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Officials say no dead animals, pet poop allowed in compost as bins roll out
across NYC
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OFFICIALS SAY NO DEAD ANIMALS, PET POOP ALLOWED IN COMPOST AS BINS ROLL OUT
ACROSS NYC



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By
Sophia Chang

Published Sep 3, 2023 at 6:00 a.m. ET

7 comments

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By
Sophia Chang

Published Sep 3, 2023 at 6:00 a.m. ET

7 comments

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In New York City, residents can put meat scraps and bones into compost bins, but
not their dead pets. They can compost used paper plates, but not kitty litter.

The sanitation department is reminding New Yorkers of these kinds of limits as
officials roll out free composting to the entire city.

“Our program and our processing facilities are designed for residential food
scraps, food-soiled paper and yard trimmings, and not intended for materials
that fall outside of these categories, including animal waste and dead pets or
street animals,” said Vincent Gragnani, a spokesperson for the department.

So dirty diapers, soiled cat litter, used doggy bags, and dead rats and pigeons
still go in regular trash, not the city’s brown compost bins.

Sanitation officials said they want to keep germs spread by feces and carcasses
out of the city’s compost. Gragnani said the policy makes processing compost
“safer for all involved under the current guidelines.”

The city does allow bones from meat and fish scraps to be put in compost bins.



But dead pets and animals aren’t allowed. A long-standing city policy directs
New Yorkers to place their late furry friends in labeled plastic bags for
regular trash pickup.

The collected organic waste is ground down by heavy machinery at the city’s
composting facilities on Staten Island and the anaerobic digesters at Newtown
Creek. The processed waste is then placed outside in massive piles to aerate for
several months, turning into a form of nutrient-rich soil additive. The decaying
process naturally generates enough heat to kill off diseases, Gragnani said.

“Sustained heat over a period of time generally kills these pathogens, and that
heat is generated internally by the composting process,” he said.

The citywide program aims to capture the roughly 8 million pounds of organic
waste that New Yorkers throw out every day, which turns into harmful greenhouse
gases if left languishing in landfills.

Aside from the fecal matter and dead animals, the city will compost all types of
organics: “This includes meat, bones [from food scraps], dairy, prepared foods,
and greasy uncoated paper plates and pizza boxes,” according to the sanitation
department’s website.

Queens residents have had to abide by the requirements since last year, when
curbside compost collection was rolled out to the entire borough. The program is
scheduled to expand to all of Brooklyn in October, and the compost bins will
come to all Bronx, Manhattan and Staten Island residences next year.



And more composting reforms are on the horizon: a mandatory citywide yard waste
compost requirement started in Queens in March, and the City Council has passed
a bill that would require New Yorkers to compost all their food scraps as well.



Tagged

sanitation
new york city

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Sophia Chang
Twitter

Sophia Chang is a reporter on the NYC Accountability desk covering government
policy, social structures and other issues that enable and complicate city life.
Got a tip? Email schang@nypublicradio.org or Signal 347-688-7674.

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