San Francisco Is Poised To Ban Plastic Straws. That’s Got Bubble Tea Shops Worried

San Francisco may become the next U.S. city to ban plastic straws. The city’s board of supervisors approved the ban on a preliminary basis last week and the final decision is on its agenda Tuesday. That has shops that sell boba, or bubble tea – a drink that has to be sucked through a straw – concerned.

For boba fans, the straw is an integral part of the experience. “Boba is just, in general, an expression, right? Says Alvin Yu, co-owner of the city’s Steep Creamery and Tea. “You have not just tapioca pearls, but you also have aloe jelly, you have these herbal jellies that we make ourselves. And it all requires a straw.”

According to Yelp, more than 200 shops sell bubble tea in San Francisco. All of them will have to change their business practices if the city bans plastic straws to help reduce litter and landfill and combat the amount of single-use plastics that end up polluting the ocean.

The size and shape of plastic straws makes them particularly problematic for the city’s composting and recycling centers, says San Francisco Supervisor Katy Tang, who spearheaded the bill. “When they’re being sorted in the sorting machines, [the straws] just fall through the cracks and so they don’t actually get composted — even if they are, supposedly, made of compostable material,” she says.

That’s why San Francisco’s plastic straw ban goes a step further than similar prohibitions passed by other U.S. cities: Not even plastic that’s compostable is allowed.

Yu says he was lucky. His shop was able to beat the rush and order paper straws in advance of the ban.

Only a few companies manufacture super-sized paper straws big enough for bubble tea. They’re all reporting huge orders and delays lasting up to four months.