Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises and Eataly join plastic-straw ban
Push to switch to eco-friendly straws on request only gains critical mass
Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises, or LEYE, and Eataly this week joined the growing number of restaurant companies that are voluntarily moving away from the use of plastic straws.
The Chicago-based LEYE, which operates 120 restaurants across nine states, said Wednesday it plans to be plastic-straw-free by Oct. 1. Instead, the group’s restaurants will shift to the use of biodegradable alternatives, including paper and biodegradable plastic — as well as all-natural straws made of hay, or wheat stems, and bamboo.
Ideally, straws will not be used at all, said the group’s president R.J. Melman, who spearheaded the move. The eco-friendly alternatives will be made available only on request.
Melman said the company has been working on moving away from plastic straws for about eight months, but the key was figuring out the supply chain alternatives.
“We use millions of straws a year,” he said. “And we have a lot of different restaurants with a lot of different needs, including places like M Burger with a lot of to-go drinks going out the door.”
But plastic-free alternatives are becoming more available, he said, and guests have liked tests of hay and bamboo straws at the group’s Ramen-san and Sushi-san concepts, for example.
“I think this thing will go nationwide,” he said. “So we don’t mind being ahead of that curve.”
The U.S. division of Italian restaurant-and-retail chain Eataly, meanwhile, said Thursday it will remove plastic straws from all locations by July 31.
Paper straws at The Keeper in Plano, Texas
The five-unit chain will switch to paper straws, and also plans to replace plastic stirrers with wood alternatives. Eataly will also switch to 100-percent compostable utensils, the company said.
Eataly locations in the U.S. use about 18,000 straws on average per week, said Nicola Farinetti, CEO of Eataly USA. “Investing in the replacement of plastic straws with recyclable alternatives is just one example of our commitment to reduce waste in action,” Farinetti said in statement.
The anti-plastic-straw movement has been growing rapidly, in some regions spurred on by legislation.
A ban on both plastic straws and utensils in restaurants is scheduled to go into effect in Seattle on July 1, for example, forcing foodservice outlets there to switch to compostable and paper alternatives or face potential fines.
Similar legislation is being considered in New York City, as well as a number of cities in California and Hawaii. The United Kingdom in April became the first country to ban plastic straws and stirrers, in a move to be implemented next year.
According to the recycling nonprofit Eco-Cycle, an estimated 500 million plastic straws are used in the U.S. each day, an amount that would fill more than 127 school buses or wrap around the globe more than twice.
That estimate is based on an average of 1.6 straws used per person per day, which means each person in the U.S. would use about 38,000 or more straws between the ages of 5 and 65, Eco-Cycle estimates.
Plastic straws are not often recycled and, in coastal areas, can end up in waterways and oceans. Consumers are also becoming more aware of the impact of plastic straws on the planet, illustrated in 2015 by a hard-to-watch viral video of a sea turtle with a plastic straw wedged into its nostril.
McDonald’s earlier this month said it will start phasing out use of plastic straws in about 1,300 restaurants in the United Kingdom and Ireland, replacing them with paper straws, starting in September.
Under pressure from environmental groups, last month the Chicago-based chain also reportedly said it will test compostable straws