Compost Toilets In Vermont

Compost toilets are increasingly common in Vermont, offering a sustainable alternative to conventional flush systems. Current state regulations allow their use, but clear permitting pathways for reusing the finished compost in soil are still lacking, and in many cases regulations still require the installation of a septic system.

Greywater Management & Septic/Sewer Requirements 

Even with compost toilets, Vermont homes must connect to an approved wastewater system (such as a septic system or sewer) for managing greywater. Septic system leach fields may be reduced by 25% for homes with compost toilets. In contrast, Massachusetts allows for a leach field reduction of 50%. In Maine, homes without pressurized water supply (using hand-carried or hand-pumped water) are exempt from engineered septic requirements, making compost toilets and simple greywater systems viable for remote or off-grid locations. We are in dialog with Vermont regulators and developing a proposal for evidence-based changes to state greywater rules that would bring to Vermont some of the greywater management benefits that are already available to residents of other states.

Compost Toilet Management

Once compost is removed from a composting toilet, there are regulations limiting where it can go, with three options currently allowed in Vermont. All have significant drawbacks, though one has potential in a reinvented form, as described in a later section. The current options are:

Community Toilet Composting Facilities 

Since 2012, the Rich Earth Institute has been permitted to process urine and distribute the resulting product to the public as a safe soil amendment. We recently expanded our permit to let us collect and process material from compost toilets, and then distribute the compost product to the public.

This permit update enables us to develop a pilot community-scale compost management program, in parallel to our community urine recycling program. We are designing and seeking funding for a high-temperature in-vessel composting system that we can use to create high-quality, tested and certified compost products. We will use the system not only to re-compost material from composting toilets, but also to process the material (sawdust and human waste) that we collect through our waterless portable toilet rental service.

As we pilot a processing system and management program through this Southeastern Vermont initiative, we aim to support adoption of similar community facilities for processing composting toilet material in other regions throughout the state. Vermonters interested in compost toilet collection services are invited to take this brief survey. If you don’t live in or near Southeastern Vermont, we will use this survey to connect compost toilet owners together into hubs that can be serviced by future community processing facilities in other locations. 

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