For three years, a local farmer has been teaching elementary school students in Lyme how to transform lunch leftovers into plant food. This year, sheâll be expanding her composting program across the Region 18 school district.
Baylee Drown, co-owner of Long Table Farm in Lyme, doesnât want the kids from Lyme Consolidated School to have to return to throwing their uneaten food in the trash when they make the transition to grade six at Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School in Old Lyme. âGoing to the middle school should not be a step back for sustainability,â she said in a phone interview this week.
Superintendent of Schools Ian Neviaser, from his office in Center School before Wednesdayâs start of school, said Lyme-Old Lyme Schools are committing to growing the composting program. The district includes four schools in Old Lyme and the single elementary school in Lyme. âWe have very little food waste from the cafeteria itself, but from student lunches we have quite a bit of food waste,â he said. âSo if a student doesnât finish their lunch, instead of throwing it out, weâre now going to be composting that.â
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