Health&Wellness Magazine March 2014 | Page 17

For advertising information visit www.samplerpublications.com or call 859.225.4466 | March 2014 FOOD BITES By Angela S. Hoover, Staff Writer Compostable Lunch Trays Piloting In Select Public Schools A handful of schools are switching to compostable lunch trays as part of a pilot project of the Urban School Food Alliance. The new trays are made from sugar cane and cost about 15 cents each. Traditional lunch trays cost 4 cents, but are not biodegradable and are often made from petroleum byproducts. Alliance member schools believe the sugar cane trays’ cost will decrease when more institutions enter into contracts. The schools plan to sell the compost the trays generate to help offset the current price increase. The Alliance has created a first of its kind partnership between six big-city school systems in Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, Miami, New York and Orlando. These cities’ combined purchasing power has helped to create a new market for sustainable food and lunchroom supplies. Together, these schools spend about $530 million on food and food supplies annually. The New York City Education Department will spearhead the supplier review bids, allowing the other member school districts to sign up with the same deal without needing to further negotiate individually. New York needs 850,000 trays for at least 1,200 schools. If all goes as expected, the trays will be in place in all six school districts by September. Underground Growing Yields Zero Carbon Crops Zero Carbon, brainchild of Richard Ballarf and Steven Dring of London, is utilizing abandoned underground spaces to grow crops. Spaces 100 feet underground like WWII bomb shelters are equipped to grow sustainable food hydroponically. Years of work will culminate in a 2.5-acre farm starting up fulltime in March. Yields will hit restaurants and markets by summer. The first batch of subterranean produce will include broccoli