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Spring Workdays & Hikes, March newsletter
Associated Project(s):See the attached newsletter for various workdays and hikes, led by the Land Conservation Foundation.
Attached Files:F&S adjusts procedures to align with WELL building standards at Sidney Lu Mechanical Engineering Building
Associated Project(s):Amy – in preparation for the Damon’s WELL certification please conduct an inventory of all our chemicals in the building that are needed and remove anything that isn’t needed. We may need to see if we can swap out anything for a green certified chemical, but we do have to have SDS printed and on site for the certification.
We also need up-to-date and complete job sheets for the building.
Pete W Varney
DIRECTOR
Transportation & Building Services
Facilities & Services
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Daily Illini Article: How can students support waste management on campus?
Associated Project(s):How can students support waste management on campus?
https://dailyillini.com/life_and_culture-stories/2023/03/17/students-was...
By Lily Perez, Contributing Writer
March 17, 2023Have you ever placed something in a recycling bin and wondered what happens next? Does it actually get recycled, or does it just get tossed in the landfill without ever being sorted out?
Students said it can be hard to be committed to sustainability when resources to do so are not always clear.
Adeline Hoegberg, junior in FAA, said she does not have a lot of knowledge about where the trash on campus is taken or how big of a difference the University is making with their waste management systems.
“I’ve heard that all of the recycling would just end up in the normal trash,” Hoegberg said.
The Waste Transfer Station in Champaign filters out around 30% of the trash that comes in, but still sends around 50 pounds to the landfill each day. This is not taking into account busier times like holidays and move-in days for students.
The Waste Transfer Station is located just off of St. Mary’s Road in Champaign and takes in trash from all various places on campus. This includes instructional facilities, University Housing, Illini Union and the Division of Intercollegiate Athletics.
Daphne Hulse works as the Facilities & Services zero waste coordinator, a new position focused on decreasing the amount of waste that goes through the University. Hulse works on various outreach projects, including hosting tours of the Waste Transfer Station.
“These tours are a really unique opportunity to illuminate to the broader campus community what goes on after you put something in the bin,” Hulse said.
Adam Soper, senior in FAA, recalled seeing several recycling places on campus but, like many other students, hasn’t heard of the Waste Transfer Station on campus.
“I know all the dorms have dedicated recycling bins,” Soper said. “But I’m not necessarily sure where those get dumped to.”
Another program that Hulse is facilitating in collaboration with Coca-Cola and the DIA is the “Fighting Illini, Fighting Waste” campaign. This campaign has students volunteer at basketball games to encourage recycling at sporting events. The last zero waste basketball game was March 2 and had 100 volunteers.
“(We’re) creating that general awareness for sustainability in an audience with not just students but townies, out of state folks and athletic rivals,” Hulse said.
Despite these programs, it can be hard for students to recycle on campus and even more so on their own where businesses and residencies don’t provide recycling services. Along with a lack of opportunity, some students feel that recycling doesn’t have a huge impact.
“I’m under the strong feeling that you can’t solely rely on us recycling,” Hoegberg said. “It’s more about the corporations if you really want to fix things.”
Soper said he would most likely not see discernible difference in a world without recycling.
“It wouldn’t be a whole lot different because the recycling practices aren’t widespread enough to be making a huge impact on the scale that we’d be able to really see,” Soper said.
Hulse recognizes that sustainability can seem isolating at times but encourages students to join organizations and communities that bring collective action. She highlighted the RSO Project4Less, whose members package leftover food in good condition and ship it out to food assistance programs in the surrounding area.
“The human connection component of climate change is so important,” Hulse said. “I think we often feel stuck by ‘what can I do as an individual’ in this global planetary crisis.”
Aside from joining sustainability-focused communities, Hulse also recommends learning what people can about what’s happening in the community and leading by example.
“We know reduce, reuse, recycle. But what about at the start of all of that, refuse,” Hulse said. “What could you refuse in your day-to-day life and start small. For example, I know students really enjoy coffee and many, many, many places around campus will take your reusable cup.”
Hulse was particularly inspired by her mother who showed her that small habits, like using reusable bags at the grocery store, can make a big change. Hulse encourages students to look for that positive influence around them and wants students to be that influence in their own sustainability journey.
“A community that is pursuing zero waste imperfectly is far better than a few individuals doing it perfectly,” Hulse said.
Fighting Illini, Fighting Waste makes WCIA news!
Associated Project(s):On March 2, WCIA covered the Illinois vs. Michigan Fighting Illini, Fighting Waste Event.
F&S, North American, and Essity follow up 2
Associated Project(s):Attached Files:2 bins placed at Harding Band
Associated Project(s):P10H08409 north of main hallway and P10H08410 south of main hallway.
3 bins placed at Education Building
Associated Project(s):P10E62230 placed in the basement, P10H08411 placed on second floor, and P10H08412 placed on third floor.
2 slim bins and 1 regular bin placed at Bevier Hall - first of the 28 bin order
Associated Project(s):P10H08408 placed on first floor near room 180, P10H8407 placed on second floor near main stairs, and P10H8406 placed at the east stair main entry.
Finalized Geothermal UTB press release attached
Associated Project(s):Hi everyone,
Thank you all for your efforts putting this press release together. (See attached) I’ve scheduled this to publish on PRI’s website on Monday, Mar. 20th at 8:00 a.m.
You can find drilling images here. Please give photo credit to Travis Tate.
Please let me know if you have any questions.
Thanks again,Tiffany
Attached Files:2-27-23 Housing + F&S meet to follow-up on the May 2023 program
Associated Project(s):On February 27, Housing and F&S met to discuss Dump & Run plans. See the attached meeting minutes. A recording can be found here.
Attached Files:3-1-23 3 solar charging tables installed at University of Illinois!
Associated Project(s):On March 1, the University of Illinois welcomed 3 new solar charging table stations, thanks to collaboration with Coca-Cola and the You Are Here Agency. One solar table was installed at the north end of Physical Plant Services Building, another at the south end of Abbott Power Plant, and a third at Allerton Park.
Attached Files:3-2-23 Fighting Illini, Fighting Waste Diversion Breakdown
Associated Project(s):A breakdown of the materials collected on 3/2:
- Arena:
- 220 lbs aluminum
- 300 lbs plastic
- TOTAL: 520 lbs from the arena
- Recycling bins around the concourse:
- 120 lbs aluminum
- 200 lbs plastic
- TOTAL: 320 lbs from the recycling bins
- Pulled from the waste stream (came from the compactor below the facility):
- 440 lbs of mixed materials (paper, cardboard, aluminum, plastic) that the sort workers pulled at the Waste Transfer Station
TOTAL: 1,280 pounds of recyclables
340 pounds of aluminum
500 pounds of plastic
440 pounds of mixed material (paper, cardboard, aluminum, plastic)
- Diversion rate
- 4,540 total waste collected that night (trash + recycling)
- 1,280 of this total waste was recycled that night
- 1280/4540 = 28% diverted
- Arena:
3-2-23 Fighting Illini, Fighting Waste Results
Associated Project(s):Good afternoon,
Thank you for volunteering at the Fighting Illini, Fighting Waste event last Thursday! You were among ~100 other student volunteers who signed up and helped initiate recycling within State Farm Center. The community-level work you have done to raise awareness for sustainability is invaluable.
During this event, you helped divert 1,280 pounds of recyclable material away from the landfill! In total, 28% of the materials consumed at this event were diverted away from the landfill. We are incredibly impressed with this number. What a feat!
As a part of our improvement process for future events, we invite you to complete this anonymous Google Form survey.
Are you interested in joining other sustainability initiatives on campus?
- Browse through the Illinois Climate Action Plan (iCAP) Teams, and reach out to those you are interested in attending.
- Sign up for a tour of the university’s Waste Transfer Station and learn about what happens after trash and recycling are thrown in the bin.
- Sign the Use the Bin pledge and commit to always using the recycling bin. We’re working towards our 10,000-signature goal!
- Sign up for the Institute for Sustainability, Energy, and Environment’s (iSEE) Illini Lights Out event coming up on Friday, March 24 from 5:30-7:00pm.
- Attend the 2023 iSEE Congress: Addressing Crises of Planetary Scale
- Join iSEE, Volunteer Illini Projects (VIP), Students for Environmental Concerns (SECS), and Facilities & Services on Thursday, April 18 for Earth Month Trash Pickup!
Thank you,
DaphneDaphne Hulse (she/her)
Zero Waste Coordinator
Facilities & Services | University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
+1 (217) 333-7550 | dlhulse2@illinois.eduVeo bikes redeployment - spring 2023
Associated Project(s):Veo is starting to redeploy vehicles on campus in the coming weeks! They plan to begin redeploying bikes tomorrow, 3/16, with a goal to reach full deployment (750) by 4/8.
Weekly Update: Closed for Spring Break
Associated Project(s):All, Bike Center is closed this week for Spring Break and I’ll be working an abbreviated week myself. We’ve got a dozen plus bikes for sale and I’ll safety check a few more before I bow out for the week.
On Friday, we got maybe the oddest donation yet: an iPod mini, complete with charging cord…
We reorganized and moved one of our storage racks from the backside of the space up front to the lobby so we can hold more bikes for sale up there. In the storage area, we’re pulling pedals/turning handlebars and so can fit more bikes without the rack.
In more sobering news, a patron who’d finished a Build-a-Bike a couple weeks ago was hit while riding the bike he’d fixed here and ended up in the ER needing stitches. He is fine, otherwise, and told me the news in person, so he is ok. The number of people I know who’ve been hit by a car is quickly approaching double digits.
The numbers:
Visitors: 37Sales: $1,234.50
Bikes (refurb): 3 for $825
Membership: 2 for $60
Tires/tubes: 7 for $115Jacob Benjamin
Campus Bike Center CoordinatorISSA Sustainability Committee meeting 4
Associated Project(s):Attached Files:Check in about C2P2
Associated Project(s):Hello,
I'm the Carbon Offset Fellow with Second Nature. I would like to check in with someone from UIUC about your participation in the C2P2 program. We are preparing to contract with an accredited third-party verifier to seek verification of all credits between July 1 2020 and Dec 31, 2022, and for the revalidation of UIUC's project crediting period. The cost for this for UIUC is significant and will require site visits by the third-party verifier. I need confirmation from someone on your team that you do want us to contract these services on your behalf.
My cell phone number is 828 582 5039. Email is also a good way to reach me.
Thank you for your attention to this. I look forward to your reply!
Meredith
-------------------------------
Hi Morgan,
Is this something you would like me to assist with?
Thanks,
Jen
Week 6 – Mar 5 – Mar 11, 2023
Associated Project(s):Zero Waste iCAP Meeting 3/10/2023
Associated Project(s):On January 30th, the Zero Waste iCAP team met to discuss final thoughts on the finished tailgate recycling recommendation, the feasibility of a large scale composting program on campus, and current work with the Student Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC).
Meeting minutes are attached.
Attached Files: