CornBurrito
Member
Sure, leftover scraps from dinner. Not a expired chicken breasts or a drawer's worth of old vegetables.
People do that?
Sure, leftover scraps from dinner. Not a expired chicken breasts or a drawer's worth of old vegetables.
And of course NPR talks about it in NE Seattle, lol.
For reference, it's not a big fee currently like a dollar but it's pretty easy to note do this. They give us compost bins to toss food scraps in that they pick up, I believe.
The city gives households bins to fill with their food and yard waste. But residents don't have to compost it themselves: They can just leave the bins curbside and have the city pick it up for a fee.
I don't understand what's so bad about food waste going to a landfill. Does having it rot in our neighborhood backyards instead do something special?
I don't understand what's so bad about food waste going to a landfill. Does having it rot in our neighborhood backyards instead do something special?
if you don't compost you are lazy.
Think of the poor landfills....Seattle alone sends some 100,000 tons of food to wither away in landfills that are as far as 300 miles away, according to the city. And that's despite some of country's most stringent recycling laws, some of which require residential properties and multi-family buildings to offer composting collection service. People, it seems, are less willing to sort out their food scraps than the government had hoped. Even now, with the new compost law in effect, residents have still been slow to adapt.
"Right now, I'm tagging probably every fifth can," Rodney Watkins, a waste contractor in Seattle, told NPR on Monday. "I don't know if that's just the holidays, or the fact that I'm actually paying a lot more attention."
The city is hopeful that the prevalence of tickets is merely a result of poor awareness about the new law. By Seattle's own estimate, the new requirements will divert as much as 38,000 tons of food waste away from landfills.
Sure, leftover scraps from dinner. Not a expired chicken breasts or a drawer's worth of old vegetables.
In Seattle, wasting food will now earn you a scarlet letter — well, a scarlet tag, to be more accurate.
Seattle is the first city in the nation to fine homeowners for not properly sorting their garbage.
I thought every major city has it's own home food waste service. This is so fucking easy and if you want compost, just save it up.
Why not? Old veggies grind up easily if you have a good disposal.
I'm Canadian
Garbage sorting is such a pain. Especially since people in condos and apartments don't have to. They still dump everything in a dumpster.
I have 3 bins to sort and it gets collected differently each week.
Sounds like a good way to fuck your neighbors.
How much is the pickup fee?
I know it wouldn't work in my apartment. Using the recycling bins for recycling is beyond many of my fellow residents.
Composting is good, and providing a service for those who can't to dispose of food waste is also good.
Even worse are the e-cigarette people, it's like unfair all the loopholes they get.wanna really penalize polluters??
what about them smokers who toss their butts on the sidewalk?
every spring time thaw....... thousands of cig butts
smokers, now those are the real urban discustos
Micro-can that's 13 gallons or so is like 5.45 a month, I think? So basically a 1.25 per week roughly, Bigger cans get more expensive.
wanna really penalize polluters??
what about them smokers who toss their butts on the sidewalk?
every spring time thaw....... thousands of cig butts
smokers, now those are the real urban discustos
You forgot the red tape of shame. You can't put a price on humiliation.So a person who can't be bothered to sort their trash can just pay a $1 fine (assuming they even get caught) instead of a >=$1.25 fee.
Seems kind of backward to me.
So a person who can't be bothered to sort their trash can just pay a $1 fine (assuming they even get caught) instead of a >=$1.25 fee.
Seems kind of backward to me.
Overeating is a big problem in America. If someone decides he can't finish his burger and fries, then he's better off throwing it away and sparing his health than forcing it down. The cents you waste in food isn't worth the potential health-related costs associated with overeating. That doesn't mean I support wasting food. Portions could be smaller, and people also tend to overbuy. It'd be nice if I could repackage my uneaten food and donate it to the needy, but that isn't realistic. Rather, if this was an ongoing dilemma, I'd have to reassess my whole approach to food quantity.
What if you have to get rid of food and you don't compost because you live in an apartment? Am I supposed to cram it down the garbage disposal?
Then you probably have to do it, unless you share a big garbage dumpster with others.
There is no way they force people in a multi-level integrated buildings as there is no way to know what garbage belongs to who
Did you read the OP? This has nothing to do with not eating the food.
Seattle is simply requiring that people toss food waste into a compost bin rather than a trash bin.
If they're too lazy to do that...well there's no hope.
How many cities charge for compost collection? None of mine have specifically, it is just part of your property taxes.Micro-can that's 13 gallons or so is like 5.45 a month, I think? So basically a 1.30-1.40 per week roughly or something, Too lazy to do math right now. Bigger cans get more expensive.
Did you read the OP? This has nothing to do with not eating the food.
In that case, as the article states, the entire building is assessed a fine. The same is true in SF.
For apartments, that means you'll ultimately see higher rents. For condos, that means you'll ultimately see higher HOA fees.
How many cities charge for compost collection? None of mine have specifically, it is just part of your property taxes.
Then they are essentially punishing people who have no control over it.
If that's how they want to live. It's fine with me.
How many cities charge for compost collection? None of mine have specifically, it is just part of your property taxes.
wanna really penalize polluters??
what about them smokers who toss their butts on the sidewalk?
every spring time thaw....... thousands of cig butts
smokers, now those are the real urban discustos
Well, it's not like most apartments or condos have individual trash bins. They choose to have a single pickup.
And if there is competent management, they fine the units that don't sort trash. It's usually part of the lease or HOA agreements. My building here in SF does that.
Ex. if you put trash in the recycling, you get fined by management.
Good, this will teach people not to waste food. It really is a shame to throw stuff away like that. I've seen my coworkers throw away half a tray of rice cause they were full.
What I'm saying is I don't know how they would know whose trash belongs to what person
So should they just eat too much and get fat?
So anything bad that happens in the apartment, management just has no clue who did it?
Let a wild hyena loose in the hallways, and "Oh, darn, we don't know who did it, oh well."
Or something like selling drugs or lighting a fire or something.
One would think apartment management is a bit smarter than that.
I thought every major city has it's own home food waste service. This is so fucking easy and if you want compost, just save it up.
Are you kidding me? Some places have 100's of units.
You think they could possibly keep track of people's garbage?
Our city didn't have town collecting of any sort (garbage, compost, recyclables, anything).
You either brought the stuff there yourself, or hired a private company to do it.
Spoiler:Lower property taxes - especially with not paying for people who don't know how to/don't know they're supposed to/don't care to sort stuff
I guess that is true if your property taxes are actually lower for it. Myself, I'm fine to pay the city through taxes to have it all taken care of (after I properly sort it of course).You don't have to pay if you're composting it yourself, I think. So it's not built into the fees we pay the city normally.
If a problem arises, they take steps to identify and address it.
Unless you really are planning to rely on that assumption and let a hyena loose in the hallways.