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Reusable Grocery Bags Pose E. coli Risk
newsinferno ^ | June 25th, 2010

Posted on 06/25/2010 4:14:27 PM PDT by JoeProBono

Plastic grocery bags are everywhere and more and more people are using the convenient commodity in an effort to be greener and recycle and reuse; however, The Washington Post has issued a reminder to wash the bags after they’ve been emptied if you plan on using them again.

A study at the University of Arizona and Loma Linda University found that just about every bag tested came back with large amounts of dangerous pathogens such as coliform and E. coli, said The Washington Post. Raw meat or uncooked food contaminants—pointing to coliform bacteria—were in about half of the bags while E. coli was found in about 12 percent of the bags tested, wrote The Washington Post. The study explained that by simply putting the bags through the washer or even cleaning them by hand, cut the bacteria levels down to nothing, wrote The Washington Post. But, just about all the shoppers who were questioned for the study generally did not normally—if-ever—wash these reusable bags, while about one-third said that they did use their bags later for nonfood items.

The American Chemistry Council funded the study, wrote The Washington Post, noting that the study took place while a debate continues over a bill in California to ban single-use bags. The Council, said The Washington Post, is opposed to the bill.

Meanwhile, coliform is a pointer to potential fecal contamination and applies to a broad array of bacteria found in the environment—for instance mammal feces, soil, vegetation, and water—and can be used to determine if other fecal pathogens, such as E. coli, are in the test environment. Such pathogens indicate the potential presence of dangerous, sometimes deadly and disease-causing contaminants.

We frequently report on E. coli and have discussed that this is a bacterium—a fecal coliform—found in the intestines of mammals: Warm-blooded animals, including humans. E. coli present in a water system can point to recent sewage or animal waste contamination....


TOPICS: Food
KEYWORDS: california; ecoli; grocerybags
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To: La Lydia
It's wonderful to see you doing so much to conserve our precious resources. Instead of one thin plastic bag you use a fabric bag, which came from who knows where at the cost of how much energy to grow, refine, fabricate and transport; one or more paper bags, and sometimes a couple plastic bags as well. And all this despite the fact that the thin plastic bags are recyclable.

Hmm.

21 posted on 06/25/2010 4:52:22 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: JoeProBono
Yep...give me the most bio-nondegradable, non-organic, global warming inducing, made in banana republic shanty towns by oppressed Oompaloompas, who have been run out of their former rainforest homes after they were clear cut for cattle grazing, plastic bags possible.

I sleep better knowing I'm causing some hip, trendy CommieLib to toss and turn.

Scouts Out! Cavalry Ho!

22 posted on 06/25/2010 4:58:05 PM PDT by wku man (Who says conservatives don't rock? Go to www.myspace.com/rockfromtheright)
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To: La Lydia
I always line my reusable grocery bags with paper bags, and change the paper ones every other week.

Sounds like a good practice...but the downside of paper is that roaches adore the glue used in paper bags.
23 posted on 06/25/2010 4:59:13 PM PDT by Nepeta
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To: wku man

ME TOO!!!


24 posted on 06/25/2010 5:01:04 PM PDT by Recovering Ex-hippie (Ok, joke's over....Bring back Bush !)
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To: hinckley buzzard

No, you don’t understand. I am consuming even more! I get the nasty, reusable, decorated, canvas-with-a-plastic-coating bags that the grocery stores sell. Then I line them with paper bags (trees!) Then I put everything in a plastic (petroleum derivative!) bag first, the recyclable ones you like so much. So, to sum up, I am consuming three times as much as I used to, bag-wise, BEFORE THEY BEGAN HECTORING ME about grocery bags. And I look virtuously green with my reusable bags as I slither out of the store. This is my revenge.


25 posted on 06/25/2010 5:06:31 PM PDT by La Lydia
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To: Nepeta

I keep them in the trunk of my car. But I don’t have and have never had any problems with roaches. That is what exterminator companies are for.


26 posted on 06/25/2010 5:09:50 PM PDT by La Lydia
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To: La Lydia

I found a colapsable crate from Good Living. I use it at Costco and Shop and Save.
I do get plastic bags everyonce in a while, mainly because I need them for scoopin’ the poop the night before trash day. Two choc. labs sure do create a lot of poop! just sayin’


27 posted on 06/25/2010 6:34:15 PM PDT by Cyclone59 (I ROCK, Guitar Hero said so........)
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Hippies pose E-Coli risks


28 posted on 06/25/2010 7:48:16 PM PDT by dsrtsage (One half of all people have below average IQ...In the US the number is 54%)
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To: w1andsodidwe

I have meat and frozen items put in plastic bag before going into my cloth bags. Haven’t had any leakage yet...


29 posted on 06/25/2010 9:04:10 PM PDT by goat granny
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To: JoeProBono
Crikey, being a germaphobe, there's no way in h*ll, I'd ever have used those "go green" grocery totes. I'm the freak who makes the checker spray the conveyer with disinfectant before I set my groceries on it when I'm checking out. cross contamination from someone's leaking meat or poultry.

I do always offer to help her dry it with paper towels, though.

Also, even though I'm tempted to put things I don't want squashed in the "child seat" part of the cart, I don't because, who knows if a kid with a leaky diaper sat in there before unsuspecting shopper sets his loaf of bread, or carton of eggs in there..thereby transfering said baby poop to his fridge when he gets home.

30 posted on 06/26/2010 12:54:28 AM PDT by sockmonkey
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To: La Lydia

LOL! What was Nordstrom’s marketing department and buyer of merchandise thinking?! :)


31 posted on 07/02/2010 10:03:52 AM PDT by StopBigGovt
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To: StopBigGovt

Scroll down to the bottom of this to see their grocery bag. It is quite fetching, but overpriced.
http://www.whiteapricot.com/newsletter/archive/issue_10.html


32 posted on 07/02/2010 12:24:53 PM PDT by La Lydia
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To: La Lydia

Agreed! The bags are quite fetching, but much too high a price. :)


33 posted on 07/02/2010 1:40:54 PM PDT by StopBigGovt
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To: w1andsodidwe
Of course this will happen. I try and wash my reuseable in the washing machine regularly. Wears them out faster but is a necesity.

Reusable grocery bags, ESPECIALLY when washed regularly, are significanlty harder on the environment than the disposable plastic grocery bags. Enviro-commies won't ever tell you the truth, though.

34 posted on 07/02/2010 1:44:20 PM PDT by Travis T. OJustice (I can spell just fine, thanks, it's my typing that sucks.)
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To: hinckley buzzard
It's wonderful to see you doing so much to conserve our precious resources. Instead of one thin plastic bag you use a fabric bag, which came from who knows where at the cost of how much energy to grow, refine, fabricate and transport; one or more paper bags, and sometimes a couple plastic bags as well. And all this despite the fact that the thin plastic bags are recyclable. Hmm.

Worth repeating. Bravo! BTW, the thin plastic ones are much easier on the environment than even the reusable bags alone.

35 posted on 07/02/2010 1:48:15 PM PDT by Travis T. OJustice (I can spell just fine, thanks, it's my typing that sucks.)
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To: JoeProBono

The second you throw those bad boys into the washing machine, the water and detergent use make those bags the most extravagantly un-green option there is for toting around your groceries.

Reusable grocery bags - brought to you by the people that brought you ethanol.


36 posted on 07/02/2010 1:53:49 PM PDT by RinaseaofDs
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To: RinaseaofDs

37 posted on 07/02/2010 1:59:59 PM PDT by JoeProBono (A closed mouth gathers no feet - Visualize)
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To: Cyclone59
"Two choc. labs sure do create a lot of poop! just sayin’"

Heck, I've got four 10-lb cats and I swear that, daily, I scoop at least 40 pounds of poop out of the litter boxes.

It's really a wonder that there are any cats left ...

38 posted on 07/02/2010 2:07:50 PM PDT by BlueLancer (I'm getting a fine tootsy-frootsying right here...)
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