Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are no longer illegal in NYC. That was a relic of an old wastewater treatment issue. They are an environmentally friendly way of disposing of food waste, especially if you can’t compost. If you put food waste in trash it releases a lot of methane. A disposer mitigates that.
You got a cite for that? Solids get pulled out of the wastewater at the sewage treatment plant, and go to a landfill.
Anonymous wrote:They are no longer illegal in NYC. That was a relic of an old wastewater treatment issue. They are an environmentally friendly way of disposing of food waste, especially if you can’t compost. If you put food waste in trash it releases a lot of methane. A disposer mitigates that.
Anonymous wrote:Why do people grind things down the disposal? I never encountered one till I came to the US, so I’ve always been curious. I have a disposal because it was already there, but I use a sink strainer instead.
Anonymous wrote:I remember watching a plumber working on the sink in my house as a kid. He told my mother "Garbage disposals are good for two things: Making money for the people who sell them, and making money for plumbers."
I have 6 rentals and none of them have disposals. I pulled them out of the first two after one tenant decided to try and grind up the peels from 10lbs of potatoes down them and the other tenant emptied the dustpan from their kitchen floor into the sink. We pulled a handful of gravel and 4 pennies out of the disposal -- right before we pulled out the disposal.