The recycling benchmark
Jad Sleiman
Issue date: 2/19/08 Section: News
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University President Dan Mote signed the American College and University Presidents Climate Commitment, and last year the school created a new Office of Sustainability. Energy-saving devices continue to proliferate.
So why are we such a laggard when it comes to recycling? Results came back last week for the first two weeks of the national Recyclemania contest showing the university to be 49th of 76 contestants in the grand champion category.
The school's recycling rate among select materials was less than half that of the No. 1 ranked Colorado State University.
Some student activists were unsatisfied with the preliminary results, but school officials say they're doing their best, especially given how young the university's conservation programs are.
In fact, the university has more than doubled the percent of total waste that it recycles over the last four years from 17 percent in 2004 to 41 percent last year. (Recyclemania uses a different metric.)
Organizers blame the university's lack of experience with recycling relative to its peers for its low ranking.
Cindy Felice, associate director of Resident Life, noted the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's many years of experience as a major factor in their high rankings. "The Office of Sustainability [here] is less than a year old," she said.
"It's an issue of changing people's minds," said Phil Hannam, a student coordinator with Recyclemania. "It's not going to be like the university makes one decision and the students all change their behavior."
Hannam recommends including sustainability issues in class curriculums to "teach them the value" of being eco-conscious.
Maria Lonsbury, a university project coordinator specialist involved with Recyclemania, said the university's standing against its own record is what's most important.
"In terms of our own experience, we're doing an excellent job," said Lonsbury. "We're making progress here at home."
The university has "thousands" of recycle bins on campus, according to Sandy Dykes, an assistant director in Facilities Management, though she couldn't quote a specific number.
The school's recycling budget is $250,000, which pays for bins, trucks and labor. The university's Recyclemania coordinators received a $2,000 grant from Pepsi, and officials expect to spend $8,000 over the course of the 10-week competition.
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Christopher Conroy
posted 2/19/08 @ 11:21 AM EST
As I have pointed out in these very pages (http://media.www.diamondbackonline.com/media/storage/paper873/news/2007/02/20/Opinion/Recycled.Lies-2729059. (Continued…)
Thomas
posted 2/21/08 @ 8:27 AM EST
I get to campus early in the morning and I once watched a cleaning lady take the container for recycled newspaper...and dumped the newspapers into the trash can she was wheeling around. (Continued…)
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