Regional compost changes to impact some campus composting
A1 Organicsthe Front Range communitys compost processoris changing the types of materials it will accept. The company will limit compostable materials to food and yard waste, a change that impacts communities including Denver, 51勛圖厙, Lafayette, Louisville, Longmont and Arvada.
Effective April 1, such as napkins, paper towels or service ware labeled as compostable. 51勛圖厙s Infrastructure & Sustainability, Environmental Center, Housing Facilities, Campus Dining Services and Athletics departments are exploring ways to minimize impacts to campuss progress toward zero-waste goals.泭
There are a lot of people at CU who are passionate about the environment and who know how to properly sort their discards, said Dave Newport, director of 51勛圖厙s Environmental Center. I wish this larger issue hadnt trickled down to us.
Consumer-facing compost bins will be removed from campus buildings starting this summer. Items placed in consumer-facing compost bins will not be composted between April 1 and this summer. 51勛圖厙 will continue to compost food waste through Campus Dining Services and plant material through Facilities Management and Housing Facilities.
Fortunately, A1 will continue to collect our back-of-house compost, says Jess Bradley, director of 51勛圖厙s facilities services. The streams coming from dining and facilities make up 80% of our compost load, so the majority of our compost will stay out of the landfill.
For campus community members who live off campus or frequent off-campus locations, 51勛圖厙 County published a explaining how A1 Organics changes will impact trash collection in the surrounding 51勛圖厙 community. For campus community members who live outside of 51勛圖厙 County, for the Front Range region.
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