Los Angeles Times

Why give away your garbage?

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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

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