Eastern Michigan U Installs Green Roof

The 3,000-square-foot rooftop garden, installed atop the university's new Science Complex, contains 16 plant species and is expected to save the university $3,600 in energy costs per year.

Emory U Establishes Diversity Website

In an effort to bring students and faculty to a single location where they can learn more about ongoing diversity initiatives, the university has launched a new website in collaboration with the Office of Community and Diversity. The diversity web portal includes a section for news and announcements regarding diversity, lists upcoming diversity events and enables users to search for diversity-related organizations and groups on campus.

Gay Mormon Students Have New Visibility at Brigham Young U

A recent panel discussion of what it’s like to be gay and Mormon signaled a new attitude toward being gay at the university, which is owned and run by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Church teachings condemn sexual relationships between members of the same sex, but in recent years the university has adjusted its Honor Code to allow students to identify as gay without facing sanctions, reports The Chronicle of Higher Education.

Genesee CC Debuts Solar Powered Weather Station

The wireless weather monitoring station is powered through solar energy stored in rechargeable batteries. Current temperature and weather conditions are available via the college's Facebook page. The station was funded through the college’s Foundation President’s Innovation Award Program.

Local Food Co-op Comes to U Mass Med School

(U.S.): The Massachusetts Local Food Cooperative has begun offering monthly distribution at the Worcester campus due to the efforts of a group of volunteers at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. On the first Friday of every month, student and faculty volunteers travel to the distribution center in Westminster to pick up orders from the university. The goods are then brought back and unloaded to a waiting pick-up area set up in the old Medical School lobby.

Luther College Completes Community Wind Power Project

A 1.6-megawatt wind turbine owned and operated by Luther College Wind Energy Project is providing the college and community with wind-generated electrical power. The power generated by the turbine is being sold to Alliant Energy under a long-term power purchase agreement and the project's Renewable Energy Certificates are being sold to the college.

Maharishi U Mgmt Debuts Net-Zero Sustainable Living Center

Together, the building's 58 solar panels and 100-foot wind turbine are capable of producing 25 kilowatts, contributing to the building's ability to produce more energy than it consumes annually. Other energy-saving features include a heat pump and geothermal tubing, extensive use of daylighting, and strategic placement of windows and verandas. As more funds are raised, the university plans to take the center completely off the grid with respect to electricity, heating, cooling, water and waste.

Mendocino College Introduces Sustainable Technology Program

Students will have the opportunity to obtain certificates in construction, renewable energy and residential performance and efficiency. Beyond the general core courses, one business elective is required.

Public Institutions Caught in Maintenance Funding Conundrum

In what Inside Higher Ed is calling "the other debt crisis," public colleges and universities are issuing their own debt to finance facility renovations, reports the online news source. Facing aging campuses, several years of backlogged maintenance projects, increased competition for students and little hope that states are going to fund the construction they need, institutions are "now catching up for several years of not being funded appropriately." Institutions that can't issue cheap debt are faced with choosing whether to hold off on projects (leading to an aging and potentially unsafe campus and more expensive renovations in the future), or funding projects from their operating budgets, potentially siphoning off resources for other priorities like faculty salaries and student services.

Rhode Island College Graduates to Sport Recycled Plastic Gowns

Each cap and gown will keep 23 used plastic bottles from winding up in landfills. Students will also have an opportunity to donate their gowns to be recycled into carpets.

San Francisco State U Earns Diverse Campus Designation

More than 35 percent of students enrolled at San Francisco State University (California) in fall 2011 identified as Asian American, Native American or Pacific Islander, earning recognition by the U.S. Department of Education as one of the nation's most diverse campuses. The designation allows the university to apply for federal funding aimed at increasing the recruitment, retention and graduation of students from all underrepresented backgrounds.

Seattle U Gives Water Bottle Proceeds to Haiti Water Project

Proceeds from the university's sale of reusable water bottles are now going to an Engineers Without Borders student chapter project that makes clean water accessible to Haitians. In its first 18 months, the initiative has raised $4,400.

Temple U Hosts Sustainability Week

Focused on a call to action to "learn by doing," the week’s events included workshops and demonstrations that offer staff, students and faculty an opportunity to develop useful pursuits that can lead to a more sustainable lifestyle.

Texas A&M Green Roof to Engage Wide Variety of Students

Next fall, students from a variety of academic programs at the university will begin collaborating on an interdisciplinary, three-year project to install and monitor a green roof and living wall atop a campus building. The project is funded by a $100,000 university reallocation grant for enhancing students’ preparation for the workplace and society through high-impact learning experiences. The project will also raise awareness of "green" technologies and provide opportunities for additional student research.

Tribal Colleges Focus on Preparing Students for Workforce

As the U.S. focuses on increasing college attainment and reducing unemployment, tribal colleges—some located on reservations with low education rates and high unemployment—are increasing their efforts to teach and train more of their populations, reports a recent Chronicle of Higher Education article. Six tribal colleges are the latest to join a growing list of community colleges involved in Breaking Through, an initiative developed by advocacy groups Jobs for the Future and the National Council for Workforce Education that includes comprehensive support services and remedial work embedded in credit-bearing courses.

U Florida Launches Adopt-A-'Swamp' Program

Student organizations will have an opportunity to clean and maintain conservation areas on campus through the Office of Sustainability’s new Adopt-A-"Swamp" program. At the start of the 2012-2013 academic year, participants will be responsible for keeping a selected area clean by picking up litter, removing invasive species and other tasks, for one year.

U Georgia Enlists Goats for Creek Clean Up

With $3,000 from the university's student green fee, eight goats are now cleaning up a campus creek by eating the non-native plant species. Additional green fee money will go toward time-lapse equipment to document the progress of the clean-up.

Unity College Partners to Raise Chickens for Food Security

Unity College (Maine) students have partnered with the Waldo County Technical Center to grow broiler chickens in support of hunger relief efforts in Waldo County. The students are developing management plans, delivering animal care and learning more about how local agriculture can work to improve food security.

U North Carolina Partners to Keep Mattresses from Landfill

The University of North Carolina at Charlotte's new mattress provider for on-campus housing uses a recycling and re-manufacturing process that includes the on-site removal and collection of old mattresses. The company deconstructs the mattresses and reuses or recycles all components. The university is saving 30 percent per mattress with the new contract, and expects to replace 800 mattresses annually; a savings of $20,000 per year.

U Oregon to Expand Urban Farm Curriculum Opportunities

The university’s Urban Farm project, a program of the Landscape Architecture department and the Student Sustainability Center, has received $42,000 from the Associated Students of the University of Oregon's Over-Realized Fund to help secure more land and resources to meet increasing student interest. The funding will expand the farm to three new lots and create another graduate teaching fellow position to help with hands-on instruction, allowing more students to be involved with the farm.

U South Florida Announces Green Energy Fund Awards

The university's Student Green Energy Fund Council has awarded a total of $269,510 to five approved proposals for energy-conserving projects around campus. Projects include the installation of lighting controls; software that will put computers in sleep mode when not in use; and upgrades to a campus building's heating, ventilation and cooling system.

Utah State U Completes Subterranean Thermal Energy Storage Tank

The tank holds two million gallons of water that will be used to improve the campus' air conditioning system. The university expects the $2.6 million tank to pay for itself over the next 20 years.

U Vermont to Install Solar Panels at Equine Farm

With $55,740 from its Clean Energy Fund, the university has announced a solar panel installation at its Miller Equine Farm. Students will have the opportunity to work with Vermont Solar & Wind Partnership Program and the Clean Energy Fund during the installation in May. The power generated will feed directly into the electrical grid.

Wilfrid Laurier U Energy Competition Saves $1.5K

Managed by sustainability representatives in the residence halls, the university's inaugural Residence Energy Competition saved $1,513 and averted 5,672 pounds of carbon dioxide.

Arizona State U Receives $27.5 M for Sustainability Efforts

The university’s Global Institute for Sustainability will use the gift from the Rob and Melani Walton Fund to develop and deploy solutions to sustainability challenges including energy, water, environment, climate, urbanization, social transformation and decision-making in local, national and global contexts. The fund will support sustainability efforts, which also include educating future leaders in sustainability, over the next five years.

Carnegie Mellon U Purchases Wind Power

The university has partnered with Renewable Choice Energy to offset 100 percent of its 2012 electricity consumption. The university purchased 116,000-megawatt hours of certified renewable energy credits sourced from wind farms located in the Midwest.

Central Michigan U Launches 'Bring Your Own Bottle' Campaign

In effort to raise environmental awareness and sustainability through small steps, the university’s Student Environmental Alliance has partnered with the Great Lakes Institute for Sustainable Systems to distribute 700 Bring Your Own Bottle (B.Y.O.B.) stickers around campus. Stickers have been placed near water fountains and trash cans to encourage the elimination of plastic water bottle waste.

Champlain College 'Kill-A-Watt' Winner Reduces Energy by 36%

The top energy savers of Sustain Champlain's annual energy reduction challenge among residence halls achieved a 36 percent savings in electricity use. The winner, Rowell Hall, was determined through a point system split between actual electricity reduction and spreading awareness through programming.

Columbia U Commits $30 M to Increasing Faculty Diversity

The funds will be dedicated to the recruitment and support of female and underrepresented minority scholars, most notably in the schools involved in science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields. The provost’s office will organize a competition between the schools to allocate the funds. A committee of senior faculty members will distribute the money based on the quality of candidates put forward, the degree to which the school is supporting current faculty, and the consistency of the enforcement of the diversity plans over time.

Florida Gulf Coast U Students Initiate 'Food Forest'

Funded by student fees, the half-acre permaculture garden mimics the seven layers of a natural forest and is divided into irrigation zones. In addition to producing edible plants, students cite the initiative's ability to create community.

Kent State U Earns Tree USA Status for Fourth Consecutive Year

The national Arbor Day Foundation program honors colleges and universities for promoting healthy urban forest management and engaging the campus community in environmental stewardship. Kent State University (Ohio) planted 132 trees last year including replacement trees for those that died and trees for new construction projects.

Luther College Pilots Employee CSA Program

The college's Wellness and Sustainability programs are collaborating to reimburse faculty and staff that take part in community supported agriculture (CSA) programs, take two cooking classes and become part of two book groups offered this summer that support a holistic approach to food education. The college is working with three local farms to provide CSAs to the campus community.

Rice U Renovation Earns LEED Silver

Sustainable features of the renovation of Will Rice College include salvaged roofing materials, water-efficient fixtures, occupancy sensors for lights and 54 new bicycle parking spots.

SEI Suspends College Sustainability Report Card

The Sustainable Endowments Institute (SEI) has announced that it is suspending the production of its College Sustainability Report Card, reports the Chronicle of Higher Education, to focus on its Billion Dollar Green Challenge. “Funders are giving preference to the proactive mission of the Billion Dollar Green Challenge, thus leaving limited resources to produce the next edition of the Report Card,” the SEI founder wrote in a letter to institutions.

Student Loan Debt Surpasses $1 Trillion Mark

A preliminary finding from a study by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau puts total student debt outstanding at more than $1 trillion, roughly 16 percent higher than an estimate earlier this year by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Reports the Wall Street Journal, the bureau attributes the rise in student debt to a surge in Americans going to college in recent years to escape the weak labor market, and tuition increases to offset cuts in state funding.

Technology Forging New Avenues to Higher Education Access

From the $99-a-month introductory courses at for-profit UniversityNow's new venture, New Charter University, to free courses provided through Stanford University (California) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a recent Chronicle of Higher Education article profiles experiments that use technology to rethink the economics of higher education.

Towson U Rolls Out Free Bike Rental Program

The pilot program is starting with 25 bicycles that students have the opportunity to rent free of charge for the entire semester. The program was developed to offer an alternative mode of transportation that is affordable and promotes a healthy lifestyle.

U California Los Angeles Traffic Drops to 1990 Levels

After focusing on lowering the number of drive-alone commuters, vehicle counts are at the lowest level since 1990, when the university first began measuring. Nearly 53 percent of employees currently drive to work alone and 25 percent of students drive alone. The university is also working to increase the number of employees that use alternative transportation methods as part of its Climate Action Plan.

U California Santa Barbara Announces Green Grant Awards

Thirteen projects were selected to receive awards totaling $172,932 including four solar power array installations, a website that will allow the campus community to track energy use, hydration stations and a Green Gateway procurement program.

U Florida Fraternity House Installs Solar Array

Beta Theta Pi has initiated a 10-kilowatt solar array on the roof of its campus house that is expected to provide as much as 20 percent of the house's energy use per year. The fraternity received a $20,000 rebate from the campus' energy provider for the $44,000 system, and a $10,000 loan from the university that fraternity members are paying off with 1,000 service hours on campus energy-efficiency projects over five years.

U Florida Student Senate Passes Green Energy Fund

The unanimously passed fund will be used for student-proposed projects to lower energy consumption and electricity costs on campus. The $6 per semester fee is expected to generate $600,000 annually.

U New Hampshire Names Sustainability Art Contest Winners

The student winners received the most “like’s” and comments on Facebook, YouTube and Flickr. The winning image, "Windmill," and video, "Sustainability through Knowledge," are on display in the university museum.

U New Hampshire Students Launch 'Friday Night Lights Out'

This grassroots effort, started by undergraduate students, mobilizes students at the start of the weekend to turn off lights and other appliances left on in academic buildings. The students have calculated that their efforts save the university about $200 per week.

Unity College Steps Up Access to Clean Drinking Water

In answer to a campus student survey, the college has installed new water coolers in residence halls that use water from existing plumbing, and new fixtures on water fountains in public spaces that make filling water bottles easier.

U Texas Arlington Launches Master’s in Real Estate-Sustainability

The program, slated to begin in May, is designed to teach students the mechanics of sustainable project development and evaluation. Students will take 15 hours of sustainability courses including "Sustainable Investing" and "Real Estate Analysis."

U Texas Austin Installs Solar Charger for Student Use

Located outside the campus library, the solar power charging station allows students to charge a variety of electrical devices. The project was proposed and funded by the Green Fee Committee.

U Wisconsin-Oshkosh Hosts Social Justice Week

To reinforce that being "green" is only one dimension of being "sustainable," the university's Social Justice Week will introduce campus and community participants to a variety of thought leaders and topics related to social justice on the local, state and national level.

Western Michigan U Kicks Off First SustainabiliBASH

The university’s Office for Sustainability has collaborated with Students for a Sustainable Earth to launch this event, which will include gardening activities, composting demonstrations, community and campus presentations, nature walks and bike rides. The free event is open to the students, faculty, staff and community members.

Western Washington U Installs Solar Panels

The energy produced by 24 solar panels on the roof of the Environmental Studies building will feed directly into the university’s electrical grid. A Student Green Energy Fee funded the $167,500 array, which is expected to be operational this month.

West Virginia U Pilots Alumni Water Kiosk Invention

Evive Station, a bottle cleaning and filling kiosk created by university alumni, is making its pilot debut on campus. About 4,300 students signed up to use the kiosk, which cleans and refills bottles with cold, filtered water. The university hopes that the convenient system will encourage resource conservation among students.