Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Anyone who has left an afternoon lecture in Budig Hall with a wrapper stuck to the bottom of a shoe or a book bag that has absorbed a Coke stain from the floor can attest to the litter problem in some campus classrooms.
But this semester three departments, the Center for Sustainability; Facilities Operations, Housekeeping; and KU Recycling, have joined forces to run a pilot program called the Campus Litter Reduction Campaign. The program’s goal is to reduce the amount of litter on campus to ease these frustrations as well as save the housekeeping staff some time at night, Celeste Hoins, administrative manager of the Environmental Stewardship Program, said.
“We want to spread awareness that it’s on us to keep these rooms clean during the day,” Celeste Hoins, administrative manager for KU Recycling said. “It’s littering. We shouldn’t do it on the street; why would we want to dirty up our hallways and classrooms?”
Key to the campaign are the groups of three bins located outside almost every classroom in Budig, Wescoe and Snow Halls. One bin is for recycling newspapers, one is for recycling bottles and cans and one is for throwing away trash.
Hoins said the University didn’t purchase any new bins for the campaign, but rather relocated other bins on campus to make recycling and throwing away waste more visible and convenient for students.
Videos advertising the campaign will also run in some of the rooms between classes later this semester, Hoins said.
Students enter a Budig lecture auditorium Monday afternoon. The Campus Litter Reduction Campaign program from KU Recycle has designated recycling bins in high-traffic halls such as Budig, Wescoe and Snow to reduce on campus waste.
Representatives from the three groups said they hoped the campaign would increase awareness about littering, reduce trash pick-up and instill a sense of pride in students for the University’s campus.
“To keep campus clean, it needs to be a community effort,” Vic Kane, assistant director of Facilities Operations, Housekeeping, said. “The KU campus is beautiful, and litter takes away from that beauty.”
Cleaning a classroom takes 30 to 40 minutes on average and requires between five and 10 minutes of that cleaning time to pick up the trash left behind, he said.
However, Kane said Budig and Wescoe Halls had the most difficult classrooms to clean on campus. He said the housekeeping staff spent 20 to 30 minutes in each room just picking up newspapers and food containers.
With less trash to collect, Kane said, the housekeeping staff could devote more time to disinfecting surfaces to help limit the spread of disease.
Kane said part of the littering problem was the build-up of waste throughout the day because the housekeeping staff could only clean at night, when students weren’t in the buildings.
Christina Graber, Kingman junior, has a class in Budig this semester. She said that she had seen how dirty classrooms could get, especially after lunch time, and that she hoped the efforts to clean up campus would be effective.
“It’s your stuff,” she said. “It shouldn’t be anybody else’s problem. This is everyone’s campus, you just need to do your part and keep everything picked up.”
Of all the trash accumulated on facility floors, Kane said newspapers were by far the most littered item on campus.
“Students read the newspaper everywhere, and leave it everywhere but the recycling bins when they’re done,” Kane said.
Hoins also said she hoped the campaign would help limit that behavior and help people realize that their waste doesn’t just disappear when they leave it on the ground.
“Nobody’s doing it intentionally to make campus dirty,” she said. “But that may be a consequence of all this litter.”
Hoins said she hoped to divert at least one ton of newspaper waste each month from classroom floors. According to the KU Recycling Web site, about 150 tons of newsprint waste were collected during the 2007-2008 school year.
The three groups chose Budig and Wescoe for the pilot because the halls host a number of large lectures taken by freshmen and sophomores, Hoins said.
“We thought we would be able to get freshmen and sophomores to participate as they start school so the habits would stick with them through their four years here at KU,” she said.
The departments chose Snow as a case study to see how successful the program would be with smaller, more advanced classes.
Should the program be a success, Hoins said she hoped to expand the campaign to the entire campus.
— — Edited by Lauren Cunningham
New service recycles campus furniture
The University of Kansas Environmental Stewardship Program is developing a new way ...
KU environmental group works to reduce move-in ...
KU Recycle wants to increase sustainability around campus, including at the residence ...
Editorial: How Budig turned into a ‘waste’ ...
Going green becomes mainstream at sporting events
University organizations suggest ways to improve recycling after football games.
Where your waste goes after it’s disposed
Follow the process your trash and recyclables go through after they’re tossed ...
Report shows University increases recycling
As convenience increases, so does the number of tons of garbage recycled. ...
City still looking into curbside recycling
Private companies offer curbside service while the city and University are looking ...
Electronic waste building up after waste pick-up ...
The KU Environmental Stewardship Program, which had organized the e-recycle system, said ...
RecycleMania competition encourages student recyclers
Kansas ranks seventh in the Big 12 for number of pounds recycled.
University recycles more than paper and plastic
Besides the standard recyclables, the University also recycles bubble wrap, packing peanuts, ...
Students’ audit measures Wescoe’s waste
A class of five seniors sorted through a day’s worth of trash ...
Greening it
Your guide to greener living
Group vows to improve recycling in engineering ...
Five Native American students are invoking their heritage to get others to ...
Students dig deeper into recycling
Several student groups are taking new looks at recycling on campus.
Recycling program keeps campus green
KU’s environmental stewardship program recycles materials and redistributes used furniture on campus.
Editorial: Don't bother handing out fliers
Fliers aren't an effective marketing ploy; Most students toss them on the ...
Sorting through KU’s trash
Students will conduct a waste audit of Wescoe’s trash to measure campus' ...
Campus, Lawrence put lid on trash
Audit at brewery is first step in ...
Several KU students volunteered at Boulevard Brewing Company on Friday.
Editorial: Despite inconvenience, students need to recycle
Recycling may be a burden but there are recycling options in Lawrence.
Lawrence seeks solutions to recycling question
The city is assembling a task force to weigh its options.
Campus groups promote recycling, reducing
The Center for Sustainability will be giving away reusable bottles and bags ...
Editorial: Recycling is easier than you think
Paper isn't the only recyclable material on campus.
Chi Omega bottle sculpture has a message
Used plastic changes fountain into an artistic reminder of sustainability in the ...
Students experience differences in Lawrence living
Student ghetto? Scholarship hall? Communal living? It’s all here.
Lawrence considers ideas for trash disposal
The city staff proposed plans to save on wages and workers’ compensation ...
Home Depot contributes to bright idea of ...
Lawrence residents can recycle compact fluorescent bulbs to reduce mercury pollution.
KU competes in recycling competition
The Environmental Stewardship Program enters the second week of recycling and waste ...
New baler will take load off KU ...
Kansan Departments
Your guide to surviving the week.
How to take out your e-trash
Get rid of those electronics in an eco-happy manner
Recycling in Lawrence is easier than you ...
Requests for safe disposal increase
More departments are contacting eWaste to get rid of their unwanted electronics
Volunteers recycle game-day cans
Students team with non-profit to collect and cash in record number of ...
Editorial: Recycling group reminds what parties leave ...
Remnants of your night out exist long after the parties end.
Pushing for an environmentally-friendly campus
Ray Anderson, found of Interface, will speak at Woodruff Auditorium tonight at ...
United Students' platforms reviewed
When Love and Wittlinger take office next fall, they'll begin the process ...
Wakarusa gets cleaned up
Festival goers encouraged to recycle and exchange trash for prizes.
Dumpster diving yields hidden treasures
One man's trash is another man's treasure. Students can find unique decoration ...
From left: Kimberlee Hinkle, Libby Johnson and Hannah ...
1 comment
Kansas Jayhawk fans hold aloft a reproduction of ...
2 comments
Erin Saupe, a Ph.D. student from St. Cloud, ...
1 comment
0 comments
Armed robbers continue to threaten.
3 comments
Comments
Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.
Sign in to comment
Or login with:
OpenID