泡芙视频app

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Culinary students do their part for Earth Day

Students in 泡芙视频app Community College鈥檚 Culinary/Hospitality program are helping to save the environment by composting all of the food waste that comes in and out of the classroom labs and the student-run Course Restaurant.

鈥淚n an industry that has a lot of waste, it is nice to know that I am doing my small part to help make a change,鈥 said Natalie Barrett, Culinary/Hospitality student.

鈥淚 love that we compost at 泡芙视频app!鈥 added Kiera Lococo, another student. 鈥Composting is one of the ways I try to be conscious of my carbon footprint, along with recycling and buying local produce.鈥

鈥淲e strive for sustainability in our program and have been doing that when it comes to purchasing our produce and meats from as many local vendors as we can, and recycling as much as we can in our labs and in the restaurant and coffee shop,鈥 said Rob Epps, program director. 鈥淭he next step was composting, really looking for more ways to be as sustainable and responsible as we can.鈥

Students use designated containers in the classrooms for the compost, which is taken to the collection bin outside. All raw foods, including meat, vegetables, egg shells, tea and coffee grounds, fish bones, paper products, waxed cardboard, and untreated bamboo and wood are able to be composted.

鈥淚 was excited to implement composting into our program to help increase our students鈥 sustainability awareness,鈥 said Angela Cheever, Course Restaurant manager. 鈥淚t is my hope that as our graduates enter the workforce they will encourage other businesses to focus on implementing their own sustainability efforts.鈥

Eventually compost is turned into dark soil, which can be sold to farms or gardeners for landscaping. Benefits of composting include adding nutrients to the soil, recycling waste, reducing landfill waste, and reducing the need for chemical fertilizers.

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Andrea Gallagher
Communications Specialist
402-323-3395
agallagher@southeast.edu