Bill Text: CA AB2648 | 2023-2024 | Regular Session | Amended
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Environmentally preferable purchasing: single-use plastic bottles.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 4-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2024-05-24 - Ordered to inactive file at the request of Assembly Member Bennett. [AB2648 Detail]
Download: California-2023-AB2648-Amended.html
into into, modify, amend, or renew a contract to purchase single-use plastic bottles for internal use or resale.
Bill Title: Environmentally preferable purchasing: single-use plastic bottles.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 4-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2024-05-24 - Ordered to inactive file at the request of Assembly Member Bennett. [AB2648 Detail]
Download: California-2023-AB2648-Amended.html
Amended
IN
Assembly
March 13, 2024 |
CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE—
2023–2024 REGULAR SESSION
Assembly Bill
No. 2648
Introduced by Assembly Member Bennett (Coauthors: Assembly Members Friedman and Luz Rivas) |
February 14, 2024 |
An act to add Section 12405 to the Public Contract Code, relating to public contracts.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
AB 2648, as amended, Bennett.
Environmentally preferable purchasing: single-use plastic bottles.
Existing law generally governs the state procurement of materials, supplies, equipment, and services. Existing law also provides various procedures and requirements pertaining to the purchase of recycled items by the state, including minimum content requirements for recycled plastic products. Existing law requires the Department of General Services, in consultation with specified parties, to provide state agencies with information and assistance regarding environmentally preferable purchasing, including, but not limited to, the promotion of environmentally preferable purchasing and the development and implementation of a strategy to increase environmentally preferable purchasing.
This bill would, with certain exceptions, prohibit state agencies from entering into
into, modifying, amending, or renewing a contract, on or after January 1, 2025, to purchase single-use plastic bottles, as defined, for internal use or resale. resale and would require state agencies to take appropriate steps to replace the use of single-use plastic bottles at food service facilities with nonplastic, recyclable alternatives, as specified. The bill would require the Department of General Services to ensure that any new, modified, or renewed agreements, contracts, or procurement undertaken by a food service facility as part of a contract or agreement with the Department of General Services comply with the bill, as specified. The bill would require state agencies to submit a report, on or before January 1, 2026, to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee, confirming its
compliance with these requirements. The bill would define a state agency for these purposes to include various agencies, including the California State University, and would request that the University of California comply with its provisions.
Digest Key
Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NOBill Text
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
SECTION 1.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California is in the midst of a plastic pollution crisis. Every year, about 11,000,000 metric tons of plastic waste enter the ocean from coastal nations. New scientific research estimates that under the current trajectory, plastic production will double by 2030.
(b) Plastic bottles are among the top 10 mostly most commonly found plastic items on beaches.
Every hour, Americans use 3,000,000 plastic water bottles. Californians used more than 12,000,000,000 plastic beverage bottles in 2017, about 70 percent of which were not recycled.
(c) The production of plastic bottles relies on fossil fuels. The production, consumption, and end-of-life management of single-use plastic bottles, typically used for only a few minutes before being discarded, have significant environmental impacts, including substantial greenhouse gas emissions, litter, marine pollution, environmental contamination, increased cancer risk to production employees, harm to wildlife, the depletion of precious natural resources, decrease of biodiversity, and the generation of hard-to-manage waste.
(d) Micro Microplastics
and nanoplastics are released from plastic bottles. Microplastics have been found within human lungs, livers, spleens, and kidneys, in the placentas of newborn babies, and in breast milk.
(e) Prioritizing reduction and reuse of packaging can provide significant economic, environmental, and social benefits and is consistent with the Integrated Waste management hierarchy that places “Reduce” and “Reuse” above “Recycling” and disposal.
(f) The availability of innovative services, systems, and businesses that deliver products in unpackaged or reusable formats is increasingly creating new opportunities for local business entrepreneurship and economic development. Recycling and reusing create between nine and 30 times more jobs than disposing of waste in
landfills and incinerators.
(g) Public access to water refill stations supports personal efforts to avoid disposable plastic bottles by using reusable bottles and helps people save money.
SEC. 2.
Section 12405 is added to the Public Contract Code, immediately following Section 12404, to read:12405.
(a) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (4), a state agency shall not enter(2) The Legislature encourages every state agency to install and maintain at least one, or maintain at least one existing, water bottle refill station located to ensure maximum access by all visitors and to allow visitors to bring their own reusable beverage bottle for use at water bottle refill
stations.
(3) A state agency shall take appropriate steps to replace the use of single-use plastic bottles at food service facilities with nonplastic, recyclable alternatives, including, but not limited to, aluminum cans, glass
bottles, water fountains, or water bottle refill stations for reusable or refillable water containers.
(4) A state agency may enter into or renew a contract to purchase single-use plastic bottles only when reasonably necessary to protect the general health, safety, and welfare in preparing for or responding to a declaration of emergency.
(5) (A) The Department of General Services shall ensure that any new, modified, or renewed agreements, contracts, or procurement undertaken by a food service facility as part of a contract or agreement with the Department of General Services complies with the requirements of this section.
(B) The Department of General Services shall take appropriate steps, including, but not limited to, revising relevant state contracting and procurement rules and procedures, in order to fulfill the requirements of subparagraph (A).
(b) On or before January 1, 2026, a state agency shall submit a report to the Joint Legislative Budget Committee confirming its compliance with this section.
(c) This section applies only to contracts entered into into, modified, amended, or
renewed on or after January 1, 2025.
(d) This section does not limit the duties of a state agency under a collective bargaining agreement entered into or renewed before January 1, 2025.
(e) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:
(1) “Food service facility” means an operation or business that is located in a state-owned facility, operating on or acting as a concessionaire on state property, or under contract to provide food service to a state agency and that stores, serves, vends, or offers for sale bottled liquids. “Food service facility” may include, but is not limited to, a cafeteria, commissary, restaurant, deli, store, shop, market, or mobile food unit.
(1)
(2) “Plastic” has the same meaning as in subdivision (t) of Section 42041 of the Public Resources Code.
(2)
(3) “Reusable” has the same meaning as in subdivision (af) of Section 42041 of the Public Resources Code.
(3)
(4) “Single-use plastic bottle” means a beverage in a sealed plastic bottle or plastic-coated carton with a capacity of 21 fluid ounces or less.
(4)
(5) “State agency” has the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (m) of Section 12200, and shall include the California State University.
(5)
(6) “Water bottle refill station” means a bottle filler that dispenses potable drinking water downward that complies with Section 116875 of the Health and Safety Code, applicable standards under the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-336; 42 U.S.C. 12101, 12101 et seq.), and accessibility requirements applicable to drinking fountains under the California Building Standards Code.
(f) The University of California is hereby requested to comply with this section.