Skip to content

NFIB Member Speaks Out Against Banning Plastics

NFIB Member Speaks Out Against Banning Plastics

June 1, 2021 Last Edit: June 5, 2025

NFIB Member Speaks Out Against Banning Plastics

Westminster-based restaurant owner Ken Harrell, an NFIB member, penned a guest editorial for Colorado Politics on the punitive effects House Bill 1162 would have on small businesses such as his.

“HB 1162, dubbed a ‘Plastics Management’ bill would, if passed, prohibit restaurants from using the polystyrene take-out containers that literally kept us alive during the pandemic, as well as tax, before also eliminating, plastic grocery and take-out bags. This bill could not come at a worse time for our businesses and our workers.

“There is some understandable concern over the accumulation of waste in landfills, and of plastics in particular. But do we really think that the bulk of this global problem comes from local take-out containers and grocery bags? Containers that are mostly air in any case, but due to the miracles of modern science and technology are still strong and effective enough to keep food warm and not leak? Or grocery bags, which, while termed as ‘single use’ actually end up serving two, three, or more functions after they bring our groceries home, serving as garbage bags or lunch sacks, or any of a number of functions? Are these really a major societal problem for the government to solve?”

Read Harrell’s full editorial here.

Related Information

Poll of Small-Business Owners Shows No Mood for Plastics Ban

Takeaways 

The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), the nation’s largest and leading small-business association, asked its Colorado members, “Do you support statewide bans on certain single-use plastics like straws, shopping bags, trays, food containers, utensils and other legal products in Colorado?” The results were:
No, 87.6%
Yes, 10.3%
Und. 1.9%

“House Bill 1162 wouldn’t institute a ban, but it would lift the prohibition on local governments from having their own bans on certain plastic products, and polystyrene, which is worse because we’d be left with a crazy-quilt of unmanageable rules and regulations to comply with,” said Tony Gagliardi, NFIB’s Colorado state director. “At a time when every, single aspect of running an enterprise needs to be unfettered if we’re ever to economically recover, a plastics ban is a needless idea coming at the worst possible moment.”

Get to know NFIB

NFIB is a member-driven organization advocating on behalf of small and independent businesses nationwide.

Receive our newsletter and email notification
Knowledge is power. Let us help you stay informed with breaking legislative news, regulatory updates, business tips, and more.

Related Articles

January 29, 2026
NFIB to Colorado Lawmakers: Treat Main Street as Partner
“Small-business owners are counting on lawmakers to see Main Street, not as a source of revenue or a problem to micromanage, but as a partner in Colorado’s fut…
Read More
January 29, 2026
NFIB Delivers 2026 Georgia Member Ballot Results to Lawmakers
The survey addressed workplace rules, health insurance and Georgia’s regulatory process.
Read More
January 27, 2026
Small Businesses Challenge Oregon’s Regulatory Burdens on Out-of-State Producers
NFIB filed an amicus brief in the case National Association of Wholesaler-Distributors v. Feldon at the U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.
Read More
The first Capitol building in Montgomery, Alabama was built in 1847, and was destroyed by fire in 1849. The current State Capitol was built on the previous Capitol's foundations, and was completed in 1851. The building has grown over time with an east wing added to the buildings rear in 1885, a south wing in 1906, a matching north wing in 1912, and along with a complete renovation to the whole building a modern addition to the rear in 1992.
January 26, 2026
NFIB Delivers 2026 Alabama Member Ballot Results to Lawmakers
The survey shows small business owners’ views on key issues.
Read More

© 2001 - 2026 National Federation of Independent Business. All Rights Reserved. Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy | Accessibility