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

Moorpark vs Thousand Oaks

How do plastic bag rules rules compare between Moorpark, CA and Thousand Oaks, CA?

Moorpark has fewer restrictions than Thousand Oaks.

Moorpark, CA

Ventura County

Some Restrictions

California Senate Bill 270 bans single-use plastic carryout bags at Moorpark grocery stores, pharmacies, and large retailers. Reusable bags or recycled paper bags carry a minimum 10-cent charge per bag.

View full Moorpark rules β†’

Thousand Oaks, CA

Ventura County

Heavy Restrictions

California SB 270 bans single-use plastic carryout bags at Thousand Oaks grocery stores, pharmacies, and large retailers. Reusable bags or paper bags cost at least ten cents each at checkout.

View full Thousand Oaks rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactMoorparkThousand Oaks
State lawSB 270 (2016)SB 270, SB 1046
Minimum bag fee10 cents-
Covered storesGrocery, pharmacy, large retail-
ExemptRestaurants, produce bags-
Bag fee-10 cents minimum
Plastic phaseout-January 2026
WIC/CalFresh-Free bags

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Moorpark FAQ

Can I bring my own plastic bag from home?

Yes. Customers may bring any bag from home for free use. The 10-cent fee only applies to bags provided by the store at checkout, not bags shoppers bring themselves.

Does the rule apply to small Moorpark boutiques?

Smaller retailers below the SB 270 size threshold are technically not covered by state law, but most have voluntarily phased out single-use plastic bags following customer expectations and brand norms.

Thousand Oaks FAQ

Why does my Thousand Oaks grocer charge for paper bags?

California SB 270 requires the ten-cent minimum charge to discourage single-use bag consumption. The retailer keeps the fee and uses it to offset compliant bag costs.

Are restaurant takeout bags covered?

Generally no. SB 270 covers grocery and pharmacy bags, not restaurant takeout. However, SB 1335 covers food service ware at state facilities, and other rules govern restaurant packaging.

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