KC Can Compost: Let’s make a natural process natural again — prioritizing people, the soil

October 16, 2020  |  Austin Barnes

KC Can Compost

It might be cool now, but Kansas Citians should expect warmer days ahead, said Kristin Chamberlain, highlighting ways the environment is changing rapidly and offering a simple solution that could help curb its effects — while also transforming lives.

“There’s ample opportunity to compost,” said Chamberlain, executive director of KC Can Compost — the social enterprise that’s dedicated itself to empowering people and preserving the planet. 

Kristin Chamberlain, KC Can Compost

Kristin Chamberlain, KC Can Compost

“When our food waste goes to the landfill, it gets suffocated and it gets no oxygen — which is what creates methane,” she explained, adding the problem could be easily curbed through widespread composting practices. 

“It’s something so natural to us. We just haven’t had the systems in place to manage it. It hasn’t been a priority within our culture.”

Enter KC Can Compost — an outgrowth of Shelter KC — which not only works to transform the environment, but to educate and employ formerly-homeless people as compost collectors. 

The effort was inspired by the work of Joe Colaizzi, former executive director of the Kansas City Rescue Mission, who wanted to see the metro better care for those experiencing homelessness and offer them a more sustainable path toward rehabilitation, Chamberlain explained. 

“He could see opportunities for the men and women transitioning out of homelessness, recovery. So that’s how this all got started, through a really generous trust that allowed us to spend about two years looking at what the city really needed.”

Chamberlain found Kansas City needed increased access to local composting resources at the commercial level, she explained. 

“For a restaurant, about 75 percent of their trash is compostable,” she continued. “So 75 percent of what they’re sending to the landfill could be composted and made into desperately needed, nutrient rich soil.”

KC Can Compost at Gigi's Wellness Cafe

KC Can Compost at Gigi’s Wellness Cafe

Such a realization has led to partnerships with Chef Collective KC and Kanbe’s Markets, alongside additional work with local restaurants and cafes that include The Campground, GiGi’s Wellness Cafe, and Long Lost Coldbrew in addition to area hospitals, hotels, and the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art — all of which contribute to KC Can Compost’s diversion of 50,000 pounds of organic waste from area landfills on a monthly basis.  

Click here to learn more about Kanbe’s Markets or here to learn more about Chef Collective KC. 

The organization works with customers to analyze waste generated, provides a composting bin, and picks up a participant’s waste on a weekly schedule — all in the name of environmental justice, Chamberlain said. 

“What we’re [predicted[ to see in Kansas City over the next 25 years is a significant increase in the number of consecutive days of temperatures over 100 degrees. That’s going to impact our farming industry, our flowers, our gardens, the poor — everything,” she continued. 

“On the reverse side, on increased days of consecutive precipitation, the flooding is going to be ridiculous because our ground can’t absorb that amount of water. It’s going to continue to run off, taking with it any nutrients that did exist in that dry soil.”

 

KC Can Compost

KC Can Compost

The use of compost on everything from playgrounds to greenspaces has significant impact on absorption rates, which could reduce flooding, Chamberlain said. 

“Places like Texas have regulations in place already where their entire department of transportation requires compositing on all the sides of all new roadways, because essentially that’s absorbing water and runoff and making it safer for drivers.”

Meanwhile, regulations on both coasts have seen cities issue mandates that require composting in all restaurants and commercial kitchens, she added. 

With plenty of opportunities to compost at home — and KC Can Compost launching it’s own Urban Compost Initiative Oct. 24 — prioritization of commercial compositing stands to deliver the most significant and immediate impact on the planet, Chamberlain said. 

“There’s a lot of great businesses in our community that are composting — it costs money to recycle, that’s just the bottom line,” she said, noting businesses have also found financial relief in composting. 

“These businesses are taking it very seriously. You’ve got museums, hotels initiating a composting program throughout their entire facility. I think [we should be] encouraging the public to demand it of the businesses in our area and then support those businesses to make it happen.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2020 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Kansas Citians of the Year: A business power couple who built a legacy of civic service

        By Tommy Felts | November 27, 2024

        A core requirement to earn the KC Chamber’s highest honor: simply making Kansas City a better place, said Joe Reardon, announcing local business icons Peggy and Terry Dunn — a former mayor and the longtime top executive at JE Dunn Construction — as the 2024 Kansas Citians of the Year. “Together, Peggy and Terry exemplify…

        How a KC design firm helped put the tinsel on Hallmark’s new town square experience

        By Tommy Felts | November 26, 2024

        Saturday’s star-studded premiere for the Hallmark movie “Holiday Touchdown: A Chiefs Love Story” at Crown Center won’t be the only hometown Christmas tie-in at the sprawling Hallmark Christmas Experience. Kansas City-built Dimensional Innovations plays a key role in the season-long holiday celebration, which kicks off with the TV movie — filmed over the summer in…

        Roll out the green carpet: KC activist-turned-global performer readies for his 1,000th clean energy show

        By Tommy Felts | November 26, 2024

        AY Young is counting down to music history, he shared. After an almost 13-year journey through 100 cities and 40 countries, the singer, songwriter, activist, and entrepreneur has 41 shows remaining until his Guinness World recording-breaking 1,000th show powered solely by clean energy. He’s planning to hit the milestone Oct. 6, 2025: Green Sports Day.…

        If their shop smells like Travis Kelce at Christmas, these candle chemists called the right play

        By Tommy Felts | November 26, 2024

        When the owners of Decori home and gift shop at the Village at Briarcliff suited up to create a Travis Kelce candle scent, they turned to their virtual assistant to help make the call. Alexa suggested a play on the “audacious, confident and powerful” scents of Creed Aventus. Three formulations later, partners Ralph Liebetrau and…