New Jersey Climate Change Alliance announces statewide Organic Material Management Plan

October 14, 2021

For more information contact Gary Sondermeyer, vice president of Operations, Bayshore Family of Companies, and co-Chair of the New Jersey Climate Change Alliance at gsondermeyer@bayshorerecycling.com or by phone at 215-530-5334.

October 14, 2021, marks the effective date of the New Jersey Food Waste Recycling Law signed by Governor Phil Murphy on April 20, 2020. The law requires large food waste generators of 52 tons per calendar year to recycle their food waste provided an authorized facility is located within 25 road miles of their location and the cost is not more than 10 percent of what they are currently paying for landfill or incinerator disposal.

Recognizing the importance of this new law, the New Jersey Climate Change Alliance Organics Workgroup was created in August 2020 as a voluntary effort of 80 stakeholder organizations with a common goal of outlining a statewide “Sustainable Organic Material Management Plan” (SOMMP) for New Jersey. Shortly thereafter, the NJDEP released its “Global Warming Response Act 80 x 50 Report” in October 2020, including a chapter dedicated to Waste and Agriculture. The timing of this release allowed the Workgroup to consider and expand upon the recommended actions identified by the State. Stakeholder discussions were held between April 1 and June 3, resulting in some 70 overall considerations, further refined into 17 initial core “opportunities for action.”  

“Nationally, USEPA advises that municipal waste landfills are the third-largest source of human-related methane emissions in the United States, accounting for approximately 15.1 percent of these emissions in 2018,” said Jeanne Herb, alliance co-facilitator and executive director of Environmental Analysis and Communications Group at the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy at Rutgers University. “Any measures we can enact to reduce the amount of wasted food and to maximize composting will contribute to GHG emission reductions.”  

The Organics Workgroup conducted a holistic review of current organic material management practices and developed a blueprint for implementation for the state. The effort focused on reducing (or preventing) food waste; maximizing the recovery (or donation) of edible food; food waste management in schools; community-scale composting (backyard composting, community gardens, municipal and private windrow composting); development of large-scale organics recycling infrastructure (aerobic, anaerobic and co-digestion facilities); and sustainable animal manure management.

“New Jersey is charting a new course for the future, with a stronger and more just environment at its center,” Shawn M. LaTourette, New Jersey’s Commissioner of Environmental Protection said. “That future includes a new approach to reducing food waste, which will avoid landfilling, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and create new business opportunities in the process.”

“History has shown us time and again that we can do great things when we work together,” said Valerie Montecalvo, president, and CEO of Bayshore Recycling, who organized the workgroup effort. “The climate crisis confronting our state, nation, and world presents a call to action of unprecedented proportion, our plan of attack, sustainable living. In our fight, every action toward mitigation or adaptation counts toward our common goal to preserve, protect and enhance our environment and natural systems for generations to come. Volunteerism and unifying common vision are among our strongest assets.”

“Today represents a new beginning as our Food Waste Recycling Law takes effect and New Jersey begins a concerted effort to reduce wasted food and recycle, as opposed to disposing of organics in landfills and incinerators,” said Marie Kruzan, executive director of the Association of New Jersey Recyclers. “Our Climate Alliance Organics Plan provides us with an initial pathway to advance the goals of the new law and to attack the reduction of GHG emissions attributable to wasted food.

More sustainable management of food can feed more New Jerseyans confronting food insecurity and improve soil quality to enhance agriculture, community gardening, and plant growth through the use of compost. 

“Compost enriches soil while helping retain moisture and suppressing plant diseases and pests, reduces the need for chemical fertilizers, and reduces methane emissions from landfills while lowering our collective carbon footprint,” said Jairo Gonzalez, President of the New Jersey Composting Council. “Working cooperatively with state, county, and local officials, we hope to show sustainable organics management is a win for not only our environment but also our economy and well-being.”

While the stakeholder effort was focused on planning, identifying practical ways to advance more sustainable organic material management was the objective.

“Our Sustainable Jersey programs now actively engage 460 New Jersey municipalities, 1,025 schools and 374 school districts,” said Randy Solomon, executive director. “We currently offer practical actions for towns and schools to take to reduce and recycle food waste. The Organics Workgroup effort will undoubtedly result in additional actions developed to promote even more sustainable management practices which can dramatically advance our GHG emission reduction and environmental goals.

Montecalvo summed up the Workgroup effort and future direction: “While we hope you find our work to be informative, it has clearly just begun! Framing a plan of action is a critical first step, but the rubber hits the road through action and implementation. It is now time to collectively roll up our sleeves and get to the real work of effecting positive change.”

The Sustainable Organic Material Management Plan can be found here: Organics Workgroup SOMMP

The New Jersey Climate Change Alliance is a network of diverse organizations that share the goal of advancing science-informed climate change strategies at the state and local levels in New Jersey, with regard to adapting to changing climate conditions and addressing the emissions that cause climate change. Alliance participants include representatives of public, private, and non-governmental New Jersey organizations from sectors including transportation, emergency management, business, energy, engineering, farming, insurance, environment, health, community planning, Environmental Justice, natural resource management, and others. The Alliance does not work to influence political outcomes or specific pieces of legislation; rather, the work of the Alliance serves to integrate science with evidence and diverse points of view through the voices of Alliance participants for the purpose of informing short and long-term climate change strategies and outlining policy options for New Jersey.

Recent Posts

RAISE-24 Recap: Does News Media Spread Fear of AI?

Summary The final round for the RAISE-24 Informatics – Data Science competition was held Friday, April 19, 2024 at the Bloustein School. Hosted by the Master of Public Informatics (MPI) program, the inaugural competition challenge asked competitors “Does News Media...

NJ Unemployment Insurance Claims Dashboard Released

The New Jersey Statewide Data System has released the New Jersey Unemployment Insurance Claims Dashboard. This dashboard uses linked, longitudinal administrative data from the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development and the New Jersey Office of the...

Susan Krum, 2024 Rose Teaching Excellence Award Recipient

The Bloustein School is pleased to announce that Susan Krum, Au.D., interim Executive Director of Health Administration & Associate Teaching Professor is the 2024 recipient of the Jerome G. Rose Excellence in Teaching Award. The award is presented annually to a...

Research Day 2024 Recap: Winners and Videos

The Bloustein School's 3rd Annual Research Day took place in person at the Gov. James J. Florio Special Events Forum on Friday, April 12th. The event was an opportunity for Bloustein students, faculty, and staff to showcase their research, receive feedback, and build...

Voices of Inclusion: Advancing Disability Justice and Advocacy

The words diversity, equity, and inclusion have been at the forefront of many conversations during the past few years. In late March, the Bloustein School hosted an event focusing on the disability community, and disability justice in particular. “Some of the...

Upcoming Events

Rutgers Day

Rutgers University

Rutgers Day is set for Saturday, April 27, 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. on the Busch Campus in Piscataway and the College Avenue and Cook/Douglass campuses in New Brunswick. Get […]

Event Series CAREERS

Career Virtual Drop-ins

Virtual

Bloustein Career Development Specialists Cheryl Egan and Andrea Garrido will be in a Zoom Room on Monday's beginning January 22, 2024 (excluding holidays and spring break) to answer questions, provide […]