No carrot, apple or French toast stick goes to waste at Bel Air Elementary School in New Brighton. If the kids don't eat it, the pigs will.
The school is one of more than 220 sites — including other schools, hospitals, grocery stores and prisons — that asks people to carefully sort food scraps into bins, which are then picked up by trucks and taken to Barthold Farms in St. Francis. There, the leftovers are heated to 212 degrees to kill off any bacteria, then served to over 2,000 pigs.
"It's really good because we can help save the environment and feed the pigs at the same time," said Albert Davis Jr., a third-grader at Bel Air.
The Food to Hog program, now in all of Mounds View Public Schools' elementary schools and middle schools, also saves the district money. Though Barthold Farms charges a fee to pick up the food waste, that fee is tax-exempt — not subject to the 70% combined state and county tax that the school district pays on garbage hauling and disposal services. Overall, the district's trash costs decrease about 8% when food and beverage are kept out of the garbage stream.
Barthold Farms also picks up food scraps from schools in the Stillwater, White Bear Lake, Orono, Eden Prairie and Roseville districts. About a quarter of the farm's food recycling comes from schools.
"It's really a win-win," said Heather Schmidt, the nutrition services supervisor for the Mounds View school district, which plans to expand the program into high schools soon. "And it's been amazing to see the buy-in from the kids. If you give them the opportunity to do good and help save the Earth, they want to take it."
The schools use a system of three color-coded bins in the cafeteria: one for trash, one for recycling and one for food scraps destined for the farm. Occasionally, a custodian has to reach into the food bin to pull out a stray milk carton or yogurt container, but overall the method is preferred by most custodians.
That's because they can simply roll the bin of food and milk to a shed behind the school, where it gets picked up at least once a week.