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No time to waste. No food to waste. Sadly, all our requests for donations of excess food from supermarkets were denied with the same abrupt response: Supermarkets can’t donate their excess food; it needs to be destroyed and disposed for liability reasons. One supermarket manager was kind enough to spend a few minutes with us and explain how they have to take great measures to destroy their excess food, like dumping chlorine on it to prevent lawsuits; Armed with printed materials from The Public Health Law Center, explaining the Bill Emerson Good Samaritan Food Donation Act, and the State and Federal laws protecting food donors from potential liability, we went to talk to more supermarkets, but the information provided didn’t make any difference. They all knew about Good Samaritan Laws, but they also knew, they could still be taken to court and the risk of a lawsuits is much greater than any possible benefit of giving us their unsellable or ugly food. To them, it wasn’t worth the risk. Supermarkets have an elaborate system in place designed to ensure compliance with state and federal regulations on top of their own company policy. They can not just break that system without another system in place. The main hurdle lays in the lack of federal or state guidance on how to safety conduct donations. Even if a grocery store manager would decide to trust the protection from Good Samaritan Laws and make a donation, he would be in the uncertain territory; from what can be included or how to transport donations, to whether food needs to be kept cold and how interpreting best-by dates. He would be basically inventing his own policy at his own risk! To this day, we haven’t been able to convince any supermarkets to donate any excess products to us. Our request is for ugly or imperfect apples, oranges, tangerines or pears, or any kind of single packed snacks or juices to add to the paper bag lunches we prepare for the homeless every other week. Large amounts of their food goes straight to the garbage can; all due to the lack of a procedure for supermarkets to follow if donating foods. We have read extensively about the efforts supermarkets and the government are taking on the road to prevent food waste, but in reality: SUPERMARKETS DUMP HUNDREDS OF POUNDS OF EDIBLE FOOD ON A REGULAR BASIS! Every day efforts are delayed, donations that could go to feed the hungry go to waste by the Ton. According to Feeding America, every year, more than 43 billion pounds of food from grocery stores get thrown away. Fear of lawsuits, due to vague laws and nonexistent regulations prevent food from being donated to people in need. Our petition: 1. WE NEED NEW JERSEY’S GOVERNMENT TO APPOINT OR CREATE A REGULATORY AGENCY (Possibly the NJ department of health) TO GUIDE BUSINESSES IN TERMS OF FOOD WASTE. 2. SAID AGENCY SHOULD IMPLEMENT GUIDANCE ABOUT HOW FOOD RETAILERS SHOULD SAFELY HANDLE THE PROCESS OF DONATING AND ENFORCE COMPLIANCE. 3. REQUIRE EVERY SUPERMARKET TO PARTNER WITH A CHARITY ORGANIZATION AND HAVE A SENSIBLE SYSTEM IN PLACE TO ELIMINATE FOOD WASTE AND DONATE EXCESS FOOD TO HELP FEED THE PEOPLE IN NEED AS PART OF REGULAR OPERATIONS. 4. NEW JERSEY’S GOVERNMENT SHOULD OFFER ADDITIONAL TAX INCENTIVES BEYOND FEDERAL INCENTIVES TO COMPENSATE FOR THE INCREASE OF COSTS AND RESOURCES DEDICATED TO DONATIONS. We Need a Law requiring all supermarkets to donate and recycle their unsold products in order to help mitigate both, food waste and food insecurity. On April 14th, and after 6 years of discussions, Murphy signed bill A2371 into Law requiring large food waste generators to separate and recycle food waste instead of sending it to landfills. We believe this law was the first step to ensure change in the way food waste is handled. However, it is disappointing that this law doesn’t include anything about donations, especially since similar Legislation in other states are already requiring supermarkets to donate their food. Supermarkets are private owned business; they can buy whatever amount of food they want and do whatever they want with their inventory; they manage their operations and products in whatever way better fit their business. All of that is fair, and we all want supermarket owners to be successful in order to generate more jobs and support the economy. However, we are talking about food here. Food has a vital component that must be addressed as soon as possible! Food retailers carry a social responsibility beyond their business operations. Food is humanity’s most basic necessity; It has a value beyond its business value and it should be measured in units beyond a price tag. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), The New Jersey Department of Health (NJDOH), and several other agencies are in charge of regulating and ensuring food safety for human consumption. They regulate how food should be manipulated, processed, handled and distributed. So, why are they not regulating the process of food donations and food waste if those are certainly part of the food industry lifecycle? The FDA should also carry the responsibility of establishing standards, regulating and enforcing how and when edible food can be destroyed and these standards should be added to the FDA Food Code. We believe the value of food itself needs to be protected and donations of eatable food to charity should be included as mandatory in the system of dealing with food. Although supermarkets see price tags on the shelves, food to some people is the difference between eating anything at all. New Jersey is proactive and compromised with reducing food waste and food insecurity and we are proud of all that has been accomplished and underway, but a determined legislative action is needed specifically to ensure edible food (unmarketable due to labeling, appearance or surplus) is separated from scraps and donated to charity as part of regular operations in supermarkets and large generators of food scraps. Similar legislations in place: Where do NJ’s Legislation Stands: We feel NJ Legislation in food waste is too passive and merely about educating, informing, urging and suggesting changes. We would like to see a legislation that takes control of the problem and enforce the necessary changes and we need the NJ department of health to do a little more to educate and inform! We need them to implement guidance about how food retailers should safely handle the process of donating and enforce compliance. Why this legislation and changes are urgent? | |||||||||||||||
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Thursday, May 13, 2021
Change.org - Food waste
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