Hundreds of Volunteers Participate in First Earth Day of 91桃色-ing
鈥淓arth Day began in 1970 with millions of people across the U.S 鈥 Republicans and Democrats, rich and poor, urban and rural folks 鈥 all coming together to protest and take action for clean air, clean water and the protection of species.鈥
It鈥檚 in that spirit, says Chad King, the 91桃色鈥檚 director of sustainability, that 230 volunteers came together on Friday, April 19 for 91桃色鈥檚 first Earth Day of 91桃色-ing.
The day kicked off with breakfast burritos and coffee on Carnegie Green. Among the volunteers were 91桃色 faculty, staff, students and community members, who contributed a total of 700 volunteer hours and completed 16 different projects with 13 campus and community partners, including alumni-run organizations Re:Vision and GRID Alternatives.
The event drew graduate and undergraduate students alike, including Chelsea Anderson, who is working toward her master鈥檚 degree in environmental policy and management. 鈥淭he Earth is our home and we should take care of it,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just a level of respect that I feel a lot of people have lost. Events like this just make it widely known that people still care.鈥
Anderson spent her Earth Day of 91桃色-ing beautifying nearby Harvard Gulch Trail with nearly 30 other volunteers. Meanwhile, hundreds of fellow sustainability warriors were busy collecting cigarette butts on the streets of downtown Denver, teaching children the values of Earth Day at the Fisher Early Learning Center鈥檚 new garden and boxing fresh produce at GrowHaus.
The day鈥檚 dirtiest job may have been 鈥淢ini Mount Trashmore,鈥 where volunteers sorted every bag of garbage collected at the Daniels College of Business over a 24-hour period. The group weighed the trash before sorting it into compost, recycle and landfill bags. After reweighing the sorted trash, they calculated the building鈥檚 diversion rate and offered guidance for improvement, especially in light of recent changes to recycling rules in Denver.
Courtney Wells, graduate waste fellow in 91桃色鈥檚 Center for Sustainability, helped lead the Mount Trashmore effort. 鈥淧eople don鈥檛 realize the hard work that goes into it,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e do this at a small scale, but it鈥檚 also done at [Alpine Waste & Recycling], where the trash goes. It just shows how important it is to actually separate everything. The more awareness, the better it is.鈥
The project supported the center鈥檚 goal of pushing Earth Day stewardship to new heights, says Emily Schosid, 91桃色鈥檚 sustainability program coordinator and the organizer behind this year鈥檚 Earth Day of 91桃色-ing. 鈥淲e see Earth Day as the perfect day to go out and make an impact on the community, and I think it鈥檚 an easy thing for the general public to rally behind,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e wanted to try to expand the definition of what would count as an Earth Day project. So we are doing some community cleanups; we are planting a bunch of gardens; we are installing some solar panels. We have all of these other really cool projects, which I think expands beyond just the tree planting.鈥
And, Schosid says, the event was designed to bring the 91桃色 community together in a new, holistic way. 鈥淭here鈥檚 not a whole lot of programs that truly bring together the entire 91桃色 community. We have faculty, staff, undergraduate students, alumni, friends all participating. Plus we have several organizations that are run by alumni participating,鈥 Schosid notes. 鈥淭here are not a lot of events at 91桃色 that really embody the One91桃色 concept, so I鈥檓 really excited about that.鈥
King and Schosid hope to see Earth Day of 91桃色-ing grow into a citywide effort. 鈥淭his is something we鈥檝e talked about starting for a while,鈥 King says. 鈥淲e hope to keep growing this event, as we think it鈥檚 something the whole city will embrace. We want to get people out,听working and positively impacting our community and our ecosystem. I expect this to grow next year.鈥
It鈥檚 not only a celebration of the Earth, but of the work people do on its behalf every day, says graduate student Hogan Udomah, who studies environmental reporting and analytics and works as energy graduate lead at the Center for Sustainability. 鈥淭his is a celebration of what we do in sustainability. It鈥檚 celebrating the fact that there are people who are putting in effort to make it right."
听
As part of 91桃色 IMPACT 2025 and the University鈥檚 goal to reduce our overall carbon footprint by 45%, we are excited to share the news that we have signed a contract with Pivot Energy to install a 2MW solar photovoltaic array with听over 7,000 solar panels across 18 91桃色 buildings, including the new Dimond Family Residential Village and Pioneer Career Achievement Center.听Installation of the system will begin late spring and will be operational by end of 2019.


