Overall Rating | Silver - expired |
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Overall Score | 52.28 |
Liaison | Stephen Ellis |
Submission Date | Nov. 25, 2014 |
Executive Letter | Download |
Boston University
OP-22: Waste Minimization
Status | Score | Responsible Party |
---|---|---|
0.77 / 5.00 |
Dennis
Carlberg Associate Vice President for Sustainability BU Sustainability |
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indicates that no data was submitted for this field
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Waste generated::
Performance Year | Baseline Year | |
Materials recycled | 1,805 Tons | 361 Tons |
Materials composted | 1,193 Tons | 0 Tons |
Materials reused, donated or re-sold | 287 Tons | 0 Tons |
Materials disposed in a solid waste landfill or incinerator | 6,657 Tons | 9,638 Tons |
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Figures needed to determine "Weighted Campus Users”::
Performance Year | Baseline Year | |
Number of residential students | 11,347 | 11,185 |
Number of residential employees | 184 | 181 |
Number of in-patient hospital beds | 0 | 0 |
Full-time equivalent enrollment | 25,599 | 24,623 |
Full-time equivalent of employees | 9,854 | 8,439 |
Full-time equivalent of distance education students | 2,596 | 1,605 |
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Start and end dates of the performance year and baseline year (or three-year periods):
Start Date | End Date | |
Performance Year | July 1, 2013 | June 30, 2014 |
Baseline Year | July 1, 2005 | June 30, 2006 |
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A brief description of when and why the waste generation baseline was adopted:
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A brief description of any (non-food) waste audits employed by the institution:
Waste audits of the Warren Towers building, which includes dorm rooms, offices, study lounges, a mail room, and a laundry room, are performed before and after the implementation of behavioral signage. The data collected serves to evaluate the efficiency of communication strategies and is used as a reference for waste minimization strategies in other non-dining buildings on campus.
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A brief description of any institutional procurement policies designed to prevent waste:
In February 2011, sustainability@BU began a collaboration with the BU Sourcing & Procurement team and Office Depot to implement the ‘We Bagged the Box’ pilot program, swapping out corrugated cardboard boxes for paper bags for orders under 30 pounds. This switch is expected to save the University approximately 4 tons of wood, 22,000 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions, 25,000 gallons of wastewater and 2,000 pounds of solid waste every year.
Office Depot is the primary office supplier for BU, carrying out deliveries campus-wide. So far the “We Bagged the Box” pilot program has been implemented in four departments. It has been met with such success that the University plans to expand the program in the coming months.
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A brief description of any surplus department or formal office supplies exchange program that facilitates reuse of materials:
The sustainability@BU Exchange is a free service that allows BU employees to swap items with colleagues around the office and throughout the University. It provides a way to reuse supplies & furniture within the University. To benefit from the service, employees fill out an online form, upload a photo of the item and submit their request.
(See http://www.bu.edu/sustainability/campus-resources/reduce-reuse-recycle/exchange/ for more information)
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A brief description of the institution's efforts to make materials available online by default rather than printing them:
All course catalogs, course schedules, and directories are only available online. These documents are no longer printed.
(See http://www.bu.edu/phpbin/course-search/ for more details)
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A brief description of any limits on paper and ink consumption employed by the institution:
In 2009, Boston University enacted a strictly enforced printing quota for all students. Every undergraduate student, faculty member, and staff member is allocated 100 sheets per semester and graduate students are allocated 500 sheets per semester. Double-sided printing is available at all on-campus print center locations. Print allocations are reset each semester and there is a fee for each page that exceeds the allocated limit.
(See http://www.bu.edu/phpbin/myprint/help/about.shtml for more information)
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A brief description of any programs employed by the institution to reduce residence hall move-in/move-out waste:
In order to reduce waste during the move-out period, Boston University has partnered with Goodwill Industries since spring 2010. The move-out program gives students the opportunity to donate unwanted goods to Goodwill during the last month of the academic year. Collection bins are placed in fifteen convenient locations throughout campus so that students may have easy access to drop-off areas. Goodwill collects clothing and other goods from each location and then sells those items in stores to support important local job training and youth programs. Goodwill, not Landfill is now implemented at the end of each semester to capture all the good stuff students leave behind when they move out of their dorms. The Goodwill, Not Landfill move-out program diverted 99.66 tons of good stuff from landfills in 2014. Since May 2009, this program has diverted 327.26 tons of clothing, electronics, and housewares from the landfill.
(http://www.bu.edu/sustainability/campus-resources/move-in/move-out-2/)
During move-in, Scarlet Squad volunteers are trained to guide incoming students and families in recycling cardboard. This year, through a coordinated effort with FM&P, Custodial Services, Residence Life, Housing, BUPD, Save That Stuff (BU’s recycling vendor), the Scarlet Squad, and sustainability@BU, the University recycled 25.3 tons of cardboard.
(http://www.bu.edu/sustainability/campus-resources/move-in/move-in-cardboard-recycling/)
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A brief description of any other (non-food) waste minimization strategies employed by the institution:
In February 2011, sustainability@BU began a collaboration with the BU Sourcing & Procurement team and Office Depot to implement the ‘We Bagged the Box’ pilot program, swapping out corrugated cardboard boxes for paper bags for orders under 30 pounds. This switch is expected to save the University approximately 4 tons of wood, 22,000 pounds of carbon dioxide emissions, 25,000 gallons of wastewater and 2,000 pounds of solid waste every year.
(See http://www.bu.edu/sustainability/what-were-doing/waste-reduction/we-bagged-the-box-2/ for more information)
Since 2009, sustainability@BU has provided reusable coffee mugs to community members who sign up to Join The Challenge, a monthly competition to reduce our environmental footprint.
(See http://www.bu.edu/sustainability/what-you-can-do/ten-sustainable-actions/bring-your-own-mug/ for more information)
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A brief description of any food waste audits employed by the institution:
Waste audits are conducted on an annual basis to track and measure waste disposal. Composting Comes Out is a program of peer education and awareness in the dining halls. Student volunteers help students scrape their leftovers into the compost barrel, which is normally done behind the scenes in the dishroom. Stickers are also handed out to students that have not left any leftovers on their plate to help discourage food waste.
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A brief description of any programs and/or practices to track and reduce pre-consumer food waste in the form of kitchen food waste, prep waste and spoilage:
Food waste audits are performed on a daily basis in most locations on campus through an Aramark food waste reduction iniative. All food waste is collected in clear containers, weighed, recorded, and entered into a database to track progress. The clear containers also give chefs the opportunity to provide feedback to Dining Services' cooks on how to reduce trimming and prep waste.
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A brief description of programs and/or practices to track and reduce post-consumer food waste:
All residential dining halls have been trayless since 2008. The majority of food is also made to order and smaller plates and portion sizes make for tapas style dining in our new dining hall, Marciano Commons.
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A brief description of the institution's provision of reusable and/or third party certified compostable to-go containers for to-go food and beverage items (in conjunction with a composting program):
At BU's main food court, customers are given the option of using reusable tableware, compostable to-go tableware, or a reusable to-go container. Residential dining halls use exclusively reusable tableware. At several other smaller retail locations on campus, compostable to-go containers are used as well. Reusable to-go containers have been available for purchase at the student union since September 2011 and can be used at the food court. Customers using the reusable to-go containers are given a $0.25 discount each time it is used.
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A brief description of the institution's provision of reusable service ware for “dine in” meals and reusable and/or third party certified compostable service ware for to-go meals (in conjunction with a composting program):
All residential dining halls use exclusively reusable dishware.
Several food containers, napkins, boxed lunches, takeout containers as well as Starbucks cups use post-consumer recycled content. The majority of disposable tableware (about 90%) purchased at Boston University is compostable and biobased; the rest is recyclable. Twelve out of fourteen locations that offer compostable disposables offer post-consumer composting. Polystyrene was eliminated from campus in 2008.
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A brief description of any discounts offered to customers who use reusable containers (e.g. mugs) instead of disposable or compostable containers in to-go food service operations:
Dining Services offers a $0.25 reusable mug discount at every coffee-serving location on campus. This discount applies to all drip coffee and tea. A $0.25 discount is also offered for customers that use our reusable to-go container.
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A brief description of other dining services waste minimization programs and initiatives:
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The website URL where information about the institution’s waste minimization initiatives is available:
Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
While figures entered for the "Weighted Campus Users" calculations are from FY06, sustainability@BU was only able to collect CY06 data for "waste generated." Because both are 12-month time periods and share a 6-month overlap, we regard them as comparable.
The information presented here is self-reported. While AASHE staff review portions of all STARS reports and institutions are welcome to seek additional forms of review, the data in STARS reports are not verified by AASHE. If you believe any of this information is erroneous or inconsistent with credit criteria, please review the process for inquiring about the information reported by an institution or simply email your inquiry to stars@aashe.org.