Sustainability

Where do plastic bag fees go?

Sometimes it’s a mystery.
This Aug. 3, 2009 photo shows a clerk bagging groceries in plastic sacks at the M Street Grocery in Seattle. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson)

Story at a glance


  • Plastic bag fees have become ubiquitous in some parts of the country amid government efforts to curb Americans’ plastic consumption.

  • State and local governments determine where the money from the fees goes.

  • It is unclear how the money is being used in some cities. But in many places, the money collected from these fees is going toward environmental cleanup or distributing reusable plastic shopping bags to marginalized communities.  

Many state and local governments have implemented plastic bag fees at grocery stores in an effort to curb Americans’ plastic pollution. But where does all the money from those fees actually go? 

The answer differs across the various areas where fees have been put in place.  

Over 100 states and localities have passed legislation mandating a fee for carryout plastic bags, according to data from the Retail Industry Leaders Association.  

In general, these plastic bag fees or taxes have gone to existing funds in states or municipalities that pay for environmental clean-up or conservation efforts, according to a spokesperson for the Plastic Pollution Coalition, an advocacy group that works to stop plastic pollution.  

For example, most of Washington, D.C.’s 5-cent single-use plastic bag fee goes toward the cleanup of local waterways.   

In 2009, D.C. became the first city in the nation to pass legislation implementing single-use plastic bag and paper bag fees.   

Under the legislation, the business providing the plastic bags gets to keep one cent of the five-cent fee. If the business offers a rebate for customers who bring in their own bag, they can keep two cents, according to the city’s Department of Energy and Environment.   

Businesses are required to give the remaining money to the Office of Tax and Revenue, which is then put towards the Anacostia River Clean Up and Protection Fund by the city, a spokesperson for the Department of Energy and Environment confirmed.   

The Anacostia River, which runs from the city’s Maryland suburbs to downtown D.C., is home to 800,000 people and dozens of species of fish and birds.   

Both people and wildlife have been negatively impacted by the trash, sewage runoff, oil, metals and other pollution that has plagued the river for years, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.  

The water was so polluted that swimming in the river was banned for more than 50 years due to safety concerns. 

D.C. has collected millions of dollars since the fee was mandated. In fiscal year 2021 alone, the city collected more than $1,946,000 in bag fees from regulated businesses, according to a 2021 Bag Law annual summary report.   

Funds from single-use plastic bag fees are also frequently put toward plastic pollution education and the distribution of reusable bags to SNAP and WIC recipients, according to the Plastic Pollution Coalition spokesperson.   

This is the case in both D.C. and Boulder, Colo.   

D.C.’s Department of Energy and Environment spent over $335,000 of Bag Law revenue in 2021 for “outreach and reusable plastic bag distribution,” according to the Bag Law annual summary

Colorado mandated a statewide plastic bag fee from January 2023 until early 2024, when a complete ban on single-use plastic bags will begin.   

A fee has been in place in Boulder longer than that, however: The city adopted a Disposable Bag Fee Ordinance in 2012 and has since required stores within the city to charge customers 10 cents per single-use plastic bag.   

Under the ordinance, stores can keep four cents of the fee to help pay for the cost of complying with the law, and the remaining six cents are given back to the city.  

“The city portion of this fee has been used to purchase reusable bags for the community and food banks, compostable bin liners for businesses, community education, and some recycling infrastructure to allow for better plastic bag recycling,” a spokesperson for the City of Boulder told The Hill.   

When the ordinance was first adopted, Boulder residents used about 33 million carryout plastic bags a year. After the plastic bag fee was imposed, the city saw about a 70 percent decrease in plastic bag use, according to the city’s website.   

Since 2018, Boulder has collected about $1,000,000 from the plastic bag fee, the website adds.  

Bag fee funds can also be used for additional or broader waste reduction management, but money from this year’s fees has not gone toward those efforts yet in Boulder, the spokesperson added.   

In some other cities where plastic bag fees or taxes have been implemented, such as Chicago, it’s unclear how the collected money is spent. 

The City of Chicago has yet to respond to questions from The Hill about how money from its Checkout Bag Tax is used.  

While data show that plastic bag taxes and fees have helped to disincentivize American shoppers from using plastic carryout bags, environmentalists stress that bans are a better long-term solution to the country’s plastic pollution problem.   

“This is a strategy known to get people in the habit of opting for reusable bags while avoiding plastic altogether,” said Erica Cirino, communications manager for the Plastic Pollution Coalition.   

“Reuse is a key principle (along with refill, repair, share, and regenerate) to eliminate wastefulness and pollution caused by the production of single-use packaging and items, especially plastic.” 


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