Spotlight

The Last Straw

Local communities are starting to reduce their plastic, one straw at a time

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It’s easy to take the impact of plastic straws for granted, but imagine if every straw you have ever used suddenly appeared in your living room. According to National Geographic, eight million tons of plastic trash makes its way into the ocean every year. This sobering statistic, not to mention heartbreaking photos of the direct and often fatal impact of plastic waste on marine life, is a call to action that local restaurants, cafes, and businesses are responding to by trying to get away from wasteful plastic products. The most visible mascot of this green movement is the humble straw.

The organization Strawless Newport is now leading the charge on Aquidneck Island. Businesses like The Power of Juice in Middletown have ditched the ubiquitous plastic tube for reusable glass straws that customers can purchase and – get this – use with every beverage they’ll ever need a straw for. Some businesses have considered selling metal varieties, while others are switching to more eco-friendly paper options. Think of it as one small sip for you, one giant slurp for Rhode Island’s oceans. It’s all for the good of the planet, after all, and that doesn’t suck.

Tony Pacitti, Nick DelGuidice, The Last Straw, Local communities are starting to reduce their plastic, one straw at a time, straws, straw ban, plastic ban, Strawless Newport, The Power of Juice, Middletown, Newport, green movement, Aquidneck Island, National Geographic, eco-friendly, plastic straws, The Bay Magazine, The Bay, East Bay RI, Rhode Island, RI, East Bay Rhode Island, TheBayMag, The Bay Mag, East Bay

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