Houston City Council is moving forward with an effort to improve food waste composting as the city grapples with limited landfill space. The council approved an item to give Solid 91²Ö¿â Management authority to reapply for a federal grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which aims to give the city more resources for food waste composting.
The grant is worth $400,000 and if acquired, would also lead to an additional $100,000 contributed by the Special Recycling Revenue Fund âThe urgency is we are running out of landfill space and food waste is 24% of our municipal landfills,â At-Large Councilmember Sally Alcorn told KHOU 11 News. âAlso the way it breaks down creates methane gases so itâs bad for the environment, so when I talk about composting, it’s not so much that you have to go in your backyard and turn up the food and make your own compost, it’s really just diverting your food waste.â
âHouston can improve the diversion rate of recyclable materials generated through the solid waste system by developing and testing strategies for planning and implementing municipal compost plans and food waste reduction plans,â an explanation of the item by Solid 91²Ö¿â Management said.
