Senin, 16 Juli 2007

Bag Lady

Bag Lady
By Meghna Chakrabarti


SHARON, Mass. - July 17, 2007 - The statistics tell a bleak tale: Americans use 380 billion plastic bags every year. It takes 100 million barrels of oil to make those bags. Most don't biodegrade in landfills and barely one percent of them get recycled.

That's why a bill pending in the Massachusetts legislature would charge you a fee of up to 15 cents every time you want to use a plastic bag for shopping. It would be the first statewide law of its kind, and one woman from Sharon is behind the push. WBUR's Meghna Chakrabarti has her story.

The audio for this story will be available on WBUR's web site after 10 a.m. on Tuesday.

TEXT OF STORY

[ROOM TONE OF PEOPLE MUMBLING/PARTY SOUNDS IN BACKGROUND; FADE UNDER TO FIRST ACT AND HOLD]

JANET MARTIN: "I'm the one woman crusade against the plastic bag."

MEGHNA CHAKRABARTI: Janet Martin is a tall, slender, 50-something Southern Belle, with blond highlights and a colorful pedicure.

She says it's not just that old plastic bags flap around in trees, or that they don't breakdown in landfills. Martin says she's on her mission because she believes plastic bags waste oil, an idea she chanced on in an article in House and Garden magazine.

MARTIN: "It said that did you know that the petroleum used in the manufacturing and production of 14 plastic bags could drive a car one mile?"

[FADE OUT PARTY SOUND UNDER NEXT TRACK]

CHAKRABARTI: Martin started writing letters to her local grocery store. She also wrote to her state Senator, Brian A. Joyce. Joyce responded by filing legislation that he says, if passed, will charge Massachusetts shoppers 15-cents for every bag they carry out of stores.

[USE JOYCE ROOMTONES FOR HANDLE AROUND THIS ACT]

BRIAN A. JOYCE: "This is just one of the 50 states, and it's just one product, but I think we can, in fact, stem the tide of harm that we've caused in the last couple of generations."

[FADE IN PARTY SOUNDS OF WOMEN LAUGHING; FADE UNDER NEXT TRACKS AND ACTS AND HOLD THROUGH THIS SCENE UNTIL INDICATED -- WE NEED TO HAVE ACTIVE BACKGROUND NOISE THROUGHOUT, THERE ARE SEVERAL AMBI TRACKS FOR YOU TO CHOOSE FROM]

CHAKRABARTI: Janet Martin is keeping up the pressure. Since the beginning of the year, she's been sponsoring what she's dubbed, "B-Y-O-B Parties"... that's Bring Your Own Bag. She goes to friends' homes, invites a group of women over for wine and cheese, and offers them a free reusable grocery tote in exchange for a promise to banish the plastic bag from their households.

MARTIN: "No one has ever stopped me from bringing a reusable bag to shop with. They go, they start reaching for a bag. I say no, I use my own bags! I've got my own. And furthermore, I have two arms and two legs and I can walk out of here with the receipt without using a bag and I'm proud of it."

CHAKRABARTI: It's not always an easy sell.

[NOTE: PLEASE BE SURE THE BACKGROUND AMBI IS VERY ACTIVE HERE TO SMOOTH TRANSITION BETWEEN ACTS]

MARY RUDSER: "The chicken! The gooky chicken! What do I put the chicken in?"

[LAUGHS]

CHAKRABARTI: Mary Rudser is a wife and mom. She's worked in grocery stores for 20 years. Her neighbor, Wendy Savino, has an even bigger worry. Plastic bags make the perfect pooper-scoopers for her dogs.

WENDY SAVINO: "That was the one I couldn't think of another way to accommodate, you know?"
RUDSER: "Scoop it with the scooper thing and carry it down the street and put it in -- "
SAVINO: "In Mary's front yard."
RUDSER: "In my front yard."
SAVINO: "Well, that's the problem."
RUDSER: "I don't know. Do you put it in paper? I don't know!"

[DOG BARKS]

MARTIN: "For doggie poop, I've got the answer for that, too. You get plastic bags around loaves of bread carrots, potatoes, the list goes on. You can take those bags, you can cut them down, take them with you when you go walk your dog."

[PUT IN 1-2 SECONDS OF PARTY AMBI]

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: "I have to head out."
MARTIN: "Thanks for coming."
UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: "Thanks for having me."

CHAKRABARTI: At the end of the party, as the women leave, Martin gives each of them reusable grocery bag, and a task.

MARTIN: "And listen, this is just a start for you. Go to Stop 'N Shop, and go to Shaw's, and bug them, and say, where are the reusable bags? I want to buy some more!"

[PEAK A LITTLE CHAOTIC ROOMTONE OF WOMEN EXITING; LAUGHING ON THEIR WAY OUT]

CHAKRABARTI: As for the future of plastic bags across Massachusetts, Joyce's bill is in committee on Beacon Hill. Public hearings on the proposed plastic fees will likely take place this fall.

For WBUR, I'm Meghna Chakrabarti.

1 komentar:

Jennifer mengatakan...

Where can i get a hold of Meghna? I am an old school friend from Corvallis and want to say hi.