Environmental Conservation Committee

Live in the Greenhouse!

Sick of where you are living this semester? Want a change? We have space for new Greenhouse members next semester! If you are a sophomore, junior, or senior, please stop by the Greenhouse, 70 Park St. to pick up an application. Just knock on the door!

The applications will be due the Thursday before Thanksgiving to either the Greenhouse or CMR 1406. Group interviews or another such activity will be after break.

Email Rachael Jaffe at rmjaff07@stlawu.edu with any questions.

ReCellar

Primary Organization: 
Environmental Action Organization (EAO)
Contact Name: 
Danielle Roslevich
Contact E-mail: 
dmrosl09@stlawu.edu
Project Start Date: 
September 1, 2008
Status: 
Ongoing

SLU REUSES - STASH IT- DON'T TRASH IT!

Did you upgrade to a suite and now you need some extra furniture? Don't like those overhead lights in your room and want something with a softer glow? Need to pick up some hangers, binders, mugs or other odds and ends for your new room?

Before you head to the store...check out the ReCellar, in the basement of Reiff.
Everyone knows you find the best treasures in the basement...

In 2005 several students teamed up with the Conservation Council and Facilities Operations to create a Reuse Program. A group of hard working, environmentally aware students were responsible for the creation of the original "SLU Reuse Initiative" a program developed to prevent usable items from ending up in the dumpsters when students move out of their dorms at the end of the year.

While the Reuse Initiative started as a spring collection and single large fall sale, with storage of items in a trailer during the summer, interest has grown and the program has expanded.  The Initiative has become so popular that it has moved from its ephemeral home in first one and then two tractor trailers to the basement of one of the dorms.
Now all those great gently used items collected when students move out can be found in the basement of Reiff.

In previous years remaining items were donated to local charities however starting in 2008 the Reuse Initiative transitioned into a year round student run campus thrift store, the ReCellar.  Three students find jobs each semester collecting, cleaning, sorting and selling gently used and working items of furniture, small appliances, electronics, clothing, school supplies, amazing costumes for all your party needs and many other miscellaneous items that would otherwise have been sent to the landfill.

Most items are sold for less than a dollar and even the highly coveted furniture and large electronics sell for less than twenty dollars. All funds from the sale go toward helping the program continue by paying employee salaries, advertising costs and other operating expenses.  Hopes for the future include the move to a more accessible location and expansion of the store size.

What can you do to help the ReCellar thrive and promote sustainability initiatives at St. Lawrence?  Donate your gently used but unwanted items all year long (faculty and staff we'll take your items too as long as a college student is likely to use them).  Remember to look for donation boxes in dorms during move out each spring and to contact volunteers to move larger items from your room to the ReCellar.

E-mail for more information on donation details, employment, fall sale and spring collection.  Check SLUWire for hours.

St. Lawrence Running on 15% Renewable Electricity

In March of 2007, President Daniel F. Sullivan signed the American College and University Presidents Climate Commitment. In becoming a signatory President Sullivan committed St. Lawrence to climate neutrality, zero-net greenhouse gas emissions.

The path to climate neutrality will not be an easy one; however we have made a significant step that I want to share with you today.

St. Lawrence is now running on 15% renewable electricity. This is equivalent to half of the electricity used by the Student Center and half of the electricity used by the Johnson Hall of Science. We have purchased RECs (Renewable Energy Credits) generated by wind turbines as our source of green electricity. The carbon emissions from electricity are about 36% of the University's total carbon footprint, thus we are proud to have taken this step to make our electricity use more sustainable and simultaneously show the nation that we support alternative energy.

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