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πŸ›οΈ Single-Use Items/Plastic Straw Rules

Plastic Straw Rules: Citrus Heights vs Sacramento

How do plastic straw rules rules compare between Citrus Heights, CA and Sacramento, CA?

Citrus Heights and Sacramento have similar restriction levels.

Citrus Heights, CA

Sacramento County

Some Restrictions

California Public Resources Code 42270-42273, enacted by AB 1884 (2018), prohibits full-service restaurants from providing single-use plastic straws unless requested by the customer. The on-request rule applies uniformly to dine-in restaurants statewide.

View full Citrus Heights rules β†’

Sacramento, CA

Sacramento County

Some Restrictions

California Public Resources Code 42270 (Assembly Bill 1884, 2018) prohibits full-service restaurants from providing single-use plastic straws unless a customer requests one. Sacramento dine-in restaurants follow the on-request rule.

View full Sacramento rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactCitrus HeightsSacramento
StatutePub Res 42270-42273PRC 42270
Enacting LawAB 1884 (2018)-
Covered BusinessesFull-service restaurants-
Annual Fine Cap$300-
Default-On request only
Penalty-$25/day, $300 cap
Scope-Full-service restaurants

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Citrus Heights FAQ

Are plastic straws banned in California?

Not entirely. Full-service restaurants may not provide plastic straws unless requested. Customers can still ask for one, and fast-food rules vary by locality.

Can California cities ban plastic straws outright?

Yes. State law sets a baseline on-request rule, and local governments may impose complete bans on plastic straws in additional venues.

Sacramento FAQ

Can I still get a plastic straw at a sit-down restaurant?

Yes, but only if you ask for one. State law requires servers to provide plastic straws only on request rather than automatically with the drink.

Does the rule cover fast food?

AB 1884 specifically applies to full-service dine-in restaurants, not quick-service. SB 54 source-reduction goals affect all single-use plastic, so many fast-food chains have switched anyway.

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