91ֿ is participating in the annual RecycleMania challenge, an international competition where colleges and universities strive to reduce waste and increase recycling. The month of February marks the official start of the 2013 RecycleMania calendar.
RecycleMania is supported by the sustainability office, which specializes in the ongoing recycling efforts at 91ֿ.
“Residence Services is bringing the friendly competition a bit closer to home for students by presenting a hall-versus-hall challenge,” said Andy Weyand, assistant director for administrative operations and facilities at 91ֿ’s Department of Residence Services. “The recycling collections from each hall will be measured and scored, and after eight weeks, Residence Services recognizes the building(s) that recycled the most per capita. A $200 recognition goes to the hall council representing the winning building.”
“This will be 91ֿ’s fourth year participating in the tournament and the second year competing head-to-head with the University of Akron for the recycling ‘Braggin’ Wheel,’” said Melanie Knowles, sustainability manager at 91ֿ.
“We’ve dubbed the traveling trophy as the RecycleMania ‘Braggin’ Wheel,’ and I should proudly point out that the Golden Flashes are in possession of said trophy,” Weyand said. “We want to keep it for 2013!”
Reduce, Reuse and Recycle
Knowles said that the eight-week tournament is a good time for students, faculty and staff to be mindful to reduce, reuse and recycle.
“On-campus recycling is single stream, which means that plastic containers (#1 and #2), glass, aluminum, paper, paperboard and corrugated cardboard, can all go in the same recycling container, indoors or outdoors,” Knowles said.
“I can speak for Residence Services – our resident assistant, hall director, assistant hall director, housekeeping staff and administrative staff members each play a role in the RecycleMania challenge each year,” Weyand said. “It’s a two-month span that we really focus on building the habit of recycling.”
Engaging the Campus to Think Green
The tournament is for the entire campus. By framing recycling in competitive terms, RecycleMania seeks to tap school spirit as a motivator to reach students and university employees who may not otherwise respond to environmental messages.
“The larger outcome for the program is to build awareness of the campus recycling programs across North America and to have one collective push toward building the recycling habits of those individuals on and visiting the campus,” Weyand said.
The most recent 2012 competition included 605 colleges representing 49 states. More than 6.2 million students and staff participated, collectively recycling 94 million pounds of recyclables and organic materials.
“We’d like to see the faculty and staff start thinking green and carrying it back to the classroom or the office,” said Bill Steiner, director of Portage County Waste. “Making recycling a priority will really help out the local economy. The waste district has a $2 million impact on the economy through our wages, taxes and business."
For more information, visit www.kent.edu/housing/stories/recyclemania-2013.cfm.