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πŸ›οΈ Single-Use Items/Polystyrene Foam Rules

Polystyrene Foam Rules: Thousand Oaks vs Ventura

How do polystyrene foam rules rules compare between Thousand Oaks, CA and Ventura, CA?

Thousand Oaks has fewer restrictions than Ventura.

Thousand Oaks, CA

Ventura County

Some Restrictions

California SB 54 phases out expanded polystyrene foodware statewide by 2025-2032. Thousand Oaks applies state law without an additional local foam ban, unlike many coastal California cities.

View full Thousand Oaks rules β†’

Ventura, CA

Ventura County

Heavy Restrictions

California restricts expanded polystyrene food containers statewide through SB 54 (2022) packaging requirements under Public Resources Code 42040-42081. The law mandates that polystyrene foodware achieve 25 percent recycling by 2025 or face statewide sales prohibition.

View full Ventura rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactThousand OaksVentura
State lawSB 54 (2022)-
Foam phaseoutJanuary 2025 effective-
Local additionNone-
SchoolsAlready prohibited-
Enacting Law-SB 54 (2022)
Statute-Pub Res 42040-42081
Recycling Threshold-25% by 2025
Full Compliance-2032

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Thousand Oaks FAQ

Are foam cups banned in Thousand Oaks restaurants?

Effectively yes, after January 2025 SB 54 implementation. Producers cannot meet the recycling threshold, so foam foodware is no longer commercially available for restaurant use.

Does Thousand Oaks have its own foam ordinance?

No. Unlike many coastal California cities, Thousand Oaks did not pass a local foam ban before state action. The city relies on CalRecycle's SB 54 enforcement.

Ventura FAQ

Is expanded polystyrene foodware banned in California?

Yes. SB 54 prohibits sale of expanded polystyrene foodware because it failed to achieve the 25 percent recycling rate by January 2025 required under Public Resources Code 42040-42081.

Can California cities still pass their own foam bans?

Yes. Many cities have stricter local foam bans, and they remain valid. State law sets a floor that cities can exceed but not undermine.

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