Archive for the ‘recycling’ Category

Five Simple Steps for Going Green in College

The college years are an exciting transitional time for young people. Many are off on their own for the first time, and they’re faced with responsibility for their own actions and their own well-being. For some teens, college is the first time they experience autonomy, and the variety of choices they’re faced with can be overwhelming, and the pressure of making green choices might just be too much to handle. There are, however, five simple choices they can make in their transition into adulthood that can easily lessen their footprint while in college.

  • Walk. Almost all college campuses are designed to be walker-friendly. This might be the easiest time to get rid of your car. However, if being completely car-free isn’t an option, park it and leave it. Campus parking is notoriously frustrating, and keeping your car parked in a lot is a lot easier than futilely circling said lot. Use your feet, a bike, or campus transportation to get from your dorm to class to the library. If your school is in a larger city, most public transit systems offer student discounts on monthly, semester-long, or yearly passes.
  • Eat greener. Dining halls have come a long way. Now, they’re catering to student demands, and the variety of food choices is endless. Choosing a diet based in whole-grains, fruits and vegetables, and lean proteins from plants sources, such as beans and nuts, will not only reduce your carbon footprint, but will help fight off the dreaded freshman 15. Many dining halls are getting with the program and offering a wider-variety of meat-free entrees, and partnering with local farms to offer organic and local produce. If yours doesn’t, take advantage of those student dining surveys to express a preference for local, organic, and fair-trade food choices.
  • Choose green cleaning products. Hopefully, most college kids helped out around the house at home, but those same kids probably didn’t have a lot of input as to the cleaning products they used. When cleaning in their dorms, whether it be the bathroom, their room, or their laundry, choosing biodegradable cleaning products keeps petroleum use to a minimum and minimizes toxins in their environment. Check out products from Mrs. Meyer’s, Method, Seventh Generation, or make your own.
  • Recycle. With the push in the higher-ed community to go green, recycling may be more convenient on college campuses than it is in the general community. "Trash rooms" in dorms, where students dispose of their garbage, almost always have recycling bins for cardboard, plastic, glass, cans, and paper. Furnishing a dorm room with two separate receptacles, one for trash and one for recyclables, makes disposal a breeze.
  • Reuse. College students are notorious for tossing away perfectly good stuff. Ever driven by dorms and off-campus housing at the end of the semester? You’ll find furniture, lamps, and appliances that students just don’t want to move. Consider used items when looking for college gear. Check out Gigoit, Craigslist, or Freecycle for free-to-dirt-cheap dorm room essentials. Conversely, use those same networking sites if you absolutely, positively, have to get rid of your old futon. Keeping functional items in use by someone keeps them out of the landfill. The same goes for clothes. One of my favorite thrift spots is located near a college where seemingly-affluent young women sell their perfectly good jeans–at a fraction of what it would cost me retail.

Students make big changes when they take the step from high school to college. That makes this transition the perfect time to take small steps for a greener life.

Last Day = Earth Day For Green Students

The end of the school year is fast approaching. Twelve days for me, but who's counting? The end of school, in many grossly unrealistic teen movies, is often punctuated by kids gleefully throwing books and papers all over the hallway as they stick it to the man by trashing their locker before they head off for a summer of debauchery.

In reality, kids do have to clean out their lockers, and those of you with teens know how items in their possession tend to…accumulate, shall we say, over time. I've got students with textbooks, binders, notebooks, and paperbacks crammed into every square inch of their lockers. All that goes somewhere at the end of the year, and oftentimes, that place is the ginormous trash bins placed in the hallway to make end-of-year checkout move as smoothly and quickly as possible.

What's this got to do with green living? In my experience, the large majority of what gets thrown away at the end of the year is reusable or recycleable. With a little advanced preparation, and some prompting from teachers and parents, the piles of paper products, pencils, pens, etc., can be diverted from the trash and put to good use.

  • Those old tests, worksheets, and papers that might not be fridge-worthy can easily be recycled: just make sure the trusty recycling bins are in just as convenient a place as trash bins.
  • Start a school-supplies freestore. I easily did this by asking both teachers (we've got our own mess to clean up, as well) and students for still-usable three-ring binders, tablets, notebooks, writing utensils, looseleaf, markers, crayons, etc. Set up a collection table in a centrally-located area. Encourage kids to turn in items by swapping old items with summer-worthy trinkets like paperbacks, candy, pool passes, gift cards, etc. I use the collected items the following year for students who need supplies.
  • Don't forget other recycleables: I guarantee that among the school-related items, their are surely soda bottles, aluminum cans, etc, that can also be recycled.
  • Make sure there's a lost and found area: teens often borrow each others clothes, only to forget where they came from. Better they find their owner than end up in a landfill. Same with books, CDs, and other personal items.
  • If you've got younger kids, make a trip to help your child clean out their locker without just pitching everything. Better yet, see if your PTO can help create a gently-used supply closet.

I'm lucky that I sponsor Student Council–this is an easy, but productive service project for my young activists.

Pssstt…You can do the same thing when you clean out your home office…

 

 

Got Bottles? Terra Cycle Wants ‘Em

I wrote about my class visit to the landfill (oh yes, I've been to TWO different landfills in the last six months) and about how that has impacted both my students and our school. Along with kicking butt in paper recycling (our Abitibi dumpster was filled to the brim today in our first post-spring-break recycling collection), we've slowly but surely started plastic bottle recycling.

Even our small school (320 students) generates a ton (figuratively) of plastic beverage bottles every day. I also mentioned that were were recycling our 20 ounce bottles through Terra Cycle's Bottle Brigade.

Terra Cycle, in short, rocks. Founded by Tom Szaky and Jon Beyer in 2001 while students at Princeton, Terra Cycle started as a way to spread the benefits of vermicomposting (that is, composting with worms) to a larger audience. For those out of the loop, worm poop is awesome fertilizer for your garden. Brown gold, if you will. Szaky and Beyer were eventually able to earn startup funds, and by 2004, Home Depot was carrying Terra Cycle Plant Food on their website.

Not only is their actual product eco-friendly, but their packaging is, as well. That's what happens to my kids' 20 ounce soda bottles: we send them back to Terra Cycle (sans label and cap), who pays us for the bottles. A nickle each. Anyone can do this, although you don't really get paid: the charity of your choice gets the money. This works for us, since technically, our school is a charity, so we can get paid. Terra Cycle takes those bottles, washes them, and relabels them. They add a trigger spray (a leftover from another corporation that produced too many) and the product is ready to ship.

Nowadays, you can still find Terra Cycle Plant Food at Home Depot, along with multiple other outlets. You can also join the Bottle Brigade, and Terra Cycle will send you prepaid shipping boxes to send them your 20 ounce bottles, which you can send back to them and donate your contribution to your favorite charity. More information on both the worm poop and the Bottle Brigade at Terra Cycle's website.

Solid Waste 101–What Can’t You Throw Away?

We got new next-door neighbors, who haven't moved in yet, but have been working on updating the house for the past few weeks. On Saturday, my husband called me over to the window.

"She's washing out her paintbrushes with paint thinner ON THE GROUND!" I looked. Sure enough, our soon-to-be neighbor was pouring paint thinner all over her paintbrush, right into her yard, along with the paint from the brush. "What should we do?" he asked. What should we do? We didn't want our first encounter with our new neighbors to be us acting as the neighborhood eco-police, but we also didn't want paint thinner going into the ground that we plant food in.

"Maybe she doesn't know that that's not okay," I optimistically offered. It wouldn't surprise me. Take a look in a neighborhood dumpster. Chances are, people in your neighborhood are probably disposing of things that they shouldn't.

When my kids visited the landfill, their pre-trip lessons included one about BOATY. BOATY is an acronym to help consumers remember what shouldn't be disposed of with your regular household trash:

Batteries, in general, shouldn't go into the house. Newer alkaline batteries have 97% less mercury than they used to, so many landfills have lifted bans on alkaline batteries, but you should check with your local hazardous waste agency on how to dispose of these. Rechargeable batteries, particularly nickel-cadmium (NiCd), are a better choice than alkaline because they can be reused many times, but are identified as hazardous waste and should be recycled after they can no longer be charged. Automotive batteries should be recycled, and button cell batteries, such as those in hearing aids, should be disposed of as hazardous waste.

Oil and other hazardous household fluids (like paint thinner) have the potential to pollute groundwater and harm wildlife (think Exxon spill). The EPA estimates that 40% of spilled oil comes from consumers in their homes changing their own oil. The good news is that you can recycle used motor oil–fossil fuels are finite, right? AutoZone and Jiffy Lube both accept used motor oil for recycling. Other household fluids, like cleaning solutions, antifreeze, fertilizers, solvents, paint, and degreasers should be disposed of during hazardous waste pickup days. Most solid waste management departments have these once or twice a year, where your hazardous waste is picked up by your municipality and properly disposed of.

Appliances and e-waste take up a ton of space in our landfills. Roughly 10 million refrigerators are disposed of each year. Ahem, did you get that? TEN MILLION! Forty percent of those are salvaged and resold/reused, but the rest go to landfills. Those old fridges release refrigerants and insulating foams that aren't exactly eco-friendly (read: ozone depleting). How do we fix this problem? First of all, repair your appliances. Use them until they completely cash out and cannot be fixed. If you are dead set on buying something new (like an incredibly efficient refrigerator) make sure you aren't throwing away a perfectly good appliance by donating or selling your old appliance via Gigoit or Freecycle. Goodwill and the Salvation Army will accept many used appliances. E-waste, a growing problem in America due to constantly emerging technology and built-to-die products, Only 13% of the 20 million computers that became obsolete in 1998 were recycled, but discarded electronics contain cadmium, lead, and mercury, all extremely hazardous to humans. Thankfully, e-cycling programs are springing up all over the country–you can even get rebates and discounts from many retailers for trading in your used cell phone, computer, or printer cartridges. Try E-Cycling Central to find programs in your area.

Tires, until the 1960's, were almost all recycled. When oil (the material used to create synthetic rubber) became cheap and abundant and steel-belted tires came into prominence, that recycling almost completely shut down. Thankfully, our country has started recycling tires again, because their durability allows them to be recycled into a plethora of items. Tires are bad for landfills because they are large and bulky and the steel-belt can puncture the , the geotextile liners of landfills, leading to ground contamination. Tires can be recycled at almost any car dealer or tire service center, but it's worth checking around–some places charge a small fee to drop off tires. Those tires are turned into roads, playground surfaces, and athletic facilities, among other things.

Yard waste, such as leaves, grass clippings, branches and sticks, are high-volume and take up a lot of space in landfills. More importantly, yard waste is easily reused by consumers and communities. Hello, composting? Grass clippings are great natural fertilizer for your lawn, but can be composted, along with leaves and your home food waste, to create a rich fertilizer for your plants. Most communities collect extra yard waste, either in special bags for pick up, or in special dumpsters. That yard waste is turned into mulch and compost used throughout cities and towns, and often available to citizens. In my hometown of St. Louis, residents can pick up mulch and compost for free, which is awesome when getting your garden started in the spring (we're taking a trip next week!)

The best resource available to figure out how to reduce, reuse, or recycle your trash, or properly dispose of it, is Earth911. They have a wealth of information and can direct you to resources in your area to help you reduce and clean up your household solid and hazardous waste. The EPA's solid waste site is also good.

(What did we do with the neighbors? We walked up to the grocery store, bought them a six-pack of locally-brewed beer and stopped by to introduce ourselves. This weekend, we're going to offer to help them move in and properly dispose of the household hazardous waste associated with moving, cleaning, and refinishing their floors. Wish us luck!)

Where is “away”? Kids find out through waste audit

Conducting a waste audit is an excellent way for students and adults alike to realize how much “trash” is thrown away each day. My students and I, with the guidance and equipment of the lovely Katy Mike Smaistrla, Education Coordinator at the Earthways Center in St Louis, did a weeklong analysis of what is thrown away at our school, and the results provided awesome learning opportunities and project potential.

Long before the waste audit, which took place close to the end of the semester, my students went on a field trip to the Fred Weber landfill. There, they saw where our trash goes, how much space our metro community needs for its trash, and learned how a landfill is structured.

The waste audit itself took about a week. During that time, kids interviewed building officials, weighed and sorted classroom trash, and analyzed purchasing by the school. The counted copiers, students, fax machines, soda machines, printers, and dumpsters. Finally, they donned jumpsuits, gloves, and goggles and dove right into the dumpster to collect bags of trash, which were sorted into individual components and weighed.

Their findings were shocking. An overwhelmingly large amount of what we threw away can be reduced, reused, or recycled, and our school was doing none of that. We found blank paper in the trash, unopened snacks, and cardboard, paper, cans, and plastics that could easily be recycled. We found bagged yard waste, enormous amounts of styrofoam and disposable utensils, unopened sodas and snacks, and perfectly good books. Our Abitibi paper-recycling bin? Empty.

The students were now invested. They realized that they throw away a lot of stuff, and when they throw stuff away, it doesn’t disappear—it has to go somewhere. The next task was to create an implement a project that would, in some way, make our school more sustainable. Because the waste audit was fresh in the students minds, their projects focused on solid waste reduction and reusing.

In only a few shorts weeks, the students were able to start a school-wide paper recycling program, designed and run by students. They also designated one of the school computer printers as a “draft printer,” printing on the blank side of previously used paper. Finally, students are currently working on recycling 20oz plastic bottles (the plastic most commonly discarded at our school) through Terra Cycle. Teachers and students are working together to decrease our waste, and later in the spring, we will do another waste audit to measure the impact these projects are having.

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