{"id":2566,"date":"2008-05-04T16:13:13","date_gmt":"2008-05-04T21:13:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/inside.augsburg.edu\/news\/?p=2566"},"modified":"2008-05-04T16:13:13","modified_gmt":"2008-05-04T21:13:13","slug":"auggies-really-do-get-their-hands-dirty","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/news\/2008\/05\/04\/auggies-really-do-get-their-hands-dirty\/","title":{"rendered":"Auggies really do get their hands dirty"},"content":{"rendered":"
You’ve done it — thrown your perfectly recyclable plastic water bottle into the garbage can. Perhaps there wasn’t a recycling bin nearby, or you just didn’t care. Whatever the case, chances are you’ve been one of many Americans, and Auggies, to throw your recyclables into the trash.<\/p>\n
Recently, a group of Augsburg students and facilities supervisor Tom Ruffaner got down and dirty and dug through two-days’ worth of our garbage. Their purpose? To get to the bottom of Augsburg’s well-intentioned recycling program.<\/p>\n
Senior Donnie McCarthy was frustrated by the Augsburg community’s lackadaisical attitude toward recycling. In the wake of this spring’s successful Focus the Nation teach-in, McCarthy asked Tim Dougherty of the Center for Service, Work, and Learning for advice on how to show students what was happening.<\/p>\n
With the help of Dougherty and Ruffaner, McCarthy and junior Jake Quarstad gathered students to conduct a trash audit. The group collected garbage from Christensen Center, Sverdrup Hall, Mortenson Hall, and the Science building. They opened the bags and separated the contents into four categories — cans and bottles, compostable materials, paper, and trash. Each portion was weighed to determine the percent of the total.<\/p>\n
The results showed that 68.8% of the garbage is either compostable or recyclable. According to McCarthy’s calculations, out of an estimated 113,303 pounds of garbage per year, 77,953 pounds could be recycled or composted. McCarthy said, “I was hoping the results wouldn’t be so dire.”<\/p>\n