Articles Archive
2005
2004
- December 31, 2004: San Francisco Chronicle
It's beginning to look a lot
like Christmas Recycling center can tell much about
the world we live in
- December 22, 2004: SFGate.com
Thinking Globally, Acting
Locally In 2004: Maybe It Was A Great Year After
All
- September 1, 2004: Waste Age Magazine
San Francisco Treat
- June 13, 2004: The Oakland Tribune
Recycling - The Perfect
Circle
- May 12, 2004: SF Gate
GREEN: Closing the Recycling
Loop, Bike to Work Day, Ink-jet Cartridges and
More
- April 28, 2004: SF Gate
GREEN: Status Quo at The
Sierra Club, Compostable Bags, Gavin Newsom and
More
- February 2004: BioCycle
Capturing Clean Wood: Mixed
C&D Recycling On-Line in San Francisco
2003
- August 16, 2003: Napa Valley Register
Silverado Resort
Uses Food Waste Compost to Restore Greens
- August 10, 2003: Sacramento Bee
Compost on the Menu: Innovative Recycling System
Extends Landfill Life
SAN FRANCISCO -- When bus boys scrape bits of
arugula or half-eaten sandwiches off plates in this
culinary capital, the food starts a 150-mile round
trip unlike anywhere in the country. Over the next
year, the scraps will be mixed with food waste from
about 1,700 San Francisco eateries, composted in
giant bags outside Vacaville, spread as fertilizer
on farms in the Sacramento and Napa valleys and
returned to the Bay Area as tomatoes or wine. "It
makes absolute sense that as I am trucking down the
freeway (to San Francisco) with all of these
nutrients from my farm that they are coming the
other way with food waste," said Dixon farmer Nigel
Walker, who targets the Bay Area with his organic
produce. "This is a way of completing the cycle...
The city is giving something back."
- August 2, 2003: The Reporter
Country Club Taps Compost
Firm
- May 28, 2003: San Francisco Chronicle
Ugly Garbage In, Pretty
Garbage Out
- March 24, 2003: Mill Trade Journal's Recycling
Markets
New MRF: Recycle Central
Debuts on San Francisco Pier
- March 23, 2003: The Reporter
Waste Not, Want Not
- March 5, 2003: Bay City News
$38 Million Recycling
Facility Opens in SF
- March 2003: The Wave
Somebody's GOTTA Do It
Celebrating the Bay Area's Underappreciated
Jobs
- Winter/Spring 2003: San Francisco Design Center
News
Beyond Recycling
- February 4, 2003: The Sonoma Index-Tribune
Compost Feeds Area
Vineyards
- January 12, 2003: Napa Valley Register
San Francisco Food Waste is
Turned into Nutrients for Local Vineyards
2002
- December 12, 2002: San Francisco Chronicle
S.F. Turns Greener City
Reaches State-mandated Goal of Recycling 50% of its
Waste
- October 23, 2002: San Francisco Chronicle
Restaurateurs Find Doing
Right Thing Feeds Bottom Line 'Sustainability' has
Green and Social Benefits
- October 1, 2002: San Francisco Chronicle
S.F. Seeks to Recycle 75% of
Waste by 2010 City Now Just 4 Points Short of the
State-mandated 50% Mark
- Fall 2002: Onearth, National Resources Defense
Council
Wasting Away
"One of the more innovative programs in this
country is San Francisco's. The program makes the
process as easy for customers as possible.
Residents receive three bins. Glass, metal, paper,
and plastic all go in one. Sorting is left to
professionals, reducing the chance that recyclables
will be contaminated with unwanted trash that can
lower their value for manufacturers. Compostables
such as food scraps and yard waste go in another,
garbage in the third. A single hauler, Norcal Waste
Systems, handles all waste, thereby streamlining
collection and sorting. (New York uses about a
dozen.) Norcal also offers twelve recycling
programs, tailored to different neighborhoods and
needs. It bills on a pay-as-you-throw basis,
charging for garbage disposal but not recycling --
a financial incentive for citizens to set out less
trash.
So successful is the system that San Francisco is
about to meet California's statewide mandate for 50
percent recycling, a real achievement for an urban
area that can't rely on yard waste to meet the
goal. (New York averaged 20 percent before its
recycling cuts.) Norcal has also taken impressive
advantage of the global demand for recyclables,
sending the city's trash around the United States
and Pacific Rim. San Francisco has even introduced
legislation to get to 75 percent recycling by 2010
-- and, by 2020, to achieve recycling's Everest:
zero garbage. 'San Francisco has had a passion for
recycling,' said Norcal's Robert Reed, 'That's the
driving force. Then it's just a matter of going out
and working at it.'
Tufts economist Ackerman agrees. He argues that
communities have to get beyond the limited question
of whether recycling costs more than putting it all
on the garbage truck. The point, he says, is that
'if you get up in the morning and decide to do
something different about the environment, you
actually can do it."
- May/June 2002: In Business
The Edible Schoolyard Sets an
Example
- April 29, 2002: Waste News
Compost Program in Oakland,
Calif., Closes the Loop
- April 13, 2002: The Oakland Tribune
Program Turns Trash into
Soil
- March 17, 2002: The Reporter
Pay Dirt: Local Program
Diverts Waste from Landfills, Other Cities Watch
and Learn
2001