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Supporters of a state ban on single-use plastic grocery bags filed a complaint Monday, calling for the secretary of state to investigate allegations that opponents seeking to overturn the measure are misleading voters to get them to sign petitions that would place the matter on the ballot.

A man leaves with a bag of groceries in a plastic bag made of recyclable material at the Nature Shop on March 28, 2007, in San Francisco. (Credit: David Paul Morris/Getty Images)
In a file photo, a man is seen leaving with a bag of groceries in a plastic bag made of recyclable material at the Nature Shop in San Francisco. (Credit: David Paul Morris/Getty Images)

Gov. Jerry Brown in September signed the legislation that requires grocery stores and pharmacies to stop dispensing single-use plastic bags in July and instead offer paper and reusable plastic bags, and charge at least 10 cents each for those alternatives.

The bag-makers group, the American Progressive Bag Alliance, is seeking to overturn the law, arguing it will not improve the environment but will enrich stores charging 10 cents for alternative bags.

The bag makers face a Dec. 29 deadline to file 504,760 signatures in order to qualify a referendum that would put the new law on hold until Californians can vote on the measure in November 2016.

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