In January 2018, ILSR convened two events in conjunction with the USCC’s International Conference and Trade Show, COMPOST2018, in Atlanta: the Best Practices in Community Composting Workshop and the National Cultivating Community Composting Forum. These events brought together composters to network, share best practices, and build support for community-scale composting systems and enterprises. The Cultivating Community Composting Forum 2018 is the 5th national forum convened by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance.
BEST PRACTICES IN COMMUNITY COMPOSTING WORKSHOP Agenda
MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 2018
CULTIVATING COMMUNITY COMPOSTING FORUM 2018 Agenda
TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 2018
Taller sobre mejores prácticas en el compostaje comunitario
In this full-day workshop for community composters, held as part of COMPOST2018, we walked through practices that work and address how to take your community-scale composting to the next level. Through both presentation and small group discussion, participants walked away knowing how to adapt the efforts and achievements of other programs for their community. Participants included community-scale composters who are composting on-site at schools, community gardens, farms, or otherwise keeping the process as local and small-scale as possible, while engaging the community through participation and education, as well as small-scale haulers, such as pedal-powered collectors.
Parte 1: Ingredientes clave del compostaje comunitario
Growing and Scaling in Community Composting — Daniel Brown, Jinetes del Cinturón del Óxido, @RustBeltRiders
Financing the Movement — Justin Senkbeil, CompostNow, @CompostNow
Model of a Worker-Owned Cooperative — Terry Craghead, Cooperativa Fertile Ground
Part 2: Small-Scale & Urban Farm Composting
Worm & Other Composting Systems on an Urban Farm — Benny Erez, Granjas urbanas ecológicas, @ECOCityFarms
Small-Scale Composting Systems — Erik Martig, LA Compost, @LACompost
Using Black Soldier Flies in Composting — Paul Rabaut, Compost Suncoast, @suncoastcompost
Part 4: Social Justice, Youth, & Community Engagement
Corinne Coe-Law, Compost Terra Nova, @wemakecompost (Moderator)
Whitney Jaye, Southeastern African American Farmers Organic Network, @SAAFON4Farmers
Sundiata Ameh-El, Comunidad de compost
Maurice Small, Farmer x Farmer Coalition
Michael Martínez, LA Compost, @LACompost
Xavier Brown, Ciudad fértil, @SoilfulCity
Part 5: Pedal Power!
Bike-Hauling Equipment & Female Empowerment — Kat Nigro, CompostNow, @CompostNow
NYC: Micro Hauling & Commercial Waste — Meredith Danberg-Ficarelli, Compost Common Ground, @CompostComún
National Cultivating Community Composting Forum
El Foro tiene como objetivo:
- Fomentar una mayor interconexión entre los compostadores comunitarios/a pequeña escala/urbanos y los miembros/asistentes a conferencias de la USCC
- Muestra cómo el compostaje a escala comunitaria encaja y complementa la industria del compostaje más grande, tanto en recolección como en procesamiento, y tanto para individuos como para organizaciones.
- Muestra la variedad de modelos e ideas innovadoras que están creciendo desde cero.
- Fomentar una red de compostaje comunitaria que se mantenga conectada después de la conferencia.
Morning Panel: Community Composting Policies, Permitting & BMPs
Community scale composting is an important facet of a healthy diverse composting infrastructure, and can bring public attention to composting as well as catalyzing larger scale municipal efforts. Yet, too often government policies hamper the ability of community composters to compete for contracts and funding. One plus for small-scale sites is that they are typically exempt from state permitting regulations. But this could lead to poorly operated systems, which might give community composting a poor reputation. Panelists addressed what local government can do to support community scale efforts and identify best management practices to ensure well-operated sites.
Best Management Practices for Community Composters — Linda Bilsens Brolis, Instituto para la Autosuficiencia Local, @ILSR, @ltbinda
Policy and Legal Obstacles to Community Compost — Kourtnii Brown, Common Compost, @CompostLocal
Afternoon Panel: What is Community Composting & Why is it Important?
This panel introduced the concept of community composting and its importance to the wider composting industry. Community Composting takes many forms, but one thing Community Composters have in common is that they recycle material in the community in which it is generated, and the finished product benefits that community. Operations are structured as for-profits, non-profits, and worker owned cooperatives. Hauling can be done with bicycles or box trucks and piles may be turned with skid-steers or pitchforks. Some operations haul, others process, while others prioritize education. Minimizing the distance material travels to be processed and utilized isn’t the only distinguishing characteristic of Community Composting. These groups also approach the work through the lens of food security, social justice, permaculture, deep ecology, and workplace democracy. They use grassroots tactics to build their customer base and education is a substantial part of their work. Their decentralized processing networks allow them to be effective in densely populated cities. Working to make composting common practice in cities and states whose governments don’t currently provide incentives, Community Composters are the harbingers of larger programs. They prove that the market does indeed exist, and help to grow it through robust education programs.
Community Composting: One Mission, Many Forms — Michael Robinson, Jinetes del Cinturón del Óxido, @RustBeltRiders
Partnerships Between Bike and Truck Haulers & Composting for Multi-Family Residents — Christi Turner, Scraps
Building Community Capital via Community Composting —Xavier Brown, Ciudad fértil, @SoilfulCity
Looking at the Big Picture — Perspectives on Where Organics Management is Heading