Wittenberg University Logo
Campus Directory | A-Z Index
Recycling Program:
Recycling News
Guidelines
Reasons to Recycle
How It Works
Recycling Quiz
Recycling Numbers
Annual Reports
F.A.Q.
Submit a Suggestion

The Green Greeks Program
Green Greek News
Green Houses
Green Representatives

Wittenberg Co-Op:
Co-Op News
About the Co-op
How It Works
Order Form
About our Suppliers
Contacts

Green Events:
Planning a Green Event
Green Event Application
This Year's Green Events
Noteworthy Green Events

Green Resources:
The Green Guide
Green Issues
Green Links

Sustainability Survey

Related Links:
Environmental Studies
STAND
Conservation Club
Outdoor's Club
Student Senate



 

w logo
The Recycling Program
redline

Campus Recycling News

Bin Sale

We have Blue recycling bins for sale. A 3 1/2 gallon bin is for sale for$ 5 and a 7 gallon for $6. Contact J.P. at s10.jjackson to order one. Also, we are offering a discount, buy a 7 gallon for $5 when you buy a Green Wittenberg T-shirt for $10. Delivery is free, all we need is an adress and a time.

bin bw.jpg

7 gallon bin

(15” tall)

3 ½ gallon bin

(12” tall)

 

The support staff of the Wittenberg Sustainability Program will be in your residence hall on an upcoming Saturday to sell recycling bins—yours to keep--for your rooms.  This effort aims to provide you with bins at the lowest possible cost and also to help boost Wittenberg’s recycling effort.

Here are the scheduled residence hall visits:

Saturday, February 21st

Firestine at 12:00 p.m.

Tower at 1:00 p.m.

New Hall at 2:00 p.m.

Saturday, February 28th

Myers at 12:00 p.m.

Ferncliff at 1:00 p.m.

Woodlawn at 2:00 p.m.

 

 

 

 

Recycling Numbers Improve by 34% (but We're Still Fair to Middlin')

recycle

First, the good news: in the first months of our campus-wide recycling effort, we have managed to divert more than 10 tons of material from a landfill. Further, the redistribution of recycling bins made possible ty the single stream approach has led to a clear uptick in our recycling as a percentage of total waste.  Our overall average for spring 2008 was 7.3% and our average thus far this fall rests at 9.7%.  Now the slightly bitter pill: that number could be much higher. Even at around 10%, our campus lags behind the 32% that the EPA reports for the average American household. It’s not at all unusual for campuses to struggle simply to meet the presidential average (some useful points for comparison can be found at the Recyclemania website), but the opportunities for significantly increasing our numbers are clearly there. The goal for the coming year is to increase our average to 20% and to begin participating in Recyclemania, an inter-university waste reclamation and reduction challenge, once we manage to reach that benchmark.

 

The Campus Makes the Shift to Single-Stream Recycling

An assessment of our recycling effort at the end of spring 2008 (the first semester of campus-wide recycling) determined that bin placement was one of the key weaknesses of the program. One option to correct this shortcoming would have been to purchase more bins, but the problem with this alternative is that we aren’t yet making full use of the bin capacity we already have. While trash receptacles get emptied daily, most recycle bins aren’t unloaded more than once or twice a week. With that reality in mind, the Recycling Program opted for a single-stream collection method in which all of the material acceptable in our recycling program—paper, glass, plastics, and metal—can be placed in the same bin. This move will help us make better use of our bin capacity while also allowing for wider distribution of the bins we currently have on hand. With any luck, the increased availability of receptacles will result in an uptick of our recycling figures. mrf


 

Cardboard Recycling Problems Identified by Computing Staff

A problem in our recycling became apparent over the summer when Myke Cooney, our Information Technology Coordinator, noticed that bags of nothing but cardboard, bags that she painstakingly filled herself, were being tossed into the compactor of our garbage truck. After some conversations with our Physical Plant and with Waste Management, I’ve learned that the Fairborn facility that receives our waste would prefer to have cardboard in significant dimensions separated from the paper waste stream—and, in fact, this is why we’re asked to reduce our cardboard to a size that can fit through the narrow opening in our bins. What a hassle that would be for someone like Myke who routinely deals with large boxes! The final word I heard from Waste Management is that we can include larger cardboard in our single stream, but it’s also clear that sending sizeable boxes down the pike is not ideal for the Fairborn plant. For the time being, we’re unfortunately not set up for a separate stream of cardboard, so the plan is take advantage of Waste Management’s willingness to accommodate us. And I’ll continue to keep my eye out for some better options in addressing this problem.



 

Wittenberg University Post Office Box 720 Springfield, Ohio 45501 800-677-7558
Non-discriminatory Policy      Web Use Policy & Disclaimer      Privacy Policy      © 2009 Wittenberg University