Recycling at Clark
Recycling at Clark has come a long way since 1990, when two students began the recycling program by placing collection bins for paper in residence halls and offices. Now,
sixteen years later, the recycling program at Clark is still operated primarily by students, but has expanded to include many other materials as well as assistance from Physical Plant staff, including a recycling coordinator.
An academic focus on the environment has long been a Clark tradition, but a dedication to the environment runs deeply through the University's operations as well. Use the links on these pages to explore environmental initiatives currently taking place at Clark.
Click here to see the pickup schedule. If you
need a special pickup, please call Dave Schmidt at (508) 793-7601.
Need a quick refresher on acceptable materials for recycling? Click on the links below for printable guidelines:
News!
EcoReps Sustainability Competition [October 20, 2009]
The Ecological Representatives (EcoReps) Program have launched this year's
Hall vs. Hall Ssutainability Competition. Last year, the competition was
between the first-year halls. This year, the competition has extended to
all nine residence halls!
Three (3) lucky winners will receive an IPod Touch or $200!
Visit the website
to learn more.
Year-end Move Out 2009: Donate your items for reuse!
Students! As you move out of housing for the summer break and identify
USEABLE items that you no longer want, please donate them to Big Brother Big
Sister. Starting Friday, May 1st, donation boxes will be available
in the residence halls to accept your stuff. What exactly are we
accepting? Read over the flyer attached to the box or view it
here.
The program has changed since last year, so be sure to mind the new list.
Big Brother Big Sister (BBBS) will pickup these items and deliver them to
Savers thrift shops. Through a long-standing relationship with Savers,
BBBS will enjoy all the proceeds from your donations.
For more information, please visit these web pages: Savers:
www.savers.com Big Brother Big Sister:
www.bbbsmb.org
Sustainable University Class (EN 103) Final Reports
These final reports are collaborative efforts detailing the work of
undergraduate students at Clark University enrolled, during the past three
years, in EN 103: The Sustainable
University. The course explores both the theory and
practice of sustainability and sustainable development by examining the role of
the university in promoting a transition toward sustainability. In addition to
reading and writing about the challenges of sustainability and the role of the
university in promoting sustainable practices in society, the students in this
course engage directly with the challenges associated with promoting
sustainable behavior and fostering institutional and social change through team
projects right here on the Clark campus. The reports are a culmination and
summary of the team projects that students developed.
Click
here to view the report from 2008.
Click
here to view the report from 2007.
And click
here to view the recycling infrastructure team’s excel spreadsheet of the
campus inventory they conducted of recycling bins which details location,
labeling, and proximity to trash bins of paper and container receptacles (This
is an Appendix attachment to the 2007 Final Report).
Click
here to view the report from the class in 2006.
Why Recycle?
Many people know that recycling is good for the environment, but did you know that…
- Recycling preserves natural resources and supplies valuable raw materials to industry.
- Recycling prevents emissions of many greenhouse gases and water pollutants, and saves energy.
- Recycling reduces our reliance on landfills and incinerators as primary methods of disposal, resulting in a longer life expectancy for our current landfills and reducing the need to open new landfills.
- Recycling saves money that would be spent on disposal costs by reducing the amount of trash we need to throw out every day.
- Recycling helps the economy, supporting more than 19,000 jobs in Massachusetts alone.
Sources: http://www.epa.gov/epaoswer/non-hw/muncpl/reduce.htm#recycle
http://www.mass.gov/dep/consumer/recyclin.htm
Fun Recycling Facts:
- In 1999, recycling and composting activities prevented about 64 million tons of material from ending up in landfills and incinerators. Today, this country recycles 28% of its waste, a rate that has almost doubled during the past 15 years. (US EPA)
- While recycling has grown in general, recycling of specific materials has grown even more drastically: 40% of all plastic soft drink bottles, 55% of all aluminum beer and soft drink cans, 57% of all steel packaging, and 52% of all major appliances are now recycled. (US EPA)
- The U.S. recovery rate for paper and paperboard has made nearly steady progress during recent years, rising from 33.5% in 1990 to just above 48% in 2002. Recovery rates for key grades such as newspaper and old corrugated cardboard containers (OCC) stand even higher at 71% and 74%, respectively, in 2002. (American Forest & Paper Association)
- Steel cans, including food, paint, and aerosol cans, were recycled at a rage of 58% in 2001. That year, the steel industry recycled more than 18 billion steel cans into new products - a rate of about 200 cans for every person with internet access in the US. (Steel Recycling Institute)
- A glass container is 100% recyclable. An old glass container can be made into a new glass container again and again and again. (Glass Packaging Institute)
- In 2002, 31.1% of plastic soft drink bottles were recycled (American Plastics Council).
- Over 1.5 billion pounds of post-consumer plastic bottles were recycled during 1999, accounting for 22 percent (by weight) of all plastic bottles produced in the United States. (American Plastics Council)
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