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 »  Home  »  food  »  School lunch tray dilemma
School lunch tray dilemma
By Green Living Tips | Published  05/23/2010 | food , family
Reversing the school styrofoam lunch tray trend
It may not seem like such a huge environmental issue, but when you consider the millions of students in the USA alone; the humble school lunch tray does have an impact.

I've been receiving a few emails of late from concerned parents and students in regard to a trend for school cafeterias to switch from reusable lunch trays to disposable ones - usually made of expanded polystyrene; aka styrofoam.

One person made mention their child's school had spent a small fortune on making its new cafeteria LEED certified (highly energy efficient); yet made the switch to styrofoam trays.

The reason for the switch is usually down to costs. It's cheaper at this point to use the expanded polystyrene trays than to wash the reusable variety.

In New York City public schools alone, 850,000 styrofoam trays are used each school day and then thrown away. Often the trays are incinerated.

Styrofoam lunch trays are by no means an environmentally friendly product. In my article on recycling styrofoam, I made mention of some of the environmental issues associated with expanded polystyrene; including the fact they are based on crude oil and the burning of styrofoam produces toxic gases. There's also some concern that toxins can leach from styrofoam when it comes into contact with hot food.

If the means of disposal isn't incineration, but landfill; styrofoam takes a very long time to break down, taking up a huge amount of space in what is already an overburdened waste stream. When expanded polystyrene enters aquatic environments, creatures may also ingest it; causing intestinal blockage that ultimately leads to death. Expanded polystyrene is a common plastic found in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.

While styrofoam can be recycled, facilities for doing so are few and far between and given the bulk of its volume is air, transporting it to recycling facilities also presents cost and environmental challenges.

Styrofoam lunch tray alternatives

Schools play an important role in teaching our children good environmental stewardship and if school lunches are being served up on an environmentally damaging product; it's not a great example to set.

However, this isn't just a school problem, it's a school community problem - parents, students and the government bodies overseeing the funding and regulation of schools need to be involved in a solution.

I can certainly appreciate the tight (and regularly reduced) budgets schools have to work within and that styrofoam trays are so attractive as they cost just a couple of cents each, but I also wonder if when making the decision to switch to styrofoam, the costs of disposal have been factored in.

Some schools have recognised the disadvantages of styrofoam outweigh the advantages and have gone back to reusable trays. To address the cost issues involved with washing the trays, volunteer programs have been set up, enlisting the help of students and parents.

Other schools are trialing compostable lunch trays made from bagasse, which is a waste product associated with sugar cane processing.

While the cost of bagasse trays is decreasing, they are still quite a bit more expensive than styrofoam; so some schools undertake fundraisers to help buy the trays. While a couple of cents extra per tray doesn't sound like much, start multiplying that by thousands of meals a week and the costs really add up. Given the environmental/health issues involved though, parents have reportedly been quite responsive to supporting bagasse tray initiatives.

Bagasse isn't the only type of compostable tray available - some are made from corn waste or recycled cardboard. To learn more about the options available and pricing, try searching on Google using the following terms:

compostable school lunch trays
biodegradable school lunch trays
recyclable school lunch trays

Biodegradable/compostable trays still don't address the costs involved with waste removal and if they just go to landfill; they don't actually compost and take a long time to break down.

Something that sprang to mind to address the waste issues would be setting up composting facilities on-site and the resulting compost used on school grounds; helping to reduce grounds maintenance costs. This would be an interesting student project in itself; very relevant to topics such as Science or Agriculture; so it could become a part of curriculum.

Sometimes there are no quick fixes, so it's a case of tackling a problem a bit at a time and reducing harm. A great initiative occurring in New York City public schools since March this year is "Trayless Tuesday". On Tuesdays, food is served in containers made from recycled paper that has a clay based coating to prevent leakages. While it's just one day a week, the initiative is slashing the amount of expanded polystyrene tray waste by 20% - and that's quite significant when viewed as a percentage of the 850,000 trays a day used in New York City schools.

Trayless Tuesday type initiatives also help raise awareness among parents and students of the issues involved with styrofoam; which can help in garnering support for further reductions in the future.

The other way to tackle the problem of lunch trays is to look at dealing with other forms of lunch related waste - such as wasted electricity, food, water and other forms of packaging. One school took this approach and lessened their cafeteria related waste from 6 dumpsters a week to two, and the savings then went towards re-introducing reusable lunch trays.

While not as flashy as solar panels on gymnasium rooftops, dealing with the expanded polystyrene lunch tray problem is a big step in greening our schools. Do you know of any schools that have successfully tackled the styrofoam lunch tray issue? I'm sure many Green Living Tips readers would be interested to know how it was achieved - please add your comments below!



Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
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  • Comment #1 (Posted by Heather Stock)

    Your suggestion that volunteers & students can wash the lunch trays is a good idea! We must stop polluting the earth with all our garbage ~ it's disgusting!
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by jenny)

    Though it would be difficult to implement everywhere, I love the on-site composting idea.

    And to reiterate that we should be teaching young students "good environmental stewardship", engagement in a compost facility will allow them to see start to finish what kind of impact their daily consumption has on the environment, in a positive light.

    If we can't figure how to cut labor costs on using re-usable trays, I think compostables are the way to go. Doing some research myself, I've found some decent pricing on bagasse trays:
    http://vivbizclub.com/products/biodegradable-food-packaging/compostable-lunch-trays/
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by kf)

    Thank you so much for your article. I have been fussing at my chilren's school about this issue. It's bad enough that nothing is really cooked in their cafeteria but re heated but they have the styrofoam trays!! Horrible for the enviroment and it isn't teaching our children how to be green. Isn't that what the big push has been about?? If the politicans would worry more about our children and the schools they attend perhaps we all could bo back to the enviromently friendly reuseable trays
     
  • Comment #4 (Posted by Zack Wiedmann)

    At my middle school we used paper trays instead of styrofoam. At my highschool we use the styrofoam and our Enviromental action club has been trying to get rid of them for 3 years with no success.
     
  • Comment #5 (Posted by B Hochbrueckner)

    Maybe it would be helpful to combine the ideas. Have reusable trays (made from recycled materials) as well as reusable flat wear (a mess kit) sold as a PTA fundraiser to the students who would be responsible for the cleaning and remembering to bring the trays. The cafeteria could have compostable trays which would have a small cost (hopefully encouraging parents to help kids remember their reusable mess kits). Then add a composting program as well.
     
  • Comment #6 (Posted by Michael Jones)

    I actually work in a production kitchen, which is also catering to our local school district. We use plastic trays and have to wash them. I can tell you that form an employee stand point, we hate these trays!
    Washing trays (in excess of 1200 a day) uses a TON of water and energy. Also, when run through a dishwasher for sanitation, chemicals and other products are used and run through the water, thus creating more of a problem.
    WHen thinking about recycling, try to remember that in order to actually recycle something the kids eat off of, they trays would have to be cleared of food before put into a recycling bin and I can't even begin to imagine asking 1200 to 1400 high school students to scrape their paper tray before they dump it in a recycle bin.
    So, really, you're at a loss both ways.
    Plastic trays waste water, use harmful chemicals and use energy - while the way we recycle paper trays (if used) is not optimal and creates a lot of extra garbage and waste for a janitor and cleaning staff. Also - you can not be sure these trays, once thrown away are going to be recycled properly, and or biodegraded in a complete way.

     
  • Comment #7 (Posted by Jackie)

    Any success out there? Please? anyone in California where they have a ban on Styrofoam?
     
  • Comment #8 (Posted by Michelle HInes)

    Jackie,

    Pittsburg California (school district) & Alameda county schools have moved to using biodegradable trays instead of styrofoam trays. There is a ban on styrofoam in almost all of Alamada county schools. Similar is taking place in San Francisco. I priced out the difference in bulk & styrofoam is .03 cents while biodegradable trays are .08-.10/tray in bulk.
     
  • Comment #9 (Posted by Arlona)

    The university I attended got rid of the dish trays completely a year before I graduated. I loved it. It simplified things both environmentally and in the dishroom. Most people are capable of carrying a plate in one hand and a beverage and silverware in the other, so it wasn't a huge deal. Plus, if you wanted more you got up when you knew how much you really wanted. I still opt not to take a tray when eating at work, remembering the frustration trays caused my friends in the dishroom.

    If the idea of trayless means that our youth can't carry as much food, wouldn't that also help reduce costs in food preparation, reduce waste, and reduce obesity in our youth?
     
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