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    Plastic Bag Ban Myths

    New Dallas law charges for plastic bags, but please don't blame Obama: Separating myth from fact

    Teresa Gubbins
    Jan 2, 2015 | 4:00 pm

    Dallas' new plastic bag law went into effect on Jan. 1, requiring supermarkets and other retailers, such as convenience stores, malls and boutiques, to charge a nickel for every "single-use carryout bag." The new law is designed to discourage people from using plastic bags in order to reduce litter and help the environment. Restaurants, dry cleaners and prescription drug purchases are exempt. Some stores are also exempting paper bags with handles, because they're considered recyclable.

    While many shoppers are already in the habit of bringing their own bags, the new law has retailers clucking about costs and inconvenience. Kroger spokesman Gary Huddleston moaned to NBCDFW that the company had to produce new signage and order separate bags for their nine Dallas-area stores, at their own expense.

    As you can imagine, it's very vexing that a company may have to spend extra money to accommodate a law that helps the environment.

    The plastics industry does not want this ban and is spending millions to change the conversation and spread ignorance about the realities. Myths have surfaced in social media channels regarding plastic bags. As a public service, we're clearing those up.

    Myth #1: It is our constitutional and/or God-given right to get free plastic bags at the grocery store
    Being forced to pay a nickel for a plastic bag or bringing your own bag to the store is indeed a giant inconvenience. It's possibly another step in our inexorable decline into a nanny state, where we are forced to consider someone or something besides ourselves. Ick. Having the freedom to get our groceries packed for us in plastic, that we can callously, even gleefully, toss aside minutes later, is surely an inalienable right? But disappointingly, there is no provision regarding plastic bags in the Constitution or the Bible.

    Myth #2: You will be forced to carry your groceries home one item at a time
    Wah if there are no free plastic bags, how can we get out groceries from Point A (the supermarket) to Point B (our refrigerator)? Good news: Plastic bags are still available! They'll just cost you 5 cents. As well as an entire array of sack-like objects people have used over the centuries to transport goods. You could put them in a knapsack. A large bandanna. A box. There are even reusable bags, made of canvas or recycled plastic, which you can bring with you when you enter the store. (There's no getting past the fact that bringing your own bag makes you look like a pussy or, worse, like someone who thinks ahead.)

    Myth #3: This law is a plot by President Barack Obama
    President Obama did not have a personal hand in the bag law in Dallas, nor the laws passed in Austin, Santa Fe, Seattle, Portland, Los Angeles, San Francisco or the entire state of California. He's too busy turning our country into a socialist republic. He doesn't have time for little things like plastic bags.

    Myth #4: This will destroy the economy in Dallas
    There are surely many shoppers, like agitated commenter Amber on this Dallas Morning News story, who says, "Will be shopping in cities that surround the City of Dallas. Done!!" But if you factor in the cost of driving to a neighboring city, you're spending additional $1-$2 on gas. To save 5 cents. But that's OK, Amber!! You've made your point!!

    Myth #5: Plastic bags were previously free
    The price of plastic bags has always been factored into the price of groceries, not to mention what you pay in taxes to civil servants to clean them up. You've been paying for plastic bags all along! Sucker.

    Dwaine Caraway, displaying reusable canvas bags, was the driver behind the new law.

    Councilmember Dwaine Caraway
    Photo by Claire St. Amant
    Dwaine Caraway, displaying reusable canvas bags, was the driver behind the new law.
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    a major award

    $2.6 million grant funds UH research towards a fentanyl vaccine

    InnovationMap Staff
    Dec 17, 2025 | 3:15 pm
    Hands holding pill bottle
    Photo by Jellybee on Unsplash
    UH has received a new financial gift towards the Michael C. Gibson Addiction Research Program, which is developing a fentanyl vaccine.

    The estate of Dr. William A. Gibson has granted the University of Houston a $2.6 million gift to support and expand its opioid addiction research, including the development of a fentanyl vaccine that could block the drug's ability to enter the brain.

    The gift builds upon a previous donation from the Gibson estate that honored the scientist’s late son Michael, who died from drug addiction in 2019. The original donation established the Michael C. Gibson Addiction Research Program in UH's department of psychology. The latest donation will establish the Michael Conner Gibson Endowed Professorship in Psychology and the Michael Conner Gibson Research Endowment in the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences.

    “This incredibly generous gift will accelerate UH’s addiction research program and advance new approaches to treatment,” Daniel O’Connor, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences, said in a news release.

    The Michael C. Gibson Addiction Research Program is led by UH professor of psychology Therese Kosten and Colin Haile, a founding member of the UH Drug Discovery Institute. Currently, the program produces high-profile drug research, including the fentanyl vaccine.

    According to UH, the vaccine can eliminate the drug’s “high” and could have major implications for the nation’s opioid epidemic, as research reveals Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) is treatable.

    The endowed professorship is combined with a one-to-one match from the Aspire Fund Challenge, a $50 million grant program established in 2019 by an anonymous donor. UH says the program has helped the university increase its number of endowed chairs and professorships, including this new position in the department of psychology.

    “Our future discoveries will forever honor the memory of Michael Conner Gibson and the Gibson family,” O’Connor added in the release. “And I expect that the work supported by these endowments will eventually save many thousands of lives.”

    ----

    This story originally was published on our sister site, InnovationMap.

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