|
For Immediate Release
Contact: Jack DeBell, 303-492-8307
University of
Colorado Launches Campus Recycling Network
‘Colorado Campus Recycling Network’ Launched In Response
To Growing Student Interest
BOULDER, November 13, 2003 – University of Colorado
announces a new network for campus recycling, “The Colorado
Campus Recycling Network,” which was formed in response to
Colorado’s growing student interest in environmentalism. The
aim of the network is to improve recycling on campuses and in college
towns around the State, by sharing information, best practices and
ideas. The Colorado Governor’s Office of Energy Management
and Conservation was involved in the planning and funding of this
campus recycling network.
The Colorado Campus Recycling Network is ready to improve recycling
around the state. The group’s first project was the recent
launch of a website where contacts for seven campus recycling programs
are listed, and more are expected to join. The site contains a “toolbox”
where recycling coordinators can share successes, allowing others
to benefit and avoid reinventing recycling programs on each campus.
Additionally, there’s an extensive set of recycling-related
resources from around the country and an e-mail listserver so subscribers
can communicate rapidly with each other.
With this initial work accomplished, organizers are already working
on projects of statewide importance. One such project aggregates
schools’ purchasing power towards environmentally preferable
goods and services. Other projects in the works include training
and career placement, and better “town-gown” collaboration.
The Colorado Campus Recycling network enables higher education
to respond to student interest in topics, such as recycling, which
continue to increase, partially due to environmental education instilled
in grades K-12 since Earth Day 1990. College students today have
been recycling since elementary school. Many of them are now interested
in taking resource management classes, finding internships with
local recycling businesses, and pursuing environmental professions
after graduation.
However, there aren’t many programs in Colorado schools on
basic recycling programs for student participation. With a few exceptions,
Colorado's colleges and universities have less developed waste reduction
and landfill diversion programs than peer institutions around the
country. Nationwide, approximately 78 percent of the nation’s
3,500 colleges and universities have an established recycling program,
compared to less than one-third of Colorado’s schools.
Campus recycling networks exist around the country at the state
and national levels. North Carolina, and California for instance,
have campus recycling organizations sponsored by their state recycling
organizations. Wisconsin and Florida fund campus recycling networks
with state government funds. Also, the College and University Recycling
Council (CURC) began as an informal caucus in 1990 and then was
funded as the Technical Council of the National Recycling Coalition
(NRC) in 1995.
Jack DeBell directs CU-Boulder’s Recycling Program and has
helped organize other campus programs around the state and nation.
He’s enthused with the potential for such a network in Colorado.
“Colleges and universities can make important, even decisive
contributions to help the environment. Students are ready but are
we?” he added.
For more information about the Colorado Campus Recycling Network,
including sponsorship opportunities and free subscription, visit
the new Web site or call 303-492-8307.
###
|