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Here are some easy ways to make sustainable choices during the pandemic

A restaurant worker hands chopsticks to customers dining outdoors
Jason Ruckart hands chopsticks to Nicole and Kyle Lehning at Roy’s in Woodland Hills in July.
(Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
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Maybe you’re appalled by the tidal wave of takeout containers from your favorite restaurants or the sea of disposable masks littering the streets. Perhaps you’ve noticed sustainable achievements starting to slide. Or maybe you’ve just got more time on your hands and you’ve always wanted to make your lifestyle more sustainable — so you figure you may as well start now.

Whatever your motivation, here are a few tips that community activists, zero-waste experts and eco-friendly shop owners recommend specifically for the pandemic.

Start with your own mask

Still using disposable masks or N95s? Hoiyin Ip, an environmental activist in Orange County, suggests you transition to a cloth mask that you can wash along with the rest of your laundry. They are reusable, sustainable and generally more comfortable too.

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Audit yourself

In order to know what to save, you must know what you waste, right? Leslie Campbell, founder and CEO of zero-waste store Sustain LA, recommends looking through your trash and recycling bins to see what you throw away. If you’re trying to improve your business’ practice, hire someone to do an audit of your disposables.

Eat smart

You may be tired of your own cooking, but eating at home is an easy way to avoid waste. Try sprucing up your repertoire of dishes with The Times’ recipe database. If you bring food from home out with you, pack it in a washable container.

Buying from local eateries is generally good for the environment, because it supports local food producers and keeps carbon-emitting travel to a minimum. But what is an eco-conscious person to do with all the takeout containers, throwaway utensils and paper products these days?

If you choose to dine in at a restaurant, Glendale environmental advocate Monica Campagna recommends bringing your own reusable container to pack up leftovers. Campbell encourages paying attention to the restaurant’s sustainability practices too. Sometimes she checks the restaurant’s social media before going out to eat to see what kind of containers they use and how much waste she can detect. She tries to support businesses that have innovated waste-reduction strategies, like Kitchen Mouse LA, which offered reusable tins for to-go boxes.

When ordering takeout, Ip suggests asking the restaurant to keep its plastic cutlery and paper napkins.

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“Before you walk away with your to-go bag, check, look into your bag [to see] if you have this stuff, and give it back to the restaurant,” Ip said.

Jodi Chin, an employee at the Refill Shoppe in Ventura, recommends reusing the disposable containers that hold your food, since they are usually sturdy enough for a second use. This tactic doesn’t avoid waste completely, but at least you can prolong the life of the product.

Leslie Campbell at her store, Sustain LA, in Highland Park
Leslie Campbell of Sustain LA in Highland Park recommends keeping track of what you throw away to better understand how you can reduce waste.
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
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Return to reusable bags

Gov. Gavin Newsom temporarily suspended California’s plastic bag ban earlier this year, but it is back in place — meaning shoppers can now bring their reusable bags into the store again. California’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration outlines a few safety guidelines customers should follow when using reusable bags for grocery shopping, including leaving the bags in the shopping cart and bagging groceries themselves.

The day before Newsom’s temporary prohibition of the plastic bag ban lifted, a group of 125 scientists from around the world wrote a letter saying reusables are safe during the pandemic. The virus is primarily spread through air droplets, the letter pointed out. Though some studies have shown that the virus can linger on some surfaces for as long as three days, the letter wrote, “One can assume that any object or surface in a public space — reusable or disposable — could be contaminated with the virus. Single-use plastic is not inherently safer than reusables, and causes additional public health concerns once it is discarded.”

Buying in bulk

Gone are the days of bringing your own jar to fill with rice at Sprouts. Bulk supermarkets and refill shops are following different procedures now. But Campagna is creatively adapting by purchasing large quantities of her essentials — like rice, pasta and cereal — and refilling a reusable container at home. While she doesn’t get rid of disposables altogether, buying in bulk avoids lots of small plastic bags, and the bigger bags can be reused.

Zero-waste refill stations let you reduce plastic waste and potentially save money because you pay only for what you take. Here’s where to find them.

That mindset can translate to household items too. Refill shops sell essentials such as dish detergent, body lotion and household cleaners in reusable containers that you can bring back again and again. Now, many shops have their employees sanitize every container and refill it themselves. Transitioning your household items from disposable to reusable “doesn’t require a purchasing overhaul,” Sustain LA owner Campbell said. Use what you have and the “small steps add up quickly.”

Since the pandemic began, Glendale environmental activist Campagna has been noticing all the plastic in her home. It’s in her dish brush, her toothpaste tube, even her deodorant stick. So once the item is used up, she replaces it with a sustainable option, like a wooden brush or deodorant in a jar.

“It’s been cool to try out these new products,” Campagna wrote in an email. “Next I plan to try out the shampoo and conditioner bars.”

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Electronic waste

Since most of the world has gone virtual, we are all using our electronics — and their power sources — more frequently, which means they are getting used up more rapidly. Once your electronic device has worn out, recycle it. Many major electronics retailers, cellphone providers and municipalities will take old cellphones, laptops and tablets, said Carl Smith, president and CEO of Call2Recycle. Battery collections in California are down a third compared to last year, he said, because many collection spots have closed or reduced hours. He advises collecting old batteries in a bag and recycling them at a drop-off location near you.

“Don’t think about something as being waste as much as it has graduated from your use and somebody else can use either it or parts from it,” Smith said.

Be patient

These kinds of lifestyle changes aren’t as simple as flipping a switch. It takes time to change habits. You’ll soon develop a sense for sustainability, and the pandemic is the perfect time to cultivate it, Campbell said.

“You get superhero vision of things,” she said. “Things that you didn’t previously notice that were just completely habitual and we were told we need, you start to question and you start to change. It can take a while.”

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