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Move-in cardboard recycling effort sets a record:
Over 23 tons of cardboard recycled by CU students
in only two weeks
September 12, 2003
Contact: Marianne Moulton, 303-492-8307 marianne.moulton@colorado.edu;
Peter Caughey, 303- 492-4007
For Immediate Release
In only the two short weeks after students began arriving on campus, the CU Recycling
Center collected and recycled 23.56 tons of cardboard – 42 percent more
than was recycled at during last year’s move-in period.
Over 5,000 students moved in, bringing with them tens of thousands
of cardboard boxes. More than 47,120 pounds of cardboard was recycled
at CU’s student
run recycling facility during the two week move in period from Aug. 21 to Sept.
4.
“It was a great way to introduce new students to recycling on
campus while cutting down on waste,” said Marianne Moulton, assistant
director of the CU Environmental Center and coordinator of the recycling
effort.
For the fourth year, staff and student volunteers were on hand during
move-in to help collect empty corrugated cardboard boxes at the loading
docks of
all CU-Boulder residence halls.
“Because there were so many kids showing me how easy it is to
recycle, I didn’t
throw away one piece of cardboard,” said freshman Liz Newton, who
moved in Baker Hall. “I was also made aware of how easy it is to
recycle on campus.”
The effort was a partnership between the CU
Environmental Center, CU Recycling, Department of Housing and Facilities
Management.
“Through this excellent partnership, we were able to provide opportunities
for the students living on campus to make a positive and significant
impact on protecting
precious resources,” said Deb Coffin of the Department of Housing.
In only those two weeks, Coffin estimates that the university saved
about $600 in trash disposal, in addition to saving 470 cubic yards
of landfill
space.
The recycling effort not only avoided disposal costs, but
also conserved the equivalent of 286 40-foot trees, 165,000 gallons
of water and
96,643 kilowatt
hours of electricity, according to Moulton. It also eliminated
an estimated 1,414 pounds of air pollution.
“This data is a tribute to our students' commitment to helping
protect and preserve our environment,” Coffin said.
The CU Recycling
program is a partnership of the University of Colorado Student Union,
Facilities Management and the Department
of Housing.
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