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CFE agenda 020915
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CFE agenda 020915
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2/9/2015
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Regular Meeting
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CFE minutes 020915
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http: / /ncsusta ina bi lityce me r.org /education /sustainability - coordinator -i m proves- school - districts -fi nancia I- and- environmenta I- ledgers <br />Schnitzer has been able to position the composting program as self - sustaining by funding it <br />through cost - savings from a reduction of trash removal inefficiencies. <br />"We did a dumpster audit to look at how we can be more efficient and saw that we were literally <br />throwing away money," he says. Like other businesses, schools pay every time a dumpster is <br />picked up. The audit showed that, over a period of weeks, many dumpsters were picked up <br />partially empty. By looking at patterns of use and strategically switching the days of removal, <br />they reduced the number of weekly pick -ups at many schools from three to two, and removed <br />some dumpsters from service altogether. The money saved in the trash line item of the budget <br />was then freed up for compostable waste programming. <br />Schnitzer, with a graduate degree in Environmental Management and Sustainability, spent six <br />years helping manage an environmental charter school in Chicago. This background, as well as <br />his experience directing an overnight summer camp, taught him about the challenges schools <br />face in balancing priorities with financial, education, and environmental impacts. He looks for <br />ways to save money and then leverage that savings in smarter ways. <br />"That's the perspective I bring to this job: an understanding that there are competing pressures <br />and priorities in the district," says Schnitzer. "Part of the challenge is that changes don't always <br />benefit everyone. Sometimes things are less convenient or take more time and work." He tries to <br />figure out what motivates people and frame sustainability in those terms. "It takes a leap of faith <br />to invest money upfront with a spreadsheet for later gain," says Schnitzer. <br />While other NC school districts, like Granville County for example, have recycling coordinators, <br />Schnitzer's role is unique in breadth of reach across the school system. He engages with food <br />service employees, facilities management, teachers, parents, school garden coordinators, <br />custodial staff, and others as project partners. <br />Schnitzer's next plans for the school district will target improvement of light and energy use <br />through LED upgrades and better efficiency. "We're working hard to optimize what we have, by <br />making sure time schedules are set and running properly, and by looking at usage patterns in <br />different areas of the buildings." <br />Educational opportunities are even more important than the immediate environmental gains of <br />sustainability initiatives in schools, says Schnitzer. "Parents and teachers are not tangential. If <br />we're not teaching the kids these lessons, then we're missing 90 percent of the impact." <br />While science class provides a clear opportunity to teach about environmental topics like waste <br />and conservation, lessons of sustainability can be relevant across the curriculum through reading <br />assignments, tasks, and exercises framed around these issues. For example, Schnitzer had the <br />chance to discuss waste management with a graphics design class that created art for the <br />district's sustainability logo and signage for the composting initiative. <br />"I believe an entire school curriculum can be built at any grade level around a school garden" <br />says Schnitzer. " Sustainability issues affect everyone." <br />
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