Connecticut 2022 2022 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00118 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 03/22/2022

                    OFFICE OF FISCAL ANALYSIS 
Legislative Office Building, Room 5200 
Hartford, CT 06106  (860) 240-0200 
http://www.cga.ct.gov/ofa 
sSB-118 
AN ACT CONCERNING THE USE OF CERTAIN POLYSTYRENE 
PRODUCTS.  
 
Primary Analyst: MR 	3/21/22 
Contributing Analyst(s): SB   
 
 
 
 
OFA Fiscal Note 
 
State Impact: 
Agency Affected Fund-Effect FY 23 $ FY 24 $ 
Technical Education and Career 
System 
GF - Cost None See Below 
Note: GF=General Fund 
  
Municipal Impact: 
Municipalities Effect FY 23 $ FY 24 $ 
Local and Regional School 
Districts 
STATE 
MANDATE
1
 
- Cost 
None $2-2.8 million 
statewide 
  
Explanation 
The bill requires each school district, regional school district, regional 
vocational technical school, and constituent unit of higher education to 
develop a plan by July 1, 2023, to discontinue the use of expanded 
polystyrene trays. The plan requirement is not anticipated to result in a 
fiscal impact to local and regional school districts or the regional 
vocational technical schools, as they have staff with the purchasing 
experience necessary to amend existing contracts and create the plans.  
To the extent that each plan's requirements are followed, the bill 
 
1
 State mandate is defined in Sec. 2-32b(2) of the Connecticut General Statutes, "state 
mandate" means any state initiated constitutional, statutory or executive action that 
requires a local government to establish, expand or modify its activities in such a way 
as to necessitate additional expenditures from local revenues.  2022SB-00118-R000066-FN.DOCX 	Page 2 of 3 
 
 
results in a state mandate and a statewide annual cost to local and 
regional school districts, including the Connecticut Technical Education 
and Career System, of up to approximately $2 million to $2.8 million, 
beginning in FY 24, associated with discontinuing the purchase and use 
of the trays. The cost per district will vary by the size of the district, the 
number of trays used, and the specific contract. It is estimated that 
replacing polystyrene trays with trays made of recycled materials 
results in an increased cost of $18 to $25 for each case of 500 trays. 
Connecticut public schools provide 46 million lunches and 18 million 
breakfasts annually. While the bill does not specifically state that 
districts must use trays made of recycled materials, it is the most 
common replacement of polystyrene trays. Assuming that a tray is used 
for each lunch, the additional statewide cost for purchasing lunch trays 
made of recycled materials is approximately $1.7 million to $2.3 million. 
Assuming 50% of breakfast meals are served with a tray, the statewide 
cost for breakfast trays is between $324,000 and $450,000. The cost to 
each district for purchasing replacement trays will vary. 
A small district serving approximately 350,000 meals will incur 
annual additional costs of approximately $12,600 to $17,500. A medium 
sized district serving 1.8 million meals will incur annual costs of 
approximately $64,800 to $90,000. Larger districts serving 2.5 million 
meals will incur annual costs of $90,000 to $125,000. If a district instead 
purchases reusable plastic trays to replace all polystyrene trays, a more 
significant cost results. It is estimated that reusable plastic trays average 
$10-$12 per tray. In addition to the larger one-time cost of purchasing 
the trays, districts would incur additional ongoing, significant costs 
related to staff, dishwashing equipment, plumbing, electrical, and 
maintenance costs. 
Additionally, the bill prohibits restaurants or caterers, beginning on 
July 1, 2024, from providing single-use expanded polystyrene food and 
beverage containers to customers, with certain exceptions. It creates a 
graduated set of penalties for violations of the bill's provisions and 
allows local health districts or departments, in addition to the 
Departments of Consumer Protection, Health, and Energy and  2022SB-00118-R000066-FN.DOCX 	Page 3 of 3 
 
 
Environmental Protection to enforce the ban.  This does not result in a 
fiscal impact to the state or municipalities in either FY 23 or FY 24 as the 
prohibition on single-use containers begins in FY 25.   
The Out Years 
The annualized ongoing fiscal impact identified above would 
continue into the future subject to the extent of tray use among school 
districts.  
It may also result in a minimal revenue gain to the General Fund and 
various municipalities to the extent, local health departments enforce 
the prohibition (since the bill requires half of the revenue from fines 
must be remitted to the municipality where the violation occurred). It is 
estimated that less than $5,000 will be generated annually from 
violations of the bill’s provisions.