Burnaby adds food scraps recycling to yard waste pick-up

July 1, 2010 by scasola  
Filed under Sustainable Communities, Waste Management

On June 7, Burnaby residents living in a single or duplex home that receives curbside pickup of yard trimmings also had the option of joining the Burnaby’s Food Scraps Recycling Program. Less than one month in, food scraps and paper products were added to the mix, reducing the household waste by half and helping the effort to create a more sustainable community. The recycling initiative reaches some 218,000 residents in British Columbia, Canada.

The Source Separated Organics program, aided by Harvest’s organic’s processing facility, Fraser Richmond Soil & Fibre, is simple. Residents need only collect food scraps and food-soiled paper products in an ice cream type bucket or large covered plastic container in the kitchen. Those scraps could then be emptied into the yard trimmings container, which is set out at the regularly scheduled collection day and time. It does not have to be full to be collected.

Beginners might have some questions about what types of scraps can be recycled. These charts cover the basics:

For more tips and tricks on how best to make this program work for you, and benefit the environment, check out the site at www.burnaby.ca.

SSO programs promote composting in Port Moody

June 29, 2010 by scasola  
Filed under Featured, composting

Did you know that the City of Port Moody in British Columbia, Canada has an extensive Kitchen and Yard Waste removal program? Residents of Port Moody have the option to recycle food scraps. This food scraps recycling program both reduces the amount of organic waste that goes into landfills and provides a nutrient rich soil amendment for local farms, parks and gardens.

Currently single family residents who receive kitchen and yard waste collection from the city have the option of adding left over food scraps and paper to their waste carts. It’s now possible to compost fruits, vegetables, meat, fish, bones, dairy, paper, even pizza boxes along with yard waste at no extra cost.

The source separated organic materials collected here are composted and processed at Fraser Richmond Soil & Fibre, a division of Harvest. Here’s a handy chart that shows just how it works:

For more details on the program, check out the City of Port Moody’s Web site at www.cityofportmoody.com.