Sobeys to eliminate plastic bags, but ‘Sobeys bag’ lives on in Atlantic Canada
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — Sobeys will phase out plastic grocery bags across the country this week, but for many Atlantic Canadians the “Sobeys bag” will live on in their kitchen cupboards.
The grocery chain, which grew from a family business founded in Stellarton, N.S., in the early 1900s, announced last summer it would eliminate the plastic shopping bags by February, offering customers reusable totes or paper bags instead.
Sobeys spokeswoman Violet MacLeod said the plastic bags would be removed from stores at midnight on Thursday. She said there are “not many left” in stores but the remaining bags will be sent back to the supplier and recycled.
The deadline has prompted a wave of nostalgia on the East Coast, where the chain’s plastic bags have taken on their own cultural significance and the term “Sobeys bag” has become a generic term for “plastic bag.” The regional semantic change has even been noted in a 2016 entry to the Dictionary of Canadianisms on Historical Principles.