Organics
Certain New York City establishments are required by law to separate their organic waste. If your business meets the minimum requirements outlined below, you must comply with the Commercial Organics Rules by the date shown.
Commercial Organics
Certain New York City establishments are required by law to separate their organic waste. If your business meets the minimum requirements outlined below, you must comply with the Commercial Organics Rules by the date shown.
Since 2016, the commissioner must evaluate annually the cost and regional processing capacity for organic waste by composting, aerobic or anaerobic digestion, or any other method of processing organic waste that the department approves by rule. If the commissioner determines that there is sufficient capacity, he or she shall designate all covered establishments required to source separate their organic waste. All such designated covered establishments must comply with the requirements beginning no later than six months following such designation.
ESTABLISHMENTS COVERED BY COMMERCIAL ORGANICS RULES
As of July 31, 2020: NEW
Food Service Establishments (such as restaurants, delis, coffee shops, cafeterias, etc.)
Food Service Establishments having 7,000 to 14,999 square feet
Chain Food Service Establishments of 2 to 99 NYC locations with combined floor area 8,000 square feet or more
Food Service Establishments in Hotels having 100 to 149 guest rooms
Food Service Establishments with combined floor area 8,000 square feet or more in the same building or location
Retail Food Stores (such as supermarkets and grocery stores)
Retail food Stores having 10,000 to 24,999 square feet
Chain Retail Food Stores of 3 or more NYC locations with combined floor area 10,000 square feet or more
Food Preparation Locations having 6,000 square feet or more
Catering Establishments hosting on-site events to be attended by more than 100 people
Temporary Public Events to be attended by more than 500 people
What to Separate
Businesses covered by these rules must separate staff-handled, back of house food scraps, plant trimmings, food-soiled paper and certified compostable products from garbage and other recyclables..
How to Comply and Avoid Violations
Provide labeled containers for the collection of organic waste in any area where organic waste is handled or set out by employees. "Label" means a display of words.
Post and maintain signs with instructions on identifying and separating organic waste from garbage and recyclables. The signs must be visible to employees in areas where organic waste is handled.
Ensure that employees place organic waste in appropriately labeled containers and do not mix organics with garbage or recyclables.
Ensure that containers for source-separated organic waste are latched at the time of storage or set-out.
Arrange for organic waste to be transported and/or processed separately from garbage and recycling.
Transportation & Processing Options
Businesses are given the option to arrange for collection by a private carter, transport organic waste themselves, or process the material on-site. Suitable processing methods include composting and aerobic/anaerobic digestion. A food waste grinder is not permitted.
Private Carter: Businesses that hire a private-carter to collect their organic waste must post an official Business Integrity Commission (BIC) decal. Containers for set-out must meet carter specifications and have a latching lid that is securely fastened at the time of set-out. Organics must be transported separately from garbage and recycling directly to a processor or transfer station. The agreement with the processor or transfer station must be made available to us upon request.