-year exemptions to individual food vendors on the basis of undue economic hardship. The bill provides a civil penalty of not more than $50 for each day of violation, to be collected in a civil action brought by the Attorney General or the relevant locality. The penalties collected are to be deposited in the Litter Control and Recycling Fund or to the treasury of the relevant locality, as appropriate. A portion of the penalties deposited in the Fund are to be used for public information campaigns to discourage the sale and use of expanded polystyrene products. Finally, the bill directs the Department of Environmental Quality to post to its website information on compliance and the filing of complaints. This bill is a reenactment of Chapter 1104 of the Acts of Assembly of 2020. Expanded polystyrene food service containers; prohibition; civil penalty. Prohibits the dispensing by a food vendor of prepared food to a customer in a single-use expanded polystyrene food service container, as defined in the bill. The bill requires certain chain restaurants to stop using such containers by July 1, 2023, and sets the date for compliance by all food vendors as July 1, 2025. The bill exempts nonprofit organizations from the definition of "food vendor" and provides a process by which a locality may grant consecutive one-year exemptions to individual food vendors on the basis of undue economic hardship. The bill provides a civil penalty of not more than $50 for each day of violation, to be collected in a civil action brought by the Attorney General or the relevant locality. The penalties collected are to be deposited in the Litter Control and Recycling Fund or to the treasury of the relevant locality, as appropriate. A portion of the penalties deposited in the Fund are to be used for public information campaigns to discourage the sale and use of expanded polystyrene products. Finally, the bill directs the Department of Environmental Quality to post to its website information on compliance and the filing of complaints. This bill is a reenactment of Chapter 1104 of the Acts of Assembly of 2020.

AI Summary

This bill prohibits food vendors from dispensing prepared food to customers in single-use expanded polystyrene (commonly known as Styrofoam) food service containers. The ban will be implemented in two phases: certain chain restaurants must stop using these containers by July 1, 2023, and all other food vendors must comply by July 1, 2025. The bill exempts nonprofit organizations from the definition of "food vendor" and allows localities to grant one-year exemptions to individual food vendors based on undue economic hardship. Violators will be subject to a civil penalty of up to $50 per day, with the collected funds to be used for litter control, recycling, and public information campaigns discouraging the use of expanded polystyrene products. The Department of Environmental Quality is also required to post compliance and complaint information on its website. This bill is a reenactment of a previous law passed in 2020.

Committee Categories

Agriculture and Natural Resources

Sponsors (8)

Last Action

Governor: Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0262) (on 03/18/2021)

bill text


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