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Facing growing waste crisis, Miami-Dade finally clears way for large-scale composting

Food scraps from the Pinecrest Library drop-off location are dumped into a composting truck. D.A. Varela dvarela@miamiherald.com
D. A. Varela
/
Miami Herald
Food scraps from the Pinecrest Library drop-off location are dumped into a composting truck. D.A. Varela dvarela@miamiherald.com

Miami-Dade has been slow to catch up with other states and other Florida communities in embracing large-scale composting. While landfills have continued to fill up, there hasn鈥檛 been a clear path in the county code for community composters to legally operate.

That just changed. Last week, county commissioners passed new legislation making it easier and cheaper for community composters to turn food scraps and other organic waste into what鈥檚 known to gardeners as 鈥渂lack gold.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檙e going to run out of landfill space in the next couple of years,鈥 said Commissioner Eileen Higgins, who championed the legislation. 鈥淪o I鈥檓 imagining this can divert in the next two to three years 30,000 tons from the landfill that would be producing methane instead of producing soil that can be used by our agricultural industry.鈥

Methane is among the worst so-called 鈥済reen house鈥 gases driving climate change. It鈥檚 created when food scraps, yard clippings and other organic material break down in landfills, and it can be more than two dozen times more damaging than carbon dioxide.

It鈥檚 always been fine for homeowners to pursue backyard composting. But until now, Miami-Dade didn鈥檛 have the legal framework to issue permits for large-scale composting, which many supporters see as a big step toward the county鈥檚 goal to reduce the volume of waste going to incinerators and landfills. At one point, officials had to return $200,000 in federal funding that would have helped spread compost in local parks.

Composting had long been lumped into the same regulatory category as massive industrial waste operations. That meant composting operations efforts had to navigate complex permitting requirements designed for much larger facilities 鈥 even though the end product is designed to be used in farming and gardening.

鈥淲e took some best practices for community composting permitting from other parts of the country, from other parts of Florida, and came up with a much more sensible permit that is to scale for what they鈥檙e doing,鈥 Higgins said.

Before the new rules, companies like Compost for Life and Fertile Earth Worm Farm had to operate under legal loopholes just to stay in business. Compost for Life, for example, had to spread compost across several nearby farms to stay within legal limits, which meant they couldn鈥檛 accept as much food waste as they wanted. Lanette Sobel from Fertile Earth Worm Farm, which operated under a state exemption for farmers, said she wasn鈥檛 allowed to sell the compost on its own, so they had to bundle it with a plant or tree to make a sale - then that even became a problem. Now farmers and gardeners can purchase the compost in good faith.

The new permitting process could encourage wider composting efforts, Higgins said. Although some communities, like Pinecrest Village, already got started before getting the green light. The village has collected 151,000 pounds of food waste 鈥 roughly the weight of 20 Land Rovers 鈥 since March at drop-off sites. The resulting soil will be used in the Everglades for the Miccosukee Tribe鈥檚 community garden.

Shannon del Prado, a Pinecrest council member who spearheaded the initiative, hoped the county move would encourage other municipalities to take part.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had no problems. I think a lot of people are afraid, oh, we鈥檙e going to have rats, or it鈥檚 going to bring rodents,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd we just haven鈥檛 experienced any of that.鈥

There are some guidelines in place to protect neighbors of the businesses, Higgins said. There are certain height requirements for piles and odors. She didn鈥檛 expect that to be a problem because during her site visits, she described it as 鈥淟ike you鈥檙e in the vegetable section of the grocery store. Good, in other words.鈥

To address concerns about groundwater contamination, the county will require businesses that compost meat, which have the chance of containing pragmatic things like antibiotics that could possibly leech into the aquifer, to have a groundwater monitoring system in place.

鈥淲e want to comply and do everything we can because we鈥檙e not in it just to make money and we鈥檙e in it to protect the environment,鈥 Sobel said. 鈥淪o if anything we were doing could be detrimental to the environment, we鈥檇 obviously want to know.鈥

Another holdup was that the county needed to deliver a certain amount of trash to the landfills to meet their contract obligations. But it became clear that there was so much trash to go around that it wouldn鈥檛 compete with the existing contract.

Francisco Torres, the founder of Compost for Life, which collects 120,000 pounds of food scraps weekly, believes composting operations like can become a bigger, greener part of the solution to the county鈥檚 waste woes.

鈥淭his gives us a true opportunity, and not only for me as a business, but as a community coming together, rising to the occasion of facing the waste crisis that we have as a county,鈥 he said.

Ashley Miznazi is a climate change reporter for the Miami Herald funded by the Lynn and Louis Wolfson II Family Foundation and MSC Cruises.

This story was originally published by the Miami Herald and shared in partnership with the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a multi-newsroom initiative founded by the Miami Herald, the Sun-Sentinel, The Palm Beach Post, the Orlando Sentinel, SA国际传谋 Public Media and the Tampa Bay Times.

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