YorkSpace has migrated to a new version of its software. Access our Help Resources to learn how to use the refreshed site. Contact diginit@yorku.ca if you have any questions about the migration.
 

A Community Compost Exchange Manual: reconnecting municipal organic waste and soil management

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2021

Authors

Dirks, Adam

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

Ontario’s Provincial waste strategy and Toronto’s long term-waste management plan both clearly recognize that the multi-residential sector holds the greatest opportunity for increased participation and decreased contamination in waste collection. With this in mind, A Community Compost Exchange Manual: reconnecting municipal organic waste and soil management was made to highlight the impacts and connections a community-based waste management (CBWM) project has to the multi-faceted issues facing multi-residential waste diversion. This manual uses a collection of essays as a framework to connect different elements of (CBWM) to greater schematic themes impacting organics recycling in Ontario and Toronto. The work can be read sequentially, or each section can be read as a stand-alone piece that dives into the academic and experienced-based aspects of the Community Compost Exchange (CCE) an organics recycling program in Toronto. A methodology comprising of literature reviews, analyses from participant surveys, qualitative data through interviews and personal communications with current Toronto composters, and personal experiences of managing and scaling up the CCE are used to inform this work. The manual starts with a soil acknowledgment that centers Indigenous knowledge and its contributions to composting and soil management. Then the programs goals and intentions are addressed in its mission statement along with the collected statistics beginning in 2015. Following that, an essay on current food waste diversion programs and techniques being utilized by Solid Waste Management Services of Toronto and local community groups is organized within a food waste hierarchy structure. This analysis shows that community initiatives do most of the work for preferred diversion methods but proportionally, are very under-supported by current municipal budgets. Then, the major components of the CCE are described in detail through three essays: 1. knowledge sharing and food justice at urban farm markets; 2. Incentivization of organics participation; and 3. best practices for processing municipal waste into nutrient dense compost for use in agricultural soils. Finally, an in-depth look at the policies impacting community composting, from the federal to municipal levels, identifies solutions and produces policy recommendations to grow decentralized composting across Ontario. Waste touches deeply on both social, political, economic, ecological and justice-based issues, which is why this manual works to thoroughly place the Community Compost Exchange into a diverse dialogue with these issues.

Description

Keywords

Community composting, Community mobilization, Urban farming, Food justice, Alternative economies

Citation

Major Paper, Master of Environmental Studies, Faculty of Environmental Studies, York University

Collections