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New Yorkers can now get fined for not separating their food scraps. Some critics say that's not the right approach.
New York City residents will be subject to fines for failing to separate compostable materials from their regular trash.
According to the New York City Sanitation Department of Sanitation, there were 24,681 trash cans across the ... Currently, the city has two types of cans, which cost between $2,000 and $3,000 apiece: ...
"I can tell from the garbage that they're putting a lot of compostable material in the actual trash," he said. While speaking to CBS News New York's Zinnia Maldonado, Athineos grabbed three bags ...
New York City's waste reduction efforts ... should be set aside in compost bins instead of trash bags. In addition to food, leaf and yard waste can also be compostable. However, the agency says ...
Green let the trash talk fly after Towns was charged with a third foul early in the second quarter and ABC camera also caught him referring to the Knicks' center as "soft" after a New York turnover.
NEW YORK — Lauren Click founded a nonprofit a few years ago offering free composting education to schools around the country.
U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy is calling for a federal review of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, ...
The warning period is over. Starting April 1, New York City residents will be fined between $25 and $100 for not putting things like fish bones, food scraps, coffee ...
The city has increased processing capacity to prepare for the shift. It issued tens of thousands of warnings before enforcement began on April 1, and has already issued nearly 2,000 summons for ...
LEE ZELDIN’S AMBITIOUS EVOLUTION — POLITICO’s Hannah Northey, Emily Ngo, Josh Siegel and Miranda Wilson: President Donald ...