NOTICE: Milk Cartons and Juice Boxes Can Now Be Recycled! Please Do Not Add Milk Cartons To Organics.
Senate Bill (SB) 1383 requires California K-12 public and charter schools, school districts, county offices of education, and other commercial businesses (including private schools) to establish programs and policies that minimize the creation of waste and effectively divert recyclables and organic waste away from the landfill (trash):
Subscribe to recycling and organic waste collection services through a franchised waste hauler. The City of Woodland's contracted franchise waste hauler is WM®.
Provide an adequate number and size of clearly marked and readily accessible recycling and/or organics collection containers for staff, students, and visitors to use.
Container bodies, lids, and/or signage should follow this color scheme: black or gray for garbage, blue for recycling, and green for organics. Labels or signage must be included to specify what materials are accepted in each container.
Recycling bins should always be placed next to trash receptacles, except in restrooms, and organics collection bins must be added as a third receptacle wherever organic waste is generated.
Periodically inspect containers for contamination.
Educate staff and students on proper organics and waste sorting.
Effective January 1, 2024, work with a local food recovery organization to recover (donate) edible food, if applicable.
SB 1383 expands the definition of organic waste to include food scraps, landscape and pruning waste, organic textiles and carpets, lumber, and wood. Accepted recyclable materials includes most paper products and cardboard, metals, plastics #1-7, and glass.
Woodland Municipal Code § 13.72 requires all Woodland businesses, public entities, and residents to follow the requirements of SB 1383, as well as all other applicable state recycling and organics laws.
Reinforces and lists what foods schools can donate and add to “share tables,” and specifically called for California Health and Safety (Health and Safety Code 114079) and California Department of Education to update its guidelines to match:
(a) Except as specified in 114079 of Health and Safety Code subdivision (b), after being served or sold and in the possession of a consumer, food that is unused or returned by the consumer shall not be offered as food for human consumption.
(b) A container of food that is not potentially hazardous may be transferred from one consumer to another if the food is dispensed so that it is protected from contamination and the container is closed between uses, such as a narrow-neck bottle containing catsup, steak sauce, or wine, or if the food, such as crackers, salt, or pepper, is in an unopened original package and is maintained in sound condition, and if the food is checked periodically on a regular basis.
(c)(1) A local educational agency may do both of the following to minimize waste and to reduce food insecurity:
(A) Provide sharing tables where food service staff, pupils, and faculty may return appropriate food items consistent with subparagraph
(B) and make those food items available to pupils during the course of a regular school meal time.
(C) Allow the food placed on the sharing tables that is not taken by a pupil during the course of a regular school meal time in accordance with subparagraph (A) to be donated to a food bank or any other nonprofit charitable organization.
(2) Donations of food or food made available to pupils during the course of a regular school meal time pursuant to paragraph (1) may include prepackaged, nonpotentially hazardous food with the packaging still intact and in good condition, whole uncut produce that complies with Section 113992 before donation, unopened bags of sliced fruit, unopened containers of milk that are immediately stored in a cooling bin maintained at 41 degrees Fahrenheit or below, and perishable prepackaged food if it is placed in a proper temperature-controlled environment.
(3) When a local educational agency, pursuant to paragraph (1), makes food available to pupils during the course of a regular school meal time or donates food to a food bank or any other nonprofit charitable organization for distribution, the preparation, safety, and donation of food shall be consistent with Section 113980.
Protects food donors from liability when they donate food in good faith to nonprofit organizations, helping to alleviate food waste and food insecurity issues in California.
Allows students to save/eat items outside of a meal service area as long as the food items do not require cooling or heating.