Business Support and Resources
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Business Support and Resources
For Businesses
Stores and retail food establishments with more than three locations in Colorado are required to charge customers a $0.10 fee for each single-use plastic and paper bag used at the point of sale. Businesses will retain four cents of the fee to cover the costs of administration and compliance while six cents is remitted to the City on a quarterly basis.
This fee went into effect on January 1, 2023 and the first bag fee remittance was due in June 2023.
Businesses keep four cents of the fee to cover their costs complying with the state law and its administration, training employees, etc.
The remaining six cents is remitted to the City of Longmont for the uses below:
- Administrative or enforcement costs associated with developing and implementing the fee.
- Providing reusable bags to the community.
- Educating residents, businesses, and visitors about the impacts of disposable bags.
- Other waste reduction, recycling, composting, or waste diversion programs.
The single-use bag fee is a fee, not a tax and therefore all proceeds collected in accordance with this State law can only be used for the purposes listed above and cannot be used for general government expenses.
The customer receipt must list the number of single-use bags and the total fees charged for each bag. The bag fee cannot be included as revenue for the purposes of calculating sales tax to the customer.
The statewide single-use bag fee took effect on Jan. 1, 2023.
The single-use bag fee is not a tax and none of the proceeds can be used for other non-related government expenses. Additionally, the fee cannot be included as revenue for the purposes of calculating sales tax to a customer.
- All the businesses that must follow the single-use bag fee.
- Including any self-checkout and delivery services.
- Restaurants.
Since January 1, 2023, retailers are required to remit the total amount of fees collected and owed to the city (or county) and to continue remitting on a quarterly basis. Retailers can remit prior to this date if the municipality or county has a system in place to receive the funds. Some retailers prefer to remit in 2023, rather than hold on to a year’s worth of fees until April 2024.
These flyers are available for any business to download, print, and use.
- City of Longmont Bag Fee flyers highlight the bag fee and remind patrons to bring their own bags.
- City of Longmont Styrofoam flyers for restaurant countertops (coming soon)
- Longmont’s Sustainable Business Program Restaurants can receive guidance and support in transitioning to recyclable aluminum containers through Longmont’s Sustainable Business Program.
- Boulder County’s Partners for a Clean Environment (PACE) for additional information and assistance
- Eco-Cycle’s Guide to the 2024 Polystyrene Ban
For more information on the State’s Plastic Pollution Reduction Act, visit https://leg.colorado.gov/bills/hb21-1162. If you have questions, please contact Longmont’s Zero Waste Coordinator at sustainability@longmontcolorado.gov.
For more information on Longmont’s Sustainable Business Program, visit Longmont’s Sustainable Business Program website. If you have questions about the Sustainable Business Program, please contact Longmont’s Sustainable Business Program at sbp@longmontcolorado.gov.
For Consumers
- Grocery stores, supermarkets, convenience stores, liquor stores, and retailers that provide plastic bags and have four or more stores located in Colorado.
- Any self-checkout and delivery services.
Plastic bags cannot go in your recycling cart as they cause a lot of problems. They clog the machinery that sorts recyclables at the Recycling Center which requires the bags to get cut out by hand, a time-intensive task.
For plastic bags to be recycled, residents must take their plastic bags to appropriate disposal locations or travel to the Center for Hard-to-Recycle Materials (CHaRM) in Boulder. Even when properly disposed of, plastic bags are very difficult to recycle due to the limited aftermarkets of the material.
No. While it’s true that more resources are used to make a reusable bag than to make a plastic or paper bag, once you use your reusable bag a certain number of times (depending on the material type) its benefits outweigh the impacts from production. The best bag you can use is a reusable bag that you use for years and years.
Plastic bags, paper bags, and Styrofoam™ containers take a lot of energy, water, and other resources to manufacture. Additionally, plastic bags and Styrofoam™ are not recyclable in curbside containers and cause a lot of issues when sent to the recycling center.
Reducing and banning the use of these materials will reduce litter in our community, help keep our wildlife safe, and reduce the impact of plastics on our food chain.
The best bag is a reusable bag that you use for years and years and that you can wash. Choose a bag that is durable to avoid having to buy a replacement in the future. Consider bags made from recycled content.
- Write “Bring Bags” at the top of your grocery list and put your bags with your list.
- Post a reminder note by your door.
- Hang your bags by your door or put them back in your car or bike basket as soon as you empty and clean them.
- Store or clip an extra bag in your purse or backpack.
- Keep a spare bag at work.
- Leave a few bags in your car.
- Put your coupons in your bag.
- If you regularly shop on a set day of the week, put a reminder in your phone or on your calendar to bring your bags.
While many people reuse bags, many do not, which is why the bag fee was put into place. Small trash bags are available at retailers or single-use bags can be purchased at the checkout to be used for garbage cans in your home. The bag fee does not apply to produce bags, newspaper bags, etc—so if you produce very little garbage those bags could be used for that purpose. Pet owners will still have multiple options to clean up pet waste. They can use plastic bags from newspapers, produce, or bread; paper bags; newspaper; or dog poop bags bought at the store.
The following businesses are exempt:
- Smaller stores with three or fewer locations in Colorado.
- Farmers and roadside markets.
- Laundry or dry-cleaning services.
- Pharmacies.
- Bulk stores.
- All restaurants.
A single-use bag means a bag that is not reusable and is destined for our local landfill or recycling process. The bag fee and ban are only on single-use plastic and paper bags distributed to customers at the point of sale. This does not include reusable bags that may be provided by the store or any bag brought in by the customer to be used.
Single-use bag does not include:
- Bags used by consumers inside stores to:
- Package bulk items, such as fruit, vegetables, nuts, grains, candy, or small hardware items
- Contain or wrap frozen foods, meat, or fish
- Contain or wrap flowers, potted plants, or other items where dampness may be a problem
- Contain unwrapped prepared foods or bakery goods
- A non-handled bag used to protect a purchased item from damaging or contaminating other purchased items when placed in a recyclable paper bag or reusable bag
- Bags provided by pharmacists to contain prescription drugs
- Newspaper bags, door-hanger bags, laundry-dry cleaning bags, or bags sold in packages containing multiple bags for uses such as food storage, garbage, pet waste, or yard waste bags
The statewide single-use bag fee took effect on January 1, 2023.
The fee is ten cents ($0.10) per plastic or paper bag.
- All the businesses that must follow the single-use bag fee.
- Including any self-checkout and delivery services.
- All restaurants.
The following stores are required to charge customers a bag fee:
- Grocery stores, supermarkets, convenience stores, liquor stores, and retailers that provide plastic bags and have four or more stores located in Colorado.
- Any self-checkout and delivery services
Customers who receive income-qualified assistance at local, state, and federal levels do not have to pay the 10-cent fee for paper bags. Examples include Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) (including Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAPE); Women, Infant and Children (WIC); Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF); and Health First cardholders
No. The single-use bag fee will not apply to bags you bring to a store for reuse, including plastic and paper bags you already have and want to reuse.
Yes. The bag fee must be applied to each single-use bag provided at self-checkout or delivery orders from stores required to charge a bag fee.