Attention, New York City shoppers: don’t think you’re going to easily avoid the statewide ban on plastic bags just by switching to paper ones.

Starting next year, those are also going to cost you 5 cents each.

When New York state lawmakers approved the ban on single-use plastic carryout bags – essentially ending the “paper or plastic?” quandary – they gave local governments the option to charge extra for paper alternatives.

The New York City Council has done just that, voting to tack on a nickel fee for each paper carryout bag a customer uses at retail and grocery stores.

The bill, approved Thursday in a 38-to-9 vote, came less than a month after New York became the second state, after California, to ban most plastic bags. Govenor Andrew Cuomo signed the plastic-bag ban into law during Monday’s celebration of Earth Day.

New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Show all 45 1 /45 New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Looking like a sea creature that's just emerged from a year down under, this billowing emerald ensemble takes every biscuit in the tin and leaves a trail of sparkling crumbs behind. It might be New York City, and the road might not be made from yellow brick, but this street styler is almost certainly on her way to Oz. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style The sass of this look is palpable. From the clownish print to its sunshine yellow hue, this is a jumpsuit you won't forget in a hurry. While the red lippy is a commendable and aesthetically-pleasing addition, it's the coquettish gaze over those super-slim sunglasses that is the cherry on top here. Getty Images for NYFW: The Shows New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Somebody sent this street styler the weather forecast. New York Fashion Week might've started as a sunny affair, but it was only a matter of time until the heavens opened. This co-ord would've put you in good stead for staying dry, thanks to its slippery vinyl coating. Getty Images New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Don't let the earrings throw you. If tinsel is too synonymous with yuletide gatherings for you to make a fair judgement, look to this street styler's inimitable coordination skills. Red repetition aside, the fan she holds is almost identical to the one decorating her satin coat: now that is some strategic sartorial prowess. Getty Images New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style More is more when it comes to python, one of the most dynamic prints set to dominate in the season ahead. Paired here with a baker boy hat and a tangerine lip, there's no stopping this savvy street styler. Getty Images New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style It's textures galore in this eye-catching ensemble, which just about gets away with its cacophonous clash of suede and satin thanks to its earthy tones and this street styler's bare-faced complexion. Getty Images New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style The colour co-ordination may be subtle, but it's fundamental to the success of this look's juxtaposing patterns. The navy of the trousers is matched by the jacket's stripes and almost every accessory is united by a bright shade of candy red. Meanwhile, the shoes are in cahoots with the jacket with their corresponding fawny hues. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style The corduroy, the shirt dress and the Burberry bucket hat - it could be the name of a girlband, one that would certainly suit this stylish trio. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style It's the silky feline skirt you've seen splattered across Instagram, the one that grazes the calf in just the right place and has the perfect ratio of spot-to-base in terms of its leopard print. Réalisation Par knew what they were doing when they designed this now-iconic garment, which is styled here with an oversized white shirt, complete with striking scarlet flames. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Who said white crochet was reserved for sun-kissed eight-year-olds and kitsch beachside stalls? Proving that the breezy fabric can work wonders on the streets of Manhattan, this street styler adds a cosmopolitan flair via emerald satin and clunky trainers. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style When the tailoring is this good, all you need is a simple pair of white kitten-heeled boots and dark boxy sunglasses to achieve a smart and polished look. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Always match your polka dots to your sunglasses, as the old adage goes. The thigh-high slit and flowing silhouette of the wrap dress is cleverly offset by the rigid structure of the thick-strap shoulder bag, resulting in the ultimate flirty-meets-grungy ensemble. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Wallpaper florals rear their aesthetically-pleasing heads time and time again, and this look is foolproof that they needn't be synonymous with archaisms. In this case, the nostalgia of the print is modernised by lace-up cream boots and a slim leather belt. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Boxy cropped jackets might've first entered the sartorial fray in the mid-90s, but its zip-heavy, oversized counterpart is having a renaissance that sets it aside from the archetypal biker chick garb. Paired here with a dusty pink midi-dress, it adds an unexpected grunge to an otherwise girlish foundation. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style More is more when it comes to tartan, as this street styler proves. The mustard jacket is enough of a statement in isolation, but when paired with the matching trousers and monochromatic bustier-style top, it's a serious vibe. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style If your outfit doesn't complement your green juice, you're doing fashion week wrong. Dressed head-to-toe in shades of blue, the splash of colour provided by said juice is more than just a happy coincidence. As for the look on the right, it's optical illusion-meets-retro glamour. A vivid beetroot juice would not have gone amiss here. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style When you have a double-breasted jacket that's long enough to cover your valuables, who needs trousers, really? It helps if you have the lithe limbs of a Grecian goddess, but who's to say the rest of us can't be equally as minimalistic? Maybe less really is more. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Lashings of leopard offset by crocodile, this street styler knows a thing or two about animal prints, which, when combined, can only be worn alongside a simple staple, such as this plain white tee. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Say what you will about the underwear as outerwear trend, this 70s aesthetic - cemented by those dangling spectacles - wouldn't be complete without the black lace bodysuit. The statement gold earrings also work a nostalgic treat. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Blind for love but sighted for style. There may not be a whole lot of colour wheel action, but a single slick of scarlet lipstick makes all the difference, giving this all-black ensemble the fervour it would've otherwise craved. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Teenagers have crop tops and Reeboks, grown-ups have midriff-baring slits and stilettos. The slicked-back platinum bob is the cherry on top of this cosmopolitan creation. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Read all about it - then tear it to shreds and turn it into a shirt dress. Is it a political statement against fake news? Is it a tribute to Carrie Bradshaw's infamous newspaper dress from Sex and the City? Or is it just another set of wavey garms? The jury is out. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style The graphic T-shirt conjures up a Hockney painting while the ornamental trousers add an elevated sense of artistry to this eye-catching ensemble. However, it's the furry Gucci loafers that are the true shining stars of this intricately-woven sartorial tapestry. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style If you're going to carry a bright red bucket bag in one hand, you might as well carry a luminous green bottle of water in the other. Plus, if you're heading out with your equally stylish pal, you are practically obliged to match your handbag to her shoes. It's basic economics. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style If sugar had a sartorial spirit animal, this would be it. The candy floss-coloured mini dress is saccharine in style while white knee-high boots give the look a distinct confectionary charm. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Gingham takes a starring role in this look, which cleverly combines an all-white base with colourful drapes and a graphic Chanel bag for an added splash of vibrancy. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Don't let the graphic tee and pinstripe trousers distract you from admiring the unlikely hero of this delightfully gaudy ensemble: brown furry slippers. Evidently, comfort is key, even at New York Fashion Week. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style And it was all... feathers. If you're going to wear an outfit that is predominantly plumage, this street styler proves that it's best to keep things simple and devoid from fuss elsewhere, which is achieved here via white shoes and a simple collared shirt. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style There's something very space age-meets-Scooby Doo about this look. Maybe it's the combination of a fringed bob haircut with brazen colour-blocking that strikes up memories of Velma Dinkley, the iconic character from the popular cartoon. The crimson satchel and slick of matching lippy complements the emerald hue of this stylish attendee's mini dress with aplomb. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Chevrons take centre stage in this colourful ensemble, which exudes a 70s kind of charm, mostly thanks to the flared style of the candyfloss pink trousers and super-slim sunglasses. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style A perfect pairing in every sense. From the pulled-up sports socks to the corresponding denim shorts, this couple knows a thing or two about dressing in tandem. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Logomania isn't going away anytime soon, as this artful monochromatic snap proves. Gucci meets Chanel in a delicious harmony of opposites - these two should stick together. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Is he going to a fashion show or a True Romance tribute party? The destination is unclear, but whichever it may be, there's no doubt that this idiosyncratic floral shirt-and-baggy jeans combo would be warmly welcomed in either setting. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Absolutely fabulous in every sense of the phrase, this fashion week attendee has got sophisticated sass down to a tee. The oversized sunglasses carry an appealing nostalgia, while the metallic ankle boots and dogtooth print bring the ensemble back to the modern day with sublime verve. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Proving that sometimes a smartphone is the ultimate handheld accessory, this look is elevated by the creative addition of a DSLR camera casually slung over one shoulder. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Jumpsuits are having a moment - and when combined with a brightly-coloured handbag, it's a look that would not be amiss on the pages of a fashion magazine. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Tailoring isn't going anywhere this season. Neither are dramatic drop earrings, for that matter, or kitten heels. All of this is good news for those with a penchant for souped-up workwear with a casual underbelly. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Oversized blazers should always be worn with round spectacles, evidently. Also, if you're struggling to inject some colour into your wardrobe, you can always dab it with splashes of paint yourself, as this street styler might well have done, or not, maybe the trick is to keep us guessing. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Why tie your jumper round your waist when you can create a dynamic silhouette by opting for a diagonal technique that is moree commonly seen on male student ravers? Pair with an arty headscarf for extra style points. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Trouble and stripes is very much the vibe of this fashion week attendee, thanks to his geometric shirt and the plethora of intricate tattoos it reveals. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style If in doubt, suit it out and take a Louis Vuitton bucket bag along for good measure. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Yellow sunglasses might've had their heyday a few seasons ago, but the look is very much still a popular one among editors and fashion influencers. This particular street styler has cleverly matched her tinted shades with the heels of her shoes - a subtle but praiseworthy detail. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Two outfits, both alike in dignity but different in mood. Colour clashing is the prevailing theme in one, while dramatic drapes and luminous lime-green nails characterise the other. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Why bother wearing multiple brands when you can make an emphatic statement by sporting the logos of just one in every component of your outfit? In case you missed it, this look is entirely Fendi. Rex Features New York Fashion Week 2018: Best street style Slip dresses are no longer a slave to the bedroom and 90s-themed parties. Tie a jumper round your waist to give it some shape and throw on a pair of Birkenstock-style sandals to offset the girlish glamour of it all. Rex Features

Environmental advocates applauded New York’s plan for curbing single-use plastic bags, but have said it could encourage shoppers to swap plastic for paper – essentially trading one form of waste for another.

The city’s legislation authorizing the 5-cent fee offers similar exceptions as the new state law, including an exemption for restaurant takeout bags. But lawmakers say the paper-bag fee is an important step in reducing overall waste.

And if the fee has its intended effect – encouraging people to change their shopping behaviour – most customers would not feel squeezed by the charge, Councilman Brad Lander said. “The goal is not to collect a single nickel,” said Lander, a Democrat from Brooklyn. “The goal is to help people bring reusable bags.”

The city’s Sanitation Department collects nearly 30,000 tons of paper bags every year, according to Belinda Mager, a spokeswoman.

The 5-cent fee will “ensure that clogged storm drains, polluted waterways and parkland riddled with non-biodegradable bag waste will be a part of New York City’s past,” Councilwoman Margaret S. Chin, a Democrat who represents Lower Manhattan and was one of the bill’s primary sponsors, said in a statement.

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Mayor Bill de Blasio, who has expressed support for the 5-cent fee, still must sign the bill into law. It would take effect in March when the plastic-bag ban begins.

New York City will not be the only municipality with a paper-bag fee. Before the governor’s bill, the city of Long Beach and Suffolk County, both in Long Island, each implemented a fee on paper and plastic bags. Officials in Suffolk County said last month that their law, which went into effect in 2018, led to a massive reduction in plastic-bag use.

Ulster County also voted to adopt a paper bag fee, which is scheduled to take effect in July.

The legislation that passed Thursday was the latest step in a years-long effort to curb the use of carryout bags. The bag fee was first introduced in 2008 by former Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who eventually dropped the idea amid opposition.

Chin and Lander took up the cause years later, and in May 2016, the City Council narrowly voted to approve a 5-cent fee on both paper and plastic bags.

But a coalition of state lawmakers intervened, arguing the fee was a form of government overreach that would impose an undue financial burden on poor New Yorkers.

Mr Cuomo ultimately signed a bill to block the city’s fee in February 2017. At the time, he said the city’s law was “deeply flawed” because it would have allowed merchants to keep the fee as a profit.

The statewide bag bill championed by Mr Cuomo, a third-term Democrat, requires local governments that charge a paper-bag fee to use some of the revenue to provide free reusable bags to residents, especially those in lower-income communities. The rest of the money would go to the state’s Environmental Protection Fund.

Under New York City’s plan, 2 cents from every paper-bag fee would go towards boosting an existing initiative that has already provided close to 475,000 free reusable bags to city residents.

Mike Durant, president of the Food Industry Alliance of New York State, which represents grocery stores, said he was concerned that no money from the city’s paper bag fee would go to retailers, who could bear additional costs because of the policy.

Mr Durant said that city lawmakers failed to consider how a seemingly small fee can cut into profit margins.

“New York City’s cost of doing business is really high and can be onerous,” Mr Durant said.

Councilman Robert Holden, a Democrat from Queens who voted against the bill, said he worried the fee would put an undue burden on consumers as well.

“As if it wasn’t enough that we are taxed to death in every facet of our lives, the New York City Council has just passed another regressive tax,” he said in a statement.