California food waste law proves heavy lift in small towns as fuel costs
spike
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[April 08, 2022]
By Nathan Frandino and Christopher Walljasper
CHICO, Calif. (Reuters) - A California law
requiring grocery stores and restaurants to donate leftover food has
been hard for local food banks and small towns to implement due to
climbing fuel costs and uncertainty over who pays for food recovery.
The effort to reduce methane emissions from discarded food sent to
landfills while feeding hungry people has been slow to take off,
illustrating the difficulty of curbing food waste on a large scale.
The California law, which took effect in January, mandates that national
retailers such as Amazon.com Inc and Kroger as well as small grocery and
convenience stores, donate unsold food, redirecting anything edible from
landfills and composting anything inedible. It tasks cities and counties
with formulating local plans, with a statewide goal of recovering 20% of
edible food by 2025.
While other states restrict food going into landfills, California is the
first to require food be donated for human consumption. The effort
aligns with federal goals to slash food waste in half by 2030.
Food waste makes up a fifth of climate warming gas emissions in
California dumps, according to the California Department of Resources
Recycling and Recovery (CalRecyle).
More than 500 waivers have been submitted by rural towns and counties to
delay implementing food waste measures, saying they are too small, or do
not have composting infrastructure in place for food that cannot be
donated.
Food banks rely on private donations and some government assistance, and
were stretched thin during the COVID-19 pandemic as hunger rates rose
and food costs soared. They typically purchase food in bulk and deliver
it to smaller food pantries to give to the hungry. [L1N2QA1UM]
Implementing the new rules has been especially challenging in rural
California. As the North State Food Bank prepared for an influx of
newly-mandated donations, the daunting costs of picking up food across
8,000 square miles (5 million acres/20,720 square kilometers) in six
northern California counties became clear.
"I can't send the truck all over town, picking up leftover sandwiches,"
said Tom Dearmore, director of community services at the Butte County
Community Action Agency, which houses the food bank.
"The more we have to spend on fuel, the less food we can buy. It's
pretty cut and dry."
U.S. gasoline prices and global food inflation hit records following
Russia's Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine, adding to the challenges.
In March, Butte County Community Action's fuel costs jumped 40% versus
2019. It spent 58% more on food. Only 10% of the food bank's food is
donated; it purchases the majority to distribute to smaller food
pantries and homeless shelters in a county where one in five families
identify as food insecure.
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Paul Wolfe, donations and volunteer coordinator at the Torres
Community Shelter, pulls a cart carrying plastic bags full of bread
donated by Panera Bread in Chico, California, U.S. March 15, 2022.
REUTERS/Nathan Frandino
INFRASTRUCTURE CHALLENGES
In bigger metropolitan areas, food banks partner with Feeding
America, which has developed a sophisticated network of food banks
across the country, to capture unsold food from national and
regional supermarket chains.
But smaller grocery stores and rural food banks lack the systems to
track and divert food waste. Michael Flood, chief executive of the
Los Angeles Regional Food Bank, thinks that will change.
"It's going to force action," said Flood. "(Smaller
grocery stores) may have been donating before, but may not have had
as comprehensive a food donation policy and plan in place."
In some cases, plans developed by towns and counties trying to
comply with the state law increase costs for retailers who have to
navigate varying food waste regulations across the state.
Raley's Supermarkets, a chain of 250 stores across California,
Nevada and Arizona, has noticed some towns begin to assess fees for
compost pickup, said Chelsea Minor, corporate director of public
affairs. She said the company pays the fees, even though stores ship
all food waste to a private company that converts it into reusable
methane gas.
CalRecycle, the state recycling agency, is trying to absorb some of
the added costs, distributing around $25 million since 2018 to help
food banks buy refrigerators and trucks to handle added food
donations. But demand has far outpaced the state's efforts.
California funded $5 million in grants last autumn, despite
receiving applications worth $13 million.
"It’s really incumbent upon the local government to figure out how
they're going to implement their system," said Rachel Machi Wagoner,
director of CalRecycle.
Facing rising fuel costs, Butte County Community Action launched an
app, known as 530 Food Rescue, that connects restaurants and grocery
stores to volunteers who can collect donations and drop them off at
food aid organizations.
On a recent Tuesday, volunteers picked up day-old baked goods from a
Panera Bread to deliver to the Torres Community Shelter for up to
140 homeless guests.
"Having enough food has always been an issue," said Taylor Storey,
executive director of True North Housing Alliance, which oversees
the shelter. "With the state our climate is in now, every little bit
counts and food recovery is a huge part of that."
(Reporting by Christopher Walljasper; Editing by Caroline Stauffer
and Marguerita Choy)
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