NYC’s Organics program is under threat from budget cuts resulting from COVID-19. Mayor de Blasio has slashed funding for voluntary curbside collection of organics and community composting drop-off sites.
MSWAB member and former DSNY Commissioner Brendan Sexton co-authored an OpEd in the New York Daily News encouraging City Council to #SaveOurCompost by restoring the $7mn annual budget and mandating Organics separation.
Sexton argues: Composting can save tens of millions of taxpayer dollars annually, once larger numbers of New Yorkers participate in the program. It is cheaper to haul organics to nearby composting facilities than to have them shipped to distant landfills and incinerators, at a cost of nearly $130 a ton.
MSWAB Chair Matthew Civello expanded upon this logic while delivering testimony to City Council on June 15 explaining the necessity of the program.
Want to join the fight to keep composting free and public? Petition elected officials on Change.org or by using this social media toolkit from the #SaveOurCompost Town Hall.