The City of Santa Barbara is considering a crackdown on confetti and prohibiting the sale of small plastic water bottles.
An Ordinance Committee on December 2, 2025, voted unanimously to review and recommend the proposed ordinance regarding single-use plastics to the city council.
The proposal seeks to update the City’s single-use materials regulations to reduce the volume of single-use waste in landfills, reduce litter in streets and waterways, and incentivize the use of reusables.
The draft ordinance seeks to prohibit the sale of Mylar or foil balloons and confetti. While latex balloons will be permitted, they cannot be used for releases, such as ceremonies and grand openings.
Mylar balloons can cause power outages and wildfires if they are caught in power lines, said Daniela Rosales, a staff member of the Sustainability and Resilience Department and Clean Community Division.
Push Towards Using Compostable, Reusable Materials
The draft ordinance calls for banning the distribution of polystyrene or traditional plastic cutlery by restaurants or using styrofoam and rigid polystyrene. Disposable plastic foodware cannot be recycled at the County’s resource center and eventually ends up in landfills.
Restaurants and food establishments will be required to use compostable paper products, including fiber-based materials such as paper, sugarcane, wood, etc., Rosales said.
Food and beverage for on-site consumption must be served on reusable foodware .
Most coffee shops typically use plastic-lined coffee cups, which are not compostable. These cups will now have to be replaced with a bio-based plastic that can be composted at the resource center, Rosales said.
“Disposable plastic foodware totals over 500,000 tons per year in California. We’d like to help reduce this number through our ordinance,” Rosales said.
To help with this transition, the City will offer grants for dishwashers and reusable foodware purchases.
No Small Plastic Bottles
The proposal includes banning plastic water bottles eight fluid ounces or smaller within city limits.
Additionally, aseptic beverage containers, such as juice boxes and Tetra Paks, at City-owned and operated facilities will be banned.
To support the transition away from small plastic water bottles, the City will add water refill stations and launch a public education campaign on water quality and plastic pollution impacts, Rosales said.
Events will have to ensure at least 10% of beverages served on-site will be served in reusable cups.
Ban on Plastic Bags
The draft ordinance seeks to ban all plastic bags at grocery stores from January 1, 2026, Rosales said.
The bill includes a 50% paper bag recycled content requirement by 2028.
“Stores can distribute paper bags or sell reusable textile bags. This will be implemented statewide,” she said.
Also Read
- Caltrans Removes Encampment Along Highway 101 in Santa Barbara
- New Thrift Store Opens in San Luis Obispo County
- California Boy’s Request for Lego Store Sparks Surprise Gift from Shopping Mall
- Video Shows Heated Exchange Between ICE Agents and Community Members in Carpinteria
- Next Phase of Milpas Street Operational Improvements Begins in January 2026















Absolutely an nice proposal but decades too late. We have been lied to and tricked by the plastics industry and compromised by their lobbyists who got the state legislature to pass a meaningless bill a few years back that actually allowed the petro-chemical industry to increase the use of plastic bags by weight. THERE SHOULD BE A REQUIREMENT THAT THOSE WHO PRODUCE THESE PRODUCTS PAY FOR THE RECYCLING OR AT LEAST RECOVERY AND ISOLATION OF THEM WHEN THEIR VERY TEMPORARY USE IS OVER.
The welfare of man is always the alibi of tyrants.
Talk about oxymorons.
Glad Costco is in Goleta
You can be sure that Goleta will follow suit.
Do it, but just be sure you enforce this across the board, during Fiesta too. If businesses have to deal with this you can’t give a littering blank check to the cascarone and other street vendors. It’s been pathetic how much plastic and other confetti has littered the streets.