Why give away your garbage?
Re “California’s climate fight needs your kitchen waste,” Jan. 9
Community composting may be a useful tool in fighting climate change, but using trucks to haul the refuse away is a concern, and I hope we will also look for more local alternatives.
I’ve been doing composting at home for decades with nothing fancy at all: a small, capped container under the sink for vegetable scraps (no meat or fish — they may draw rodents), and a corner of earth where I can put it about twice a week.
Earthworms do the rest within a month or so. The result is mulch for the garden — and no hauling by trucks. (I am fortunate to live in a house with a yard, and I know that.) Paul Cooley
Culver City
Segregating kitchen waste is old news in Philadelphia, where I lived in the 1960s and ’70s and kept a separate “garbage pail.” We kept it outside, and about twice a week the pig farmers from New Jersey came by to collect the waste as feed.
Unfortunately, the food drew all kinds of vermin and smelled terrible by the time it was removed.
The climate in Philadelphia is much cooler than ours, so I can just imagine what we are in for. Claire Wilson
Mission Viejo
Thank you for the article on the new law mandating that Californians toss their food waste in with their yard waste starting Jan. 1.
I was disappointed, however, that the article did not mention San Luis Obispo County, which has had a high solids anaerobic digestion facility in operation since September 2018.
At that time, all county residents were issued countertop bins for their food waste and encouraged to participate. Restaurants, grocery stores and other high-production facilities are included.
I toured the facility in 2019. It is quite impressive. Juliane McAdam
Los Osos