Efforts Take Off Following State Senate’s
Failure to Pass Measure with Majority Support
Failure to Pass Measure with Majority Support
Albany – Today, legislation
was introduced in the New York City Council which will ban the sale of
products made with microbeads – the tiny plastic pellets that come by
the tens of thousands
in bottles of products like face wash and toothpaste.
Since August, eight local
governments representing a majority of all New Yorkers have now enacted
or introduced bans. Other municipalities have passed resolutions urging
their county officials
to enact a ban due to the costly havoc microbeads wreak on New York’s
aging wastewater infrastructure.
Local bans are popping up due to the state Senate’s failure to pass the
Microbead-Free Waters Act.
That bill passed the Assembly with overwhelming
bipartisan support by a vote of 139-1. The Senate’s version was
sponsored by 59% of all senators. However, despite promises of focusing
on the “people’s business,” new Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan
(R-Long Island)
refused to allow a fair vote.
Instead, the statewide
ban remains stalled in the Environmental Conservation Committee as the
lead sponsor, Senator Tom O’Mara (R-Big Flats), put his energy behind an
industry-backed bill for which he was the lone supporter. That effort
failed.
Saima Anjam, environmental
health director at Environmental Advocates of New York said, “Microbeads
are a needless industry waste that wreaks havoc on our waterways and
wastewater treatment
systems, and which ultimately harms wildlife
and public health. I hate being the bearer of bad news, but despite the
marketing, not a single New Yorker is cleaner or more beautiful today
because of plastic pellets in their face wash or toothpaste. Microbeads
are as pointless as they come.”
She added, “What we’re
seeing are local governments and leaders stepping in to fill the void
the Senate has created, giving New Yorkers the leadership they expect.
Republicans and Democrats,
officials in rural and urban areas alike, recognize the need to act and
have chosen not to ignore the consequences. We applaud them, because
that’s what residents want and deserve. It is unacceptable that industry
continues to recklessly pollute our waterways
with microbeads. Senator Flanagan needs to keep his promise in 2016 and
let senators pass the Microbead-Free Waters Act.”
The listing of local governments taking action include:
Erie County (signed into law),
Cattaraugus County (in legislative process),
Chautauqua County
(passed, awaiting county executive’s signature), Albany County
(in legislative process), Monroe County (in legislative
process), Ulster County
(in legislative process), New York City,
and Suffolk County (in legislative process).
Source: Environmental Advocates of New York
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