A Central Saanich teen is encouraging Saanich Peninsula residents to consider a plastic bag ban, and is presenting to schools and local governments to highlight the issue.
Alyssa Jensen, 15, is a student at StellyB次元官网网址檚 Secondary and first learned of the problem in her Marine Biology 11 class. When her teacher, Mr. Siebert, assigned an inquiry project, she chose to research garbage in the ocean, particularly single-use plastic bags. Jensen said they are the second most common plastic item in the oceans (bottles are the first), and they can be recycled.
In her research, Jensen learned that garbage in the ocean is caught in the currents and ends up in inlets or the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, and much of that could have been recycled. Jensen supports a ban because she said there are many alternatives, including re-usable bags and paper bags. She said single-use plastic bags can be recycled at many grocery stores, but most people donB次元官网网址檛 because it is inconvenient.
B次元官网网址淕arbage cans are a lot easier than recycling, because theyB次元官网网址檙e everywhere and you donB次元官网网址檛 have to go out of your way,B次元官网网址 said Jensen.
She began at Central Saanich council on May 22, where her father Carl is a councillor. Because of that, he declared a conflict of interest and left the room for his daughterB次元官网网址檚 presentation. At the microphone, she presented a three-point plan to educate, engage, and finally enact a ban. She believed smaller businesses should be consulted when making the transition, because they might have a harder time adjusting than a larger business.
In an interview, Jensen said councillors were B次元官网网址渧ery open to the idea, adding they asked good questions and offered advice on how to take her proposal further.
Mayor Ryan Windsor said he was B次元官网网址渂iased towards the environment,B次元官网网址 saying he bought canvas bags years ago. Coun. Niall Paltiel said a similar motion was brought forward to the CRD previously. In addressing JensenB次元官网网址檚 plan, Paltiel suggested she could educate and engage initially, with the understanding that a shift to zero waste will take time. Councillors voted unanimously to include the topic in an upcoming edition of the Central Saanich newsletter.
Coun. Alicia Holman suggested Jensen apply for a sustainability grant-in-aid to educate the public about single-use plastic, which Jensen said she would do.
She will be presenting to Sidney and North Saanich in the coming weeks, and said she will reach out the City of Victoria to see how they enacted their ban as well as the CRD. She also wants to continue presenting to classrooms, having already presented to a Grade 7 class at Bayside and a kindergarten class at KELSET.
B次元官网网址淚 really want to tell the community that because itB次元官网网址檚 hard to tell the ocean is struggling unless youB次元官网网址檝e seen it.B次元官网网址
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