Content on Demand for Special Sections and Niche Publications
Eating in the cafeteria? The disposable forks are biodegradable, made from corn. Leftovers? There's composting, both off-site and on. Trouble getting home? Try car-pooling, van-sharing or something called maxi pool.
Seattle U. is typical of many universities across the country that are trying to win the hearts and minds _ and tuition checks _ of students by becoming greener than their peers.
Perhaps nowhere is the trend more apparent than in the
The move toward greener campuses is driven as much by the concerns of a new generation of students as it is by university leaders. And it reaches beyond the cafes and dorms into the lecture halls. At the
Local universities have been quick to crow about their green successes. Just consider some recent news releases: "
Beyond the hype, the universities are laying down serious plans for reducing carbon emissions. The
In the plan, the school sets ambitious targets: a 15 percent reduction in greenhouse-gas emission over the next decade, and the elimination of all net emissions by 2050.
The university says it expects technological improvements to account for some 60 percent of its energy-reduction goals. Suggested improvements range from the mundane, such as reducing steam leakage from the pipes in its heating plant, to the fanciful, such as pumping cold water from the depths of
The school hopes behavioral changes, prompted by education and financial incentives, will account for another 20 percent of its goals. Carbon offsets _ planting trees, for example _ would take care of the remainder.
While some initiatives like the Climate Action Plan are coming from administrators, others are bubbling up from students like
"We don't mean to be chastising students at all, and we try to be as friendly as we can," says Yousoufian, the associate-director of Students Expressing Environmental Dedication (SEED). "We understand it's confusing, and we are here to help, not to make people feel stupid."
Yousoufian says students are generally supportive, although there have been some awkward moments. To avoid those in the future, she says, SEED members plan to start wearing T-shirts or pins, and perhaps playing music, to make their mission clearer.
"The UW is a pretty sustainable campus," she says. "I think students come in and have the culture of green thrown at them."
That should become reality by mid-March, he says, by which time compostable lids for coffee cups and soup bowls will have been introduced.
"If you go back about three years, we had the classic waste model. Everything on the customer side was garbage," he said.
Back then, the university sent 120 tons of green waste annually to Cedar Grove Composting, according to Meyering. That's now grown to 540 tons per year.
Seattle U. has gone one step further by composting some of its food scraps on campus.
Seattle U. has a long-standing commitment to such practices. It stopped using pesticides back when Ciscoe Morris, now a gardening celebrity, was the campus groundskeeper some 30 years ago.
(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)
Students at a number of other local campuses have taken to growing their own food in small garden plots. Evergreen even boasts its own organic farm, which serves as an outdoor classroom. And students at both Western and Evergreen have voted in favor of paying a fee to ensure their power comes from green sources such as wind and solar.
New buildings on most campuses _ including a new business school at the
At Seattle U., staff recently celebrated the opening of the new Admissions and Alumni building, which features floor-to-ceiling windows and a roof that collects and filters rainwater. Designed as a gathering spot for students and the community, the building is expected to get a prestigious gold rating through the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) rating system.
(END OPTIONAL TRIM)
(EDITORS: STORY CAN END HERE)
Some students seem apathetic about the greening of their campuses, but if there's any push back _ a feeling that it's overkill or too entwined with a particular political viewpoint _ it's not immediately apparent. Most seem to embrace the idea of creating a cleaner, greener place to study.
The fact that publications like
"There's a lot of student activism on campus, and students are used to people talking to them about social or environmental issues," says
___
(c) 2010, The Seattle Times.
Visit The Seattle Times Extra on the World Wide Web at http://www.seattletimes.com/
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
_____
PHOTOS (from MCT Photo Service, 202-383-6099): GREENCAMPUS
You have 0 items in your Shopping Cart
totaling $0.00.
RECENTLY POSTED
-Senior living - January
-Employment - January
-Personal finance - January
-Home & Garden - January
-Holidays 2011
UPCOMING
-Spring weddings
Monthly sections mean monthly revenue
Looking for content for your advertorial space? Ch...
Leave a comment or
view all blog entries »
Our designers can help you lay out a single page or an entire section, doing it in less time and at a cheaper price than you'd expect. Contact us and we'll help get you started.