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Wegmans to go plastic-bag free in New York; is Pennsylvania next?

  • One month after its doors opened, Wegmans is still going...

    Nicole Munchel | Aegis staff, Patuxent Publishing

    One month after its doors opened, Wegmans is still going strong. Shoppers are flocking to the store, which has upped the competition among other grocery chains in the area.

  • Wegmans said it will work to reduce the usage of...

    Harry Fisher / MORNING CALL FILE PHOTO

    Wegmans said it will work to reduce the usage of single-use bags, straws and other plastic items at its stores in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Virginia, Maryland and Massachusetts. The chain has three locations in the Lehigh Valley.

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ALBANY, N.Y. — Wegmans will eliminate single-use plastic grocery bags at its New York state stores by year’s end — just before a state ban on the packing takes effect, the grocery store chain announced Monday.

The Rochester, N.Y., grocery chain also said it will reduce the usage of single-use bags, straws and other plastic items at its stores in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Virginia, Maryland and Massachusetts. Wegmans has three stores in the Lehigh Valley. And though none is in Bethlehem, which is considering a ban on plastic bags, two are in Northampton County, which has urged municipalities to rein in plastic consumption.

“We’re taking measurable steps to improve and implement programs that increase our recycling rate, minimize waste, and help make a difference in every community we serve,” Jason Wadsworth, the company’s packaging and sustainability manager, said in a statement accompanying the company’s Earth Day announcement.

All grocers in New York state will have to eliminate the ubiquitous plastic shopping bag when the state’s ban takes effect in March. California and Hawaii already ban the items, which are a major source of plastic pollution on land and in water.

Lawmakers approved the ban this month as part of its state budget. Under the law, local counties will have the option of imposing a 5-cent fee on paper bags, with 3 cents going to the state’s Environmental Protection Fund and 2 cents kept by local governments.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, touted the ban he helped pass during a speech Monday on Long Island.

He said going without plastic bags will be a “minor inconvenience” compared with the devastating impact of plastic pollution. State figures estimate that New Yorkers now use 23 billion single-use plastic bags each year.

“By 2050, there will be more plastic by weight in the oceans than fish,” Cuomo said. “You would have to be blind not to see what’s going on with our environment.”