The University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, collected more than 16 tons of reusable goods during spring move-out and kept landfill waste from major commencement events to just 217 pounds through coordinated waste reduction efforts.
The university gathered more than 32,000 pounds of clothing, bedding, shoes, household items and food from residence halls during the spring semester, redirecting them to campus programs and local nonprofits rather than landfills. The total represents the largest collection in the program’s more-than-25-year history.
Six commencement and end-of-semester events attended by approximately 9,500 people achieved a waste diversion rate exceeding 90 percent, with 1,850 pounds of compost collected during the celebrations.
“Many of the items students leave behind still have a lot of usable life left in them,” Alison Richardson, program manager at the UM Office of Campus Sustainability and Innovation, said in the story. “By collecting and redistributing those materials, we can reduce waste while supporting students and local organizations.”
The 16.2 tons of donations included 5.6 tons of clothing, 4.7 tons of bedding, 4.4 tons of household items, 0.9 tons of shoes and 0.6 tons of food and personal care items.
Campus programs receiving donations included the Planet Blue Student Leaders FreeStore, University Career Center Clothes Closet and Maize and Blue Cupboard, which received more than 1,000 pounds of food and personal care items. Seven local nonprofits also benefited, which included Jewish Family Services, Ann Arbor Thrift Shop, Ann Arbor PTO Thrift Shop, House N2 Home, Gretchen’s House Foundation, Kiwanis and Goodwill. Some items will be stored over the summer and redistributed to students during fall FreeStore events.
Volunteers from Student Life Sustainability, Graham Sustainability Institute, Michigan Sustainability Community, Michigan Dining and LSA Sustainability helped organize and sort the donations.
—
‘uncommon thinkers reuse what common thinkers refuse.’
-j.r.d. tata
*Jehangir Ratanji Dadabhoy Tata ( 1904-1993)was a French-born Indian industrialist, and aviator, who was the chairman of
Tata Sons and Tata Group.
—
source credits: advance media, photo: roger hart, um campus sustainability office
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Good for them. A worthy project!
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yes, much of it used to just be left behind
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I’m all for recycling and reusing the enormous amount of materials that would normally go to waste, Beth
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same
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That was a supreme effort! Well done to them.
Best wishes, Pete.
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yes, all of this used to just be left behind
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Ah .. life is not easy, nor simple, for a bushman in the city …
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heartening to see the great community effort; vaguely remember a song called ‘Sixteen Tons’ decades ago; by Tennessee Earnie Williams, I believe; No, No, that can’t be right: Tennessee Ford ?
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This is a very good idea.
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That school up north! Ha ha, well done Michigan! And for the record, I’m not a fan of Ohio State either. Ha ha. On a serious note, this is a huge problem. Every school really needs to be doing this especially when you see how much students personalize and customize their rooms nowadays. That’s a lot of stuff saved from the landfill!!!!😎😎😎
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“You load 16 tons and what do you get…?” That’s really good stuff.
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This is amazing and encouraging. This is perfectly how it should always be. I applaud this. Beautiful. May we hear more good news like this. It should be normalized. Thanks to all who put in the efforts. Thanks Beth for sharing.
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Fantastic !
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I love initiatives such as this, Beth. Grassroots and meaningful – and the potential to scale up across the community. Way to go Ann Arbor!
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