More people in Fort Worth are doing what’s right when it comes to the environment and making our green footprint larger than ever before. This means reducing waste, reusing items, recycling more and composting food waste. Through the city’s Residential Food Waste Composting Program, residents can turn even more waste into resources instead of garbage by collecting food scraps to be processed into compost, a rich soil nutrient.

Most foods can be composted: fruits and vegetables, including peels and pits, bread and other baked goods, coffee grounds and filters, tea bags, egg shells, cooked meats and bones and any table leftovers, to name a few. The compost program, which launched in 2019, has recently added new locations, making a total of 15 collection sites. The new sites:

  • Chisholm Trail Park, 4680 McPherson Blvd.
  • Walsh Community Garden, 13749 Makers Way.
  • Golden Triangle Library, 4264 Golden Triangle Blvd.

These additions make it more convenient for residents who live in the south, west and north of the city to drop off food waste. A new collection site is in the works for the east side of Fort Worth.

To read the full story, visit https://fwculture.com/news/12682306.
Author: Stacy Hollingsworth, Cultural District 
Alliance
Image: Cultural District Alliance

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