With Pay-As-You-Throw Firmly in Place, Decatur Seems Primed for Composting
Decatur Metro | November 29, 2011 | 1:50 pmNow let me start off by saying that I haven’t done a lick of research into the hurdles the city would have to be overcome to actually dispose of compost accumulated from around Decatur. Perhaps the City’s Lena Stevens will step in and set me straight on that.
But the recently released first draft of the city’s Sustainability Plan goal “Promote the Expansion of Food Composting” got me thinking, “How hard would it be to get Decaturites composting?”
After doing a bit of looking around and some sporadic noodle-scratching, I determined, “Not that hard at all!”. And I’m not even talking about implementing the kind of militant composting prescriptions of the Pacific Northwest (San Fran, Seattle), which require composting under penalty of “liens, fines, and other fees.” While Decaturites are often pointed to as some of the most liberal Georgia residents, most actual residents know that if you fly a bunch of us over to the piney lakes of Washington State many of us “progressives” would sound down right conservative. (“Where’d you get that plastic grocery bag son? Atlanta, eh??”)
Why do I have such blind and unsubstantiated faith in the potential ease of convincing Decaturites to compost?