Media
Landmark New Jersey Law Tees Up Aggressive Food Waste Goals
A new 2026 law requires local districts to reduce their food waste by half by 2035.
Editor’s note: This story was originally published by Waste 360. Click here to read the article.
A new 2026 law requires each New Jersey solid waste management district to develop and implement a strategy that will reduce food waste by at least 50 percent by 2030. The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection needs to approve the strategies.
The bill increases the local focus of food waste reduction. Districts are required to increase the donation of “surplus edible food,” develop food waste diversion methods that also reduce methane emissions, and increase public awareness of surplus food waste.
Table to Table Executive Director Heather Thompson praised the bill’s passage.
“I think this bill will strengthen county- and community-level awareness of the impact of food waste. And it will strengthen the commitment to implement solutions locally, instead of seeing the problem as too large to solve or too removed to be concerned about. We are already seeing positive impacts in a couple of counties,” Thompson told Waste360.
Thompson also said it allows Table to Table to build deeper partnerships in our five-county footprint, “and it opens opportunities to work more closely with county and municipal leaders to explore and implement strategies to expand our work and achieve food waste reduction goals.”
Table to Table is New Jersey’s first and largest food rescue nonprofit, bridging the gap between food being wasted and people facing food insecurity. We bring rescued fresh, nutritious food to 276 community partners, including social service organizations, pantries, shelters, fresh produce markets and centralized distribution hubs. Food is provided free of charge. Through this, Table to Table touches a diversity of those in need, including families, children, veterans, and older adults, making good nutrition accessible while serving as a stimulus for other longer-term benefits. Since 1999 we have rescued more than 133,271 tons of nutritious food — enough for 266,542,863 million meals — and delivered it to our neighbors in need, saving over 612 metric tons of methane saved.
Related:
More From News
REAL PEOPLE, REAL STORIES.
April 22, 2026
Leftover Food From Bloomfield School District Rescued for Seniors
Editor’s note: Essex News Daily published an article featuring Table to Table partnering with the Bloomfield School District to rescue freshly-prepared food...
April 6, 2026
Food Waste & Feeding Families: Inside NJ’s Largest Food Rescue
Editor’s note: Table to Table Executive Director Heather Thompson appeared on Healthy In The Garden State’s “A Dose of Health” short-form series...
April 3, 2026
Goya Presents Flag Cities
Fighting hunger while reducing food waste is the mission Table to Table, a nonprofit making a meaningful impact across New Jersey communities....