Yale School of Public Health Releases Sustainability Plan

Aimed at enhancing the relationship between environmental, fiscal and public health, the new Sustainability Strategic Plan is accompanied by a website that features successes to date and participation opportunities.

Elon U Residence Halls Earn LEED Gold Certification

(U.S.): Sustainable features include preferred parking spaces for low-emitting vehicles, a stormwater management plan, geothermal system and a building dashboard for monitoring real-time energy consumption.

Indian Institute Kansbahal Awarded Green Campus of the Year

(India): The institute recently received the honor at the 33rd World Environment Congress in New Delhi and its director, Niranjan Nayak, received the International Association of Educators for World Peace's Lifetime Achievement Award for his contributions to educational planning and administration.

JCTC Students Initiate Trash Removal Process for Local Watershed

(U.S.): After realizing that no one was measuring the amount of debris traveling to the Atlantic via their local Ohio River, the students established a uniform system and collected data for eight weeks. The group recently presented their findings to JCTC staff and students, as well as a representative from the Ocean Conservancy's Trash Free Seas. As a result, those in attendance are brainstorming ways to raise public awareness of the problem and help remove trash and debris from the river and watershed areas.

Lahore U Mgmt Sciences Students Take Social Responsibility

(Pakistan): More than 160 graduating students recently signed the Graduation Pledge Alliance’s Graduation Pledge of Social and Environmental Responsibility: "I pledge to explore and take into account the social and environmental consequences of any job I consider and will try to improve these aspects of any organizations for which I work."

Linfield College Debuts Sustainable Food Systems Internship

(U.S.): Spearheaded by a recent graduate and the university's sustainability coordinator, the program exposes students to the history, business and politics of food through guest lectures and field trips, as well as hands-on experience with planting, tending and harvesting crops at local farms.

North Carolina State U Donates, Diverts Unwanted Move-Out Items

(U.S.): Twenty-six thousand pounds of reusable items left behind during the student move-out from residence halls was recently donated to local nonprofits and 47,500 pounds of material recycled.

NY Times: 'Greening of Canadian Campuses'

(Canada): "Sustainability has become more than a fashionable buzzword on Canadian campuses; it has become enshrined both in university policy and in daily student life," says a recent New York Times article. From a Shut Your Sash program, which encourages lab users to close their fume hoods when they were not in use, to campus farmer's markets and student-spearheaded fees for sustainability, several higher education sustainability strategies at McGill University, University of Toronto and University of Victoria are profiled.

San Francisco State U Adds Electric Vehicle Charging Stations

(U.S.): Donated to the university by manufacturer Clipper Creek through a grant from the California Energy Commission, nine charging stations are now available for free public use.

Sterling College Completes Fossil Fuel Divestment

(U.S.): As of July 1, the college's endowment is invested in a fossil fuel free portfolio.

U Melbourne Debuts Green Roofs for Research, Education

(Australia): Divided into three sections, the Research Roof will operate as a testing facility for the university's urban horticulture team, the Biodiversity Roof aims to provide a protected space for experimentation with Australian native plants, and the Demonstration Roof serves as an exhibition and interpretive space, designed for educational activities.

U Melbourne on Track for Green Star – Communities Rating

(Australia): The university has committed to achieving Green Building Council of Australia's rating for its Parkville Campus. All new buildings will have a minimum rating design target of 5 Star Green Star, and all major building upgrades will need to achieve 4 Star Green Star.

U New Hampshire Completes Energy-Efficient Lab Upgrade

(U.S.): With a new passive-solar air pre-heating system, the university will reduce ventilation heating costs of its Kingsbury lab by up to $10,000 per year.

U Ulster to Open New Renewable Energy Engineering Center

(U.K.): Accepting 50 students this fall, the center will prepare students for engineering careers in the local and global wind, wave, tidal, hydro and biomass power sectors.

U Victoria Installs 3 Electric Vehicle Charging Stations

(Canada): The new charging stations are available 24/7 to the campus community and general public.

U Victoria Releases Carbon Neutral Action Report

(Canada): The university has reduced total greenhouse gases by 8 percent and natural gas use by 10 percent. These reductions are the result of increasing energy efficiencies in campus buildings, lighting upgrades and behavior changes among staff, students and faculty.

Virginia Tech Adds Free Bike Repair Stations

(U.S.): A way to further encourage the biking trend on campus, the new repair stations include tools for basic maintenance and fixing a flat.

Virginia Tech Launches Environmental Informatics Major

(U.S.): Based in the Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation, the new undergraduate major will bring together information technology, data analysis, natural resources, geospatial science and ecological modeling.

2 North Carolina State U Buildings Earn LEED Certification

Receiving LEED Silver certification, the university's James B. Hunt Jr. Library features a green roof to assist with rainwater runoff, solar thermal panels and a robotic book retrieval system that enables the library to be 40 percent smaller. The Eastern 4H Center, which earned LEED Gold certification, includes insulation made from recycled denim, recycled ceramic tile, concrete exterior panels, a rain garden and bamboo flooring.

Bowling Green State U to Install Bike Shelters

Funded by a $50,000 grant from the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, the new bike shelters not only help encourage biking to campus, but also trap stormwater run-off with green roofs of succulents and sedums.

Chatham U, EARTH U Partner for One-year Grad Degree Programs

EARTH University graduates now have the opportunity to enroll in one-year master’s degree programs at Chatham’s School of Sustainability and the Environment. The one-year Master of Sustainability and Master of Arts in Food Studies programs are designed specifically to prepare EARTH graduates to address sustainability and food system challenges.

Chatham U Sustainability Efforts Receive International Accolades

In recognition of the upcoming fall opening of its Eden Hall Campus, built for sustainable development, living, and learning, the university has received a Sustainable Campus Excellence Award from the International Sustainable Campus Network (ISCN).

Cornell U Opens Institute for Climate Change and Agriculture

Developed from a need to help farmers adapt to changing climates, the institute will act as a clearinghouse for research, climate monitoring, decision‐support tools and applications at the intersection of climate and agriculture. An early step will be developing a website for disseminating and gathering information on farm-level impacts and trends, losses and gains resulting from warming and extreme weather. Allison Morrill Chatrchyan, who most recently served as environment and energy program leader with Cornell Cooperative Extension, will step in as the institute's first director effective September 1.

Elmhurst College Receives $28K Composting Grant

Awarded by the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity’s Food Scrap Composting Grant Program, the funding will allow the college to purchase a grinder that will help divert up to 900 gallons of compostable material and food scraps from the landfill per week.

Indiana U-Purdue U Indianapolis Names Diversity Vice Chancellor

Karen Dace, who most recently served as deputy chancellor in the Division of Diversity, Access and Equity at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, will become the university's next vice chancellor for diversity, equity and inclusion effective September 3. In her role, Dace will oversee the Multicultural Success Center and Adaptive Educational Services, as well as facilitate the institutionalization of structures that advance equity and diversity on campus.

Rollins College Earns Fair Trade Status

Thanks to a student-led effort, the college is committed to purchasing fair trade products and encouraging its vendors to provide sustainable products created under fair working conditions. The school will also incorporate fair trade principles part of its curriculum.

U Iowa Student Leaders Focus on Affordability, Workforce Access

Student government leaders recently met with the Iowa governor to discuss college affordability and workforce development for graduates who want to stay in Iowa. The students will travel the state this summer to talk with legislators about extending the tuition freeze another year and ways that the state can help connect graduates from area universities to in-state job opportunities.

U New Hampshire Student Turns Recycling Prgm into Nat'l Nonprofit

The launch of a new nonprofit, PLAN: The Post-Landfill Action Network, is a national expansion of the university's student-led Trash 2 Treasure program, which to date has salvaged more than 100 tons of usable materials, recycled over 2,000 electronics, and donated more than five tons of food and clothing to local shelters. Trash 2 Treasure co-founder and recent graduate Alex Fried founded PLAN to work with student groups, administrators and sustainability offices to reduce campus waste nationwide.

U North Carolina Greensboro Quad Renovation Earns LEED Gold

The renovated collection of residence halls features water-efficient landscaping, common-area lighting sensors, and low-VOC (volatile organic compound) paints, carpets and other flooring materials.

U Rhode Island to Lead National Climate Change Education Project

The university's Graduate School of Oceanography has received a $1 million National Science Foundation grant to serve as the national hub for a Climate Change Education Partnership Alliance. The school will work to build a network of climate change scientists, educators, communication professionals and government and private-sector stakeholders to educate the public about the science of climate change and its implications.

U Wisconsin-Oshkosh Breaks Ground on $7M Biodigester Facility

Funded by the UW Oshkosh Foundation, the new biogas production facility at the state’s largest dairy farm will be able to generate 1.4 megawatts of electricity using livestock waste to generate, capture and combust methane. The biodigester will also be used by the university's environmental science, microbiology and sociology students as an off-campus laboratory.

2 Cornell U Student Teams Win EPA P3 Award

Soliciting student projects that protect people’s health, the environment, encourage economic growth and use natural resources efficiently, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s People, Prosperity and the Planet (P3) Award honored students working on a cookstove fuel/biochar project in Kenya and a water filtration project. Each winning team now qualifies to receive a grant of up to $90,000 to further develop their design.

BCIT Undergoes Energy-Efficient Ventilation Makeover

Funded by the Ministry of Advanced Education, upgrades to the British Columbia Institute of Technology's outdated ventilation and HVAC systems are expected to result in energy savings of $125,000 per year.

Bowling Green State U Approves Smoking Ban

Starting January 2014, the ban was approved following the Ohio Board of Regents recommendation that all Ohio public universities become smoke free.

Dept. of Ed Releases College Affordability and Transparency Lists

The updated lists highlight institutions with the highest and lowest tuition prices, and institutions whose costs are rising at the fastest rates.

Harvard U Housing Project Achieves LEED Platinum

The newly renovated Graduate Common Area maximizes daylight and incorporates efficient LED lighting. Twenty-seven percent of the project’s construction materials were manufactured within 500 miles.

Historic Harvard U House Awarded LEED Gold

Originally constructed in 1807, the university's Fay House at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study now features ground source heat pumps to provide building heating and cooling and LED lighting. Eighty-seven percent of the existing structural walls, floors, and roof were preserved including the restoration of the wood windows and original hardwood floors.

Indiana U-Purdue U Indianapolis Debuts Bike Fix-it Stations

Spearheaded by students, three do-it-yourself bicycle repair stations were recently installed on campus. The stations, available anytime, feature all the tools necessary to perform basic repairs and maintenance.

Lehigh U Embarks on Community Native Planting Project

The latest project to come from the South Side Initiative, a group of university and surrounding community members that aims to foster democracy and improve quality of life, includes the transformation of a former railroad bed into a scenic meadow of native vegetation.

Oregon Lawmakers Roll Out 'Pay it Forward, Pay it Back' Plan

The Oregon state legislature has unanimously approved a plan to provide free tuition to those students attending a community college or public university. In return, students will pay back the state with a percentage of their incomes after graduation. The state's Higher Education Coordinating Commission will develop a pilot program and lawmakers will decide whether to implement the program in 2015.

San Diego State Holds Rainbow Flag-Raising Ceremony

To show its support of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities on campus, the university recently held its fourth annual Rainbow Flag-Raising Ceremony. The university offers a minor in LGBT studies and has announced plans for a new LGBT studies major next spring.

Student Loan Rates Double

With no action by Congress to prevent the increase on July 1, the interest rate for federally subsidized Stafford loans for undergraduates has doubled from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent. Congress may act later this month to reverse the increase.

Texas A&M U System Announces New Center for Solar Energy

In addition to housing a renewable power generation system that will power the A&M-Central Texas campus, the nearly $600 million center will act as an incubator for practical and emergent technologies relating to renewable energy and photovoltaic solar technologies.

U Arizona Harvests Campus Seed Pods for Flour

The university's Campus Arboretum has installed nets onto the trunks of mesquite trees to harvest the seed pods, which Dining Services will incorporate into dishes served on campus. Olives and citrus fruit will also be harvested in similar projects.

UC Santa Barbara Installs Natural Area Signage

Funded by Associated Students, Coastal Fund and the university's Housing and Residential Services, the eight new interpretive signs inform visitors and answer common questions about stormwater management and whale migration as they travel through designated natural areas on campus.

U Illinois Chicago Enforces Tobacco Ban

As of July 1, the university is now a tobacco-free campus, prohibiting all forms of tobacco anywhere within campus boundaries.

U Maryland Students Create 'Connect4Climate' Video

"Right here, right now, together" is the slogan for this video by a group of students in the university's "Contemporary Social Problems" class. The video is part of a larger student campaign advocating serious action to fix the climate problem that brought the group to the Connect4Climate event in Washington, D.C. in March.

U Maryland Welcomes Sustainably Minded Food Truck

Featuring ingredients from a campus garden and area farms, the university catering company's new food truck effort averages 100 orders per day.

U Mississippi Turns Racial Incident into Teachable Moment

After a Mitt Romney rally led by University of Mississippi students last November turned racial, assistant to the chancellor for multicultural affairs Donald Cole recently turned the incident into a teaching moment. Cole, who himself experienced discrimination as a student at the university, addressed the emotions and concerns surrounding the rally head on with this fall's 120 incoming freshmen and their parents. "The idea again is that learned men show their differences by rhetoric, show their differences by persuasive arguments," the NPR story quotes Cole saying during his speech. "Learned men don't fight."

U Wisconsin-Oshkosh Residence Hall Earns LEED Gold

Horizon Village features a green roof, a geothermal ground-source heat pump for heating and cooling, geothermal hot water production and a designated area for interior bicycle storage. Additionally, the limestone façade from the building formerly on site was recycled for reuse in the fireplace surround in the student lounge.