To build interconnections between prison programs teaching inmates agriculture and composting skills, and giving them an opportunity to enter the job market with these skills can help restore the fabric or soil of a community through sustainable solution building. Piece of work, Taylor McAvoy Fertile ground: Sustainable practices in prison lead to sustainable futures in 2014 discusses how worms have not only helped cut down costs and created rich soil amendment from prison composting; but it also discusses another urgent need to cut down the number of recidivism cases once the incarcerated populations enter these programs. The intersection of social economics and waste management municipalities located in heavily densified impoverished communities, is a major issue rarely spoken about and the one word which sums it up according to McAvoy’s article relevance is …show more content…
This use of worms to consume toxic soilds from former high industrial communities like Lawrence, Holyoke or Springfield could potentially benefit Brownfield sites. Often times buildings where high levels of industrial development left buidlings and soil contaminated with toxic substances. The value and future use of these lands are then graded and given allowance for certain types of developments or denial of development rights. In, Brunello Ceccanti , et al. article, Soil Bioremediation: Combination Of Earthworms And Compost For The Ecological Remediation Of A Hydrocarbon Polluted Soil concludes that, “ compost (especially with earthworms) had the double effect of adding nutrients and labile organic matter for the soil authoctonous microrganisms, but also of introducing new microrganisms in the soil system” (Ceccanti et al.