New York City's compost project ends due to budget cuts

Mayor Eric Adams' budget cuts have ended New York City's 30-year-old composting program, affecting community farms, gardens, and green jobs.

Angelica Ang reports for Civil Eats.


In short:

  • The NYC Compost Project, which began in 1993, provided compost for community farms, gardens, and street trees.
  • The budget cuts have forced most composting organizations to cease operations, with only three remaining open at reduced capacity.
  • More than 115 green jobs are threatened, and important community connections and green education efforts are at risk.

Key quote:

"[Volunteering with Nurture BK] made me for the first time experience a community I’ve been living in for 15 years. And Eric Adams has come by and destroyed all that for me."

— Justin Realmuto, Nurture BK volunteer

Why this matters:

The composting program, established to divert organic waste from landfills, has played a pivotal role in enriching urban soil, supporting local agriculture, and reducing the city’s carbon footprint. Community gardens and farms have particularly benefited from the nutrient-rich compost, which has fostered greener, more productive spaces in neighborhoods across the city.

Critics of the budget cuts argue that dismantling the composting program is a step backward in the fight against climate change and urban sustainability. They emphasize that the program's elimination undermines efforts to build a greener, more self-sufficient New York, highlighting the broader implications for community health and environmental justice.

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