U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region
7
11201 Renner Boulevard, Lenexa, KS
66219
Iowa, Kansas,
Missouri, Nebraska, and Nine Tribal Nations
University of Missouri-Kansas City Food
Recovery Program Highlighted by EPA Region 7 as Nation Observes America Recycles
Day, Nov. 15
Contact Information:
EPA Region 7 - David Bryan,
913-551-7433, bryan.david@epa.gov; UMKC - Kristin Pitts,
816-235-6678, pittsk@umkc.edu
Environmental News
NEWS MEDIA ADVISORY
(Lenexa, Kan., Nov. 13, 2012) - EPA Regional
Administrator Karl Brooks will join University of Missouri-Kansas City (UMKC)
officials on Thursday, Nov. 15 – America Recycles Day – to highlight the
university’s participation in EPA’s Food Recovery
Challenge.
The Food Recovery
Challenge encourages organizations to find better alternatives to throwing food
away. The challenge aims to assist organizations sustainably manage food waste
through source reduction, donation and composting. It helps organizations learn
to practice leaner purchasing and divert surplus food away from landfills to
hunger-relief organizations and onto the tables of those in need in the
community. It also diverts food scraps, suitable for composting or animal
consumption, to composting or animal feed.
WHO:
Karl Brooks, EPA Region 7 Administrator; UMKC Chancellor Leo Morton; Kate
Johnston, UMKC Sustainability Coordinator
WHAT: EPA Regional Administrator Karl Brooks will join UMKC officials
to highlight the university’s participation in EPA’s Food Recovery
Challenge.
WHERE: UMKC Student Union, Jazzman’s CafĂ© and Bakery, 5100 Cherry, Kansas City, Mo.
64110. Visitors may park on the Fifth Floor of the Cherry Street Parking
Garage, 5000 Cherry St.
WHEN: Nov. 15, 2012, 10:30 a.m.
Visuals – Remarks by Karl Brooks
and Chancellor Morton; students recycling materials in the student union;
kitchen staff engaging in sustainable food recovery practices; extended story
opportunity to see composting at Missouri Organics (destination for compost
materials).
Background – For years, UMKC Dining Services has
continually reduced its food waste. Dining Services uses cage-free eggs,
biodegradable cups, 100 percent recycled napkins and compostable straws, and
practices organic composting. UMKC also features a tray-less cafeteria, bulk
condiments, and no-rinse dishwashing products. Dining Services offers many
locally grown foods, and recycles more than 500 pounds of cardboard every week
at the University Center alone.
The Food
Recovery Challenge asks participants to reduce as much of their food waste as
possible – saving money, helping communities, and protecting the
environment.
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