Advocates praise bills aimed at reducing plastic and polystyrene use; some restaurants have concerns

Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed several bills last month aimed at reducing plastic and polystyrene use. Two other bills environmental advocates say are important steps to improving reusable systems and minimizing waste are still awaiting his signature.

Senate Bill 58 would require state agencies and public universities to significantly reduce their purchase of single-use plastics, including materials made out of polystyrene, which is the main substance in foam takeout containers.

In 2018, the World Health Organization classified styrene, a building block of polystyrene, as a “possible carcinogen.” It’s also harmful for workers in factories that produce it, according to the U.S. Occupational Safety and Hazard Administration.

The goal of Senate Bill 58 is to encourage companies to move toward manufacturing more environmentally friendly options, like paper products, said Andrea Densham, a senior policy adviser with the Great Lakes Alliance.

“We can do that by using the marketplace, which you know, the state of Illinois is a large purchaser,” Densham said.

But some working in restaurants have concerns about a possible industrywide polystyrene ban in the future.

Ghaleb Massoud runs Yaba’s Middle Eastern Grill in Logan Square and said recent efforts by Illinois lawmakers to encourage producers to switch to nonpolystyrene options could hurt the business.

Every month Massoud checks online prices for foam takeout containers, purchasing the cheapest option for his family-run restaurant.

“The alternative will be very expensive for us,” he said. “Actually, many restaurants cannot afford it.”

For an 8-ounce foam container, Massoud said typical prices are 4 to 5 cents each. Paper containers, which are biodegradable, are around 22 cents. Massoud said he would have to increase menu prices to offset this cost, potentially losing customers.

Densham compared the cost of a polystyrene ban to the cost of electric vehicles.

“We used to hear that it would be unbelievably far too expensive for us to move from the cars that we have now to electric vehicles,” she said. “Well, if we build smart policy, we invest in smart ways. We can move in that direction.”

Bills that ban polystyrene at the restaurant and consumer level have been introduced but with little success. Only nine states have laws limiting or banning polystyrene products, according to the advocacy group Environment Illinois.

In Chicago, an attempt in 2020 by Northwest Side Ald. Scott Waguespack, 32nd, didn’t get support from the City Council.

The Illinois Restaurant Association has stated that lawmakers should consider the financial hardships placed on restaurants by a polystyrene ban. Instead, the association supports restaurants’ voluntary efforts to decrease environmental impacts.