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Government Businesses United States

California Law Banning Paper Receipts Clears First Hurdle In State Legislature (latimes.com) 216

In January, California Assemblyman Phil Ting (D-San Francisco) introduced a law barring retailers from printing paper receipts unless a customer requests one. Otherwise they'd be required to provide proof-of-purchase receipts "only in electronic form." The bill has cleared its first hurdle in the sate Legislature on Monday as it passed the Nature Resources Committee in a 6-3 vote, despite concerns from some industry groups that say the switch should be driven by the market, not a government mandate. The Los Angeles Times reports: Assembly Bill 161 by Assemblyman Phil Ting (D-San Francisco) said his bill is an easy way to reduce paper waste in the state while addressing consumers' frustrations with excessively long receipts. Customers have taken to social media for years to complain and poke fun at the size of their receipts, particularly at CVS drugstore, posting pictures of the coupon-packed printouts measuring taller than a refrigerator. The paper that receipts are printed on is generally too thin to be made from recycled material, according to a legislative analysis of the bill. Once they are thrown away, the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery, or CalRecycle, said the use of chemicals on paper receipts makes them undesirable to recyclers.

The American Forest and Paper Assn., a paper industry group that opposes the bill, estimates that the United States generates 180,000 tons of paper receipts each year. That, the group points out, is a small percentage of total paper waste. The bill would give businesses until 2022 to provide customers electronic receipts, or a paper printout available on request. Violators would receive two warnings before being levied a $25-per-day fine. The maximum annual fine would be $300. The bill exempts cash-only and smaller businesses with gross receipts under $1 million a year from the electronic receipt requirement.

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California Law Banning Paper Receipts Clears First Hurdle In State Legislature

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  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @05:57PM (#58344462)

    ... law barring retailers from printing paper receipts unless a customer requests one. Otherwise they'd be required to provide proof-of-purchase receipts "only in electronic form."

    Okay, I don't live in CA, but ... this mean you'd have to give every retailer you buy from your email address, so no thanks. I'll always be asking for a paper receipt.

    [ Contact info is not the new "plastic". ]

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Not jus tthat, but anybody that doesn't have email, or probably a smartphone, would be unable to receive a receipt for what they purchase. The result is that for some poor people, they'd be unable to prove that they've bought something legally and also wouldn't be able to return or exchange it if they needed to.

      This is a really fucking stupid idea. I get that there is an environmental cost to receipts, but it isn't really something that retailers do to murder the environment. I already see companies volunta

      • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

        Most retailers around where I live now ask me if I want a receipt. Some offer the option to email it to me. I decline and go for the paper every time. I have enough shit coming into my email box.

        It's not the paper receipt itself that is the issue. It's the volume. I bought a pack of gum in walgreens. A whole tree was used to print the receipt. I swear the reams of paper that came out of that machine weighed more than the pack up gum. That was bullshit. The receipt shouldn't have been longer t

    • It doesn't mean that at all. You can buy something and walk out without a receipt. I do it all the time with small purchases. The only difference is that the retailer won't print the receipt by default, so they won't have to throw anything away when you don't ask for it.

      • You can buy something and walk out without a receipt. I do it all the time with small purchases.

        When one of your "small purchases" turns out defective, what steps do you typically need to take to prove to the retail clerk that you bought the product at that store within the return window (such as 14 or 30 days)?

        • by Strider- ( 39683 )

          If it's cheap enough for me to not want a receipt, it's not worth my time to return it.

        • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

          You must have a ton of free time on your hands to be returning things, or on a super tight budget.

          If it takes 30 min to drive to the post office, or the store, then it takes an hour round trip, plus time to wait in line, plus gas, plus depreciation on the car, insurance (miles add up driving around town) etc etc....

          if you make $50,000 a year, your time is worth about $25/hour. If you're returning something under $25, just based on time alone, you're losing money returning it. Once you facto

      • by ebyrob ( 165903 )

        Good luck when they accuse you of shoplifting. There really is no good alternative to a paper receipt yet. Email is likely the closest thing and it ain't great.

  • One needs the receipts longer than my height filled with coupons, right? What will we do if we lose those $2 discounts on the shampoo, and buy one get one offers on vitamins?

    (jk)

    • I fully expect the rolling coal sort of people to start visiting CVS and buying a ton of the cheapest item they can find, all on separate transactions...with paper receipts, of course

      • Could you run a car on a wood style gasifier using CVS receipts? Bet I could.

        Getting that street legal in CA? I'd have to start with something smog exempt. All those have 'better uses'.

    • by J053 ( 673094 )

      Ya know, you can just refuse to use your CVS "loyalty" card, and then you get a normal-sized receipt. With no coupons. Imagine that.

  • This law is just going to benefit retailers who will make it harder to return merchandise with fewer customers having receipts. It's also going to erode privacy further by herding people into giving stores their phone numbers or email addresses.

    Instead, make a summary receipt the default. Date, store, cashier, total price, tax. Wouldn't need to be more than a couple inches.

    • Many major retailers will let you return the item using the credit/debit card you purchased it with. Cash / giftcard purchases might be problematic though...
  • No bloody way ... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    In January, California Assemblyman Phil Ting (D-San Francisco) introduced a law barring retailers from printing paper receipts unless a customer requests one. Otherwise they'd be required to provide proof-of-purchase receipts "only in electronic form."

    Sorry Phil Ting, you're a well meaning idiot but fucking clueless.

    I'm not providing most business I deal with my email, my phone number, or any other suitable information for getting a receipt "only in electronic form".

    I don't trust businesses not to be asshol

    • So, are you utterly illiterate, or did you just forget the bit where you can still get a paper receipt? All you have to do is answer "yes" when the clerk asks if you'd like one.

  • Just ignore it? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by aaron44126 ( 2631375 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @06:17PM (#58344566) Homepage
    OK, so, business that bring in less than $1 million per year don't have to comply. Businesses that bring in more than $1 million per year can pay... $300 per year in fines, and then just ignore it? How is this actually going to work?
    • $300 per year in fines, and then just ignore it

      Perhaps it will be taken into account if one day they renew the cashout system.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      As another cash grab by the government, it sounds like it's going to work exactly as intended.

    • Re:Just ignore it? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jmcharry ( 608079 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @07:39PM (#58345020)

      Why not just tax the receipt paper?

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      It's supposed to virtue-signal, not actually work. Duh. Welcome to California.

  • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @06:22PM (#58344588) Journal

    If they REALLY want to do something useful, how about banning disappearing-ink receipts?

    I've had SO many receipts from California merchants where the blue ink faded completely by tax-filing time, leaving me with a mysterious piece of blank paper in my "deduct this" collection. B-b

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      After the government gets rid of the unsolicited paper advertising in my mail box, we can talk about paper receipts.

      Every week I receive about a pound of unsolicited advertising in my mail box.
      It's over 1000X the weight of a weeks worth of receipts.

      There are REAL problems in San Francisco, but nothing the dishonorable Mr. Ting wants to act upon. Obviously, Phil Ting is an idiot who does not understand democratic voters living beyond Apple's rat infested garden.

      • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

        That paper advertising subsidizes most of the post office's operations.... us post office gets no funding from federal tax dollars and email took a huge bite out of their day to day funds... there is a ton of infrastructure required to run a daily mail operation in a country of our size, that money has to come from somewhere.

        • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

          And because of the email, there is no longer any point to a daily mail operation, and it is long past time that we got rid of home delivery for all but the disabled. Most of that infrastructure needs to be rolled back.

      • That advertising has opt-out options if you'd like to stop receiving it.

        Also, that advertising can be printed on recycled paper. Receipts can't.

        Also, that advertising can (usually) be recycled. Most receipts can't.

        • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

          It's 2019. Recycling paper is at just virtue signalling in its best light. In realistic light, it is counter productive. It cost more to collect and recycle, than to make new paper from farmed trees.

          • It's 2019. Most people understand that hauling a bunch of paper to a landfill is not a terribly good idea. Most.

    • I think the disappearing ink is thermal printed on specially treated paper. Look up the Cheeseburger bird. They're everywhere near my sisters house.
    • You lose deductions, pay more in taxes, and expect the government to 'do something'?

      This is due to the new BPA-free paper, which protects infants whose parents have them snack on receipt paper.

      So, yeah, they already 'did something'. What's not to like!

      • This is due to the new BPA-free paper, which protects infants whose parents have them snack on receipt paper.

        It actually protects people who eat fast food, because the surest way to transfer BPA from one of those receipts is by contaminating it with hot grease. Then it transfers to your fingers, and since fast food is messy, from there to your mouth.

        • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

          The logical fallacy is that the effects from the amount of BPA ingested that way, pales in comparison to the effects of eating the fast food. You're worrying about starving to death in a vacuum.

  • by istartedi ( 132515 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @06:36PM (#58344646) Journal

    My understanding is that this proposal makes the paper receipt *optional* if you give them an e-mail. First, I don't want to be on their list. Secondly, I sometimes want a paper receipt for a variety of reasons, such as eating at the grocery store and not wanting to get accused of shoplifting.

    What they need to do is regulate the width and length of the receipt, and the number of items per unit length. They also need to phase out thermal paper, perhaps tax the thermal paper to fund a program for replacing it with plain paper. Why? Because thermal paper is plastics, and plastic pollution is a huge problem. Require the receipt to tell us if it's plain or thermal so we can dispose of it properly. Finally, no coupons or promotions printing out of the register unless we hit OK on the terminal.

    Of course that's a lot, and lobbyists are going to push HARD against that but IMHO it's really the direction we need to go. I'm not sure how we get there.

    Maybe then we can get rid of the stinkin' "club cards" and games they want you to play at the store, but first things first.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      My understanding is that this proposal makes the paper receipt *optional* if you give them an e-mail.

      This.

      However because it's California, the headline uses BANNED in big letters.

      I wish the UK would make it mandatory for receipts to be optional. Like many people here in the UK, when I pop to the shops for a bag of crisps I don't need a receipt so I'm happy to select "No" (or tell the cashier I don't want one). It'll save them being thrown on the passenger seat of my car until a point where it looks like I'm carpooling with an albino.

      I've been to the US, popping into a CVS for a coke results in a r

  • CVS always asks for my email when I buy a $0.50 tube of chapstick, then they print out a 3 foot long receipt. Do you really think they won't spam the hell out of any email address I give them?

    CVS is the current bad guy, but as soon as $BigBoxRetailer gets their hands on my email address do you really think they won't spam the hell out of it?
    • by J053 ( 673094 )

      You know, you can refuse to give them an email address, and then you don't get the monster receipt and coupons.

  • One of my brothers want to CVS, bought three items, and ended up with a receipt that was almost 6 feet in length. Perhaps all we need to do is limit the length of CVS receipts.
    • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

      No. He (and everyone else) needs to walk out without taking the receipt.

      -OR-

      Tear off the useful part, and leave them with the rest.

  • Endocrine Disrupters (Score:5, Informative)

    by BrendaEM ( 871664 ) on Wednesday March 27, 2019 @06:39PM (#58344666) Homepage
    It's not so much the paper that bothers me, it's the bisphenol A.
  • Ban paper receipts? No thanks. It's official documentation of the transaction.
    Allow the status quo? No thanks. Stores are needlessly printing too much paper with information I do not need.

    How about we compromise? Let's -reduce- the amount of waste, mandating that consumer receipts contain a maximum amount of information, say a list of purchased items, prices, and quantities, name & contact info of business, and date of transaction? Then only print all the extra QR codes, coupons, promos, etc. if a customer asks for it.

  • It is unbelievable that CA has nothing better to do than meddle with things like this. This type of action is almost completely meaningless other than appearance. I get more paper in junk mail that I don't want (despite being on anti-marketing lists) in any single day than the amount of paper on receipts for over a month, which I DO want.

    It can also be EXTREMELY expensive for small businesses to comply with such ridiculous laws. Why? Because if all they can produce is a paper receipt, now they somehow h

  • That California DEMOCRATS, because they've run the place for years, have less common sense than you'd find in a cheeseburger.

    Not to say the Republicans would be any better, but...

    Maybe it's an opportunity- create a zillion fake receipts for expenses etc. The state would have no chance or way to challenge their legitimacy. PROFIT!

    • That California DEMOCRATS, because they've run the place for years, have less common sense than you'd find in a cheeseburger.

      Not to say the Republicans would be any better, but...

      I always believe that you get the best results with a proper mix of both, such that they have to cooperate and the worst excesses of either can be controlled by the other.

      If it wasn't nearly 100% democrat control, this receipt thing would probably be subsumed over fighting over the budget of larger ticket items.

  • California has REAL problems and they prioritize paper receipts?

    That vast State Water Project was designed for a population not much greater than 25 million. Today, on any one day, California verges on nearly 40 million people within its borders and is projected to reach 50 million if not higher.

    According to a January 2017 study, “California state and local governments owe $1.3 trillion as of June 30, 2015.” The study was based on “a review of federal, state and local financial disclosur

  • Create a new email alias each month/year/... ex: receipt2019@mydomain.com, receipt201903@mydomain.com... At the end of each month/year, archive your emails and delete your alias. This way, you will not have to share your "real" email to every store and spam will bounce when you delete the alias.

    • You can't tell who is selling your email address or is being hacked that way. Use a unique email for every site and store that you do business with. (store1@mydomain.com, store2@mydomain.com, etc) Have a rule that says that anything that isn't your primary email address (the one you give out to friends and family) gets moved to a secondary inbox. Then you go through your secondary inbox for your receipts, messages of orders being sent, etc and archive them as required. Just make sure to keep an eye on your

  • Does Costco still have people at the exit to check your things to make sure that you have only the stuff that you paid for? If so then everyone is going to have to ask for a receipt with this silly law. There are better things that could be done for the environment than trying to ban receipts.

  • Start printing out highly-polluting plastic receipts! That'll teach those idiots in legislature what for!

    • Start printing out highly-polluting plastic receipts! That'll teach those idiots in legislature what for!

      You can't start doing what you're already doing. Thermal receipt paper is plastic-coated.

  • Many return / rebate / warranty processes require presenting the original receipt. It is these requirements that make systems like Neat Receipts suspect -- a retailer won't accept a scanned copy of the receipt. I hope this triggers a change in that thinking.

  • great idea, most of the time i don't want a receipt, i'm sure a lot of people don't really need one. but if you do, you can ask and still get it.
    but after seeing those twitter posts and having a good laugh, there should also be some limit put on the size of receipts as well. even just one printed CVS receipt is 99% waste.

  • There was an article on NPR several years back talking with the head of the U.S. Printing Office, now called the U.S. Publishing Office.

    The guy talked about all the efficiencies that had taken place over the previous twenty years or so, how they had reduced head count while still doing their service. One of the points he mentioned was the change from paper forms (IRS and the budget in particular) and how much money the taxpayers were being saved because of the reduced spending on paper.

    Guess who whined abou

  • I really wish there was an electronic solution to receipts. I get them with every purchase I make and they just tend to pile up until I throw them all out. Some retailers will e-mail me receipts, which is better, but obviously I don't want to give every merchant my e-mail address. I get enough junk mail without being signed up for every corporate newsletter they have just because I once bought one item in their store. I wish there was a way for the retailer to send me a PDF of the receipt in such a way that

    • I wish there was a way for the retailer to send me a PDF of the receipt in such a way that the retailer wouldn't know my e-mail address

      There is. It's called a throwaway address. Your provider (or your personal email system) could generate a new one for literally every purchase. That way you'd know precisely who the spammers were, and they'd have no idea what your actual address was. Several (or even several hundred) could be generated every time you had network access, so you wouldn't run out.

  • ... back-door attack by the cashless society people? You be the judge.
  • This is waste of fucking time and does nothing about climate change. Jesus fucking Christ you could actually go after the real drivers instead of the insignificant piddly bull shit.
  • So I can see this being an issue when you tell the cashier your email address and they enter it in wrong. Then when you need to return the defective product, you suddenly realize you never got the receipt. Now, you could hold up the line until you see it show in your inbox, but I've had mail be delayed 30+ minutes when there are issues in the pipes I can't be aware of. This is just going to lead to abuse from criminals and legitimate grievances from non-tech customers.

  • by SETY ( 46845 )

    /. Is showing its age. Receipts suck and are super inefficient for small business owners who buy things retail. Stop thinking about all the negatives. Iâ(TM)m sure someone can think of a non tracking way to get an electronic receipt on your phone in a standardized way.

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