Contain the Madness - Quarantine San Francisco NOW!
From the AP via MSNBC ...
San Francisco - Trash collectors in San Francisco will soon be doing more than just gathering garbage: They'll be keeping an eye out for people who toss food scraps out with their rubbish. San Francisco this week passed a mandatory composting law that is believed to be the strictest such ordinance in the nation. Residents will be required to have three color-coded trash bins, including one for recycling, one for trash and a new one for compost - everything from banana peels to coffee grounds. The law makes San Francisco the leader yet again in environmentally friendly measures, following up on other green initiatives such as banning plastic bags at supermarkets.
Food scraps sent to a landfill decompose fast and turn into methane gas, a potent greenhouse gas. Under the new system, collected scraps will be turned into compost that helps area farms and vineyards flourish. The city eventually wants to eliminate waste at landfills by 2020. Chris Peck, the state's Integrated Waste Management Board spokesman, said he wasn't aware of an ordinance as tough as San Francisco's. Many cities, including Pittsburgh and San Diego, require residents to recycle yard waste but not food scraps. Seattle requires households to put scraps in the compost bin or have a composting system, but those who don't comply aren't fined. "The city has been progressive, and they've been leaders and it appears that they're stepping out of the pack again," he said.
Waste collectors will not pick through anyone's garbage, said Robert Reed, a spokesman for Sunset Scavenger Co., which handles the city's recyclables. If the wrong kind of materials are noticed while a bin is being emptied, workers will leave what Reed called "a love note," to let customers know they are not with the program. "We're not going to lock you up in jail if you don't compost," said Nathan Ballard, a spokesman for Mayor Gavin Newsom who proposed the measure that passed Tuesday. "We're going to make it as easy as possible for San Franciscans to learn how to compost." A moratorium on imposing fines will end in 2010, after which repeat offenders like individuals and small businesses generating less than a cubic yard of refuse a week face fines of up to $100.
Food scraps sent to a landfill decompose fast and turn into methane gas, a potent greenhouse gas. Under the new system, collected scraps will be turned into compost that helps area farms and vineyards flourish. The city eventually wants to eliminate waste at landfills by 2020. Chris Peck, the state's Integrated Waste Management Board spokesman, said he wasn't aware of an ordinance as tough as San Francisco's. Many cities, including Pittsburgh and San Diego, require residents to recycle yard waste but not food scraps. Seattle requires households to put scraps in the compost bin or have a composting system, but those who don't comply aren't fined. "The city has been progressive, and they've been leaders and it appears that they're stepping out of the pack again," he said.
Waste collectors will not pick through anyone's garbage, said Robert Reed, a spokesman for Sunset Scavenger Co., which handles the city's recyclables. If the wrong kind of materials are noticed while a bin is being emptied, workers will leave what Reed called "a love note," to let customers know they are not with the program. "We're not going to lock you up in jail if you don't compost," said Nathan Ballard, a spokesman for Mayor Gavin Newsom who proposed the measure that passed Tuesday. "We're going to make it as easy as possible for San Franciscans to learn how to compost." A moratorium on imposing fines will end in 2010, after which repeat offenders like individuals and small businesses generating less than a cubic yard of refuse a week face fines of up to $100.


Food scraps sent to a landfill decompose fast and turn into methane gas, a potent greenhouse gas.
Why not capture the stuff and using it to generate electricity?
I'll bet the reason why this is happening now is that Alameda County is tired of being SF's dumping ground; there's no room in SF for a landfill, so they truck their garbage to the landfill at Altamont, just east of Livermore. I see their unmarked tractor/trailer garbage hauling rigs whenever I pass through there.
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama | 06/12/2009 at 09:57 PM
...Why not capture the stuff and using it to generate electricity?...
HAHAHAHAHA.
Jaysus! Bomb, your optimism worries me.
You feelin' okay, amigo?
Posted by: Steel | 06/13/2009 at 09:40 AM
Actaully, Steel, I have been involved (on a QA/QC level) with just such projects as what Bomb suggests at local landfills here in NZ. One such landfill does exist in the Auckland region where methane from decomposing trash is used to run generators that go onto the power grid. I was involved in a feasability study of re-injecting leachates back into the buried rubbish in order to catalyse further methane production. The numbers were within moisture content limits for this to occur and be put into practice.
Posted by: Joe | 06/13/2009 at 05:39 PM