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Environmentby Fern Shen12:41 pmSep 10, 20180

Jobs for Baltimore’s youth and a second life for its trashed food

A visit with the Baltimore Compost Collective, the kind of project the city is embracing as part of its war on food waste

Above: Youth composter Anthony Walton shows off the “black gold” he helps make at the Filbert Street Community Garden in Curtis Bay. (Fern Shen)

Disgusting garbage.

That’s how most would view this pile of banana peels, whole tomatoes, rotting watermelon rinds and more steaming away under the hot sun in Curtis Bay one recent afternoon.

But to 19-year-old Anthony Walton, who was standing atop this mini-mountain of food waste, chopping at it with a long-handled tool, it represents something else entirely:

Opportunity and redemption – for him and for his community.

“They call this black gold,” Walton said, holding up a handful of rich brown gardening compost, the usable product those food scraps are destined to become.

From left, Anthony Walton and Marvin Hayes, of the Baltimore Compost Collective, chop food waste. (Fern Shen)

Anthony Walton and Marvin Hayes, of the Baltimore Compost Collective, chop food waste. (Fern Shen)

Walton, who grew up in this hardscrabble southside neighborhood, works for the Baltimore Compost Collective, a year-old food scrap collection service that employs local youth to pick up the food waste from residential customers and turn it into compost.

“Tell ’em what composting means to you, Anthony,” program manager Marvin Hayes said, as he sliced and diced alongside his young assistant.

“Well, a job for one thing!” Walton cracked with a smile. “And maybe one day I’ll run a program like Mr. Hayes does here.”

Hayes, a longtime youth mentor from the Sandtown-Winchester neighborhood, met Walton when he was 14 and participating in an earlier program that Hayes ran.

The boy left Baltimore to live with relatives in California, and when he returned, he reconnected with Hayes who worked to steer him away from the streets and potential trouble.

“They changed my life around,” Walton said, referring to Hayes, garden manager Rodette Jones and others. “I really thank them.”

Filbert the Rooster

The project is located in, and provides compost for, the Filbert Street Community Garden, a verdant plot that generates produce for the neighborhood and educational programming for area schoolchildren.

Visitors can see the red tomatoes, green squash and orange pumpkins growing on vines intertwined with rampant white morning glories. They can dodge the bees in the apiary.

Or feed Filbert, the boss rooster of this one-acre kingdom, that includes a menagerie of other chickens and ducks, as well as volunteers and neighborhood gardeners.

Don't mess with

Don’t mess with Filbert, who rules the roost at the community garden. (Fern Shen)

They can also learn about the work of the Compost Collective.

It currently has the capacity to produce about 800 pounds of compost. Hayes, Anthony and another youth participant, Rayjion Hall, collect the material from 28 residential customers and one commercial customer, Pure Raw Juice, a Federal Hill juice bar.

So far, two of the five young men who have worked in the program have gone on to full-time employment.

“We not only rescue food, we rescue young people,” Hayes said. It’s kind of his catchphrase, which he repeats with infectious verve.

Mixing Greens and Browns

Launched a year ago with funding from the Abell Foundation and the Robert F. Schumann Foundation, the Collective is a project of the Institute for Local Self Reliance, United Workers and the Filbert Street Garden.

It serves Curtis Bay, Locust Point, Riverside and Federal Hill, charging residential customers $25-per-month for a bucket to be picked up weekly.

Gourds and pumpkins at the Filbert Street Community Garden. (Fern Shen)

Gourds and pumpkins at the Filbert Street Community Garden. (Fern Shen)

They currently don’t have the capacity to accept any other commercial customers, but hope to keep expanding in the future, Hayes said.

“Shout out to Pure Raw Juice for raising $1,500 to towards the building of these three new bins,” he said, asking Walton to explain the process.

“You got your ‘greens,’ like the vegetables scraps, and your ‘browns,’ like leaves, woodchips and straw. And for every ‘green’ it takes two ‘browns,’” Walton said. “There’s some math involved in this!”

The mixture cures in the bins for a couple of months and then, after being sifted through a screen, the fine crumbly product is ready.

“Someday maybe we’ll be able to accept commercial customers,” Hayes said. “We’re not there yet.”

Walton said he’s glad to help the garden provide vegetables, eggs and honey for the community.

“The closest place to buy food is the Shoppers market and that’s like almost two miles away,” Walton said. “When you don’t have money for a cab or the bus, you just have to walk. I’ve done that.”

Raised beds tended by Curtis Bay residents. (Fern Shen)

Raised beds are carefully tended by Curtis Bay residents. (Fern Shen)

Ending Waste, Feeding People

Hayes and the others involved in the Compost Collective are not the only ones in Baltimore with dreams of scaling up composting.

The Planning Department’s Office of Sustainability last week announced that Baltimore was selected for a food waste management partnership with the Natural Resources Defense Council that includes a $200,000 grant from the Rockefeller Foundation.

The grant will support a full-time person for two years dedicated to leading a three-pronged effort.

The initiative will encourage people not to waste food through an ad campaign. Estimates are that as much as 40% of the U.S. food supply goes uneaten every year.

Another priority will be to promote food recovery by restaurants and other businesses. The goal would be to get surplus food to people who need it.

And as part of the campaign, the city will work to strengthen and foster pilot composting programs like the one operating out of the Filbert Street Garden.

“We’re looking at doing some composting pilots residentially, with businesses, maybe with farmer’s markets,” said sustainability coordinator Anne Draddy at a news conference last week with Mayor Catherine Pugh.

Estimates are that as much as 40% of the U.S. food supply goes uneaten every year.

“One thing we’d like to do in the two years is site a composting facility somewhere in the city and work with a private partner who will develop that with us and do a public-private partnership,” she added.

Draddy was asked if the goal was to get Baltimore to the point where it could provide residents with curbside food waste pick-up, as San Francisco, New York City, Portland, Maine and other cities do.

“That’s a long-term vision for municipalities,” Draddy said. “That’s gonna take a long time of educating people to do composting.”

Honey from the apiary is another Filbert Street Community Garden product, Marvin Hayes explained. (Fern Shen)

Marvin Hayes points to the apiary where honey bees are kept at the Filbert Street Community Garden. “Let’s maybe step away from here for now,” he said, after disentangling one of the bees from a reporter’s hair. (Fern Shen)

– Baltimore Brew has received grant funding from the Abell Foundation.

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