Westchester Goes Green

March 3, 2008

The impact of Eimatai was colossal on the students of Westchester Hebrew High School. The students that attended the program from WHHS put to use all the skills they learned from the program. The students Nili Yaari, Robbie Schrag, Dani Haramati Daniel Revkin, Hannah Lubart, and Lexi Milstien managed to put together a school-wide recycling program. With the help of their Eimatai advisor Caren Abitbol, they utilized all their leadership traits developed on the program, to inspire other students in their school to be more aware of the environment. The teens got their high school to dedicate one week to environmental awareness and ran programs that included a speaker from the NY Times, an environmental debate, and a recycling program.

A truly heated debate over environmental issues hastily engulfed the school during environmental awareness week. The school got an expert speaker working for the NY Times to come and discuss his views on the topic. “Once the debate got going it seemed like a perpetual stream of views were being discussed” said Nili Yarari, “I didn’t realize how many people were truly interested in this issue”. The debate portrayed countless opinions on the topic and gave several solutions for the issues being discussed. Teachers and students worked together to try and propose possible ways in which the students could help solve some of the issues. One major solution proposed was a school recycling program.

The WHHS recycling program is indubitably unique. It is an unprecedented effort at WHHS to try and help reduce wastes in the environment. The school set up boxes around the building each with a grade number on it. The goal of it was to see which grade could recycle the most and the winner would receive a luxurious pizza party. The program rapidly took off and the competition was on. The program not only did an outstanding effort in reducing garbage but also helped to unite each grade slightly more. The grades had to work together to make sure everyone was recycling, because otherwise they would stand no chance in winning. “It was so cool” said Dani Haramati, “my whole grade joined together with one set goal. I know it sounds cheesy but I really felt like we were a family”. In the end, while the juniors won, the atmosphere in the school hinted at a school-wide victory.

Eimatai truly had a profound effect on the students of WHHS. Even those whom did not attend the program were still able to feel a part of it because of the environmental awareness week. The program set a recycling precedent in WHHS that will surely not fade any time soon. All in all the goals set on that fateful weekend in Baltimore of achieving a cleaner school in WHHS have without question been achieved. It just goes to show you that a little leadership goes along way.


All of those Old Cell Phones

January 16, 2008

Look around your house, and you may find that like most Americans, you have  a bunch of old cell phones just lying around not being used. In fact, over 150 million cell phones are taken out of service each year in America alone. That is over 400,000 cell phones per day! The image above is just a sampling of those 150 million phones. (For more photos of how much waste Americans produce, checks out these shocking photographs by Chris Jordan).

The EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) has launched a new effort called “Recycle Your Cellphone: It’s an easy call!” to get people to start recycling old cell phones.

Aside from just being more garbage that has to go somewhere (landfills are filling up!), the batteries for these phones are pretty detrimental to the environment.

So thankfully, there are a number of ways you can recycle an old cell phone with very little effort. Different cell phone providers (Verizon, T-Mobile…) have different recycling policies, but Sprint will take any phone from anywhere.

In order to publicize the scale of this issue, and artist named Chris Jordan had photographed the awesome amounts of waste that Americans produce each year. Chris want’s people to realize how much waste we produce, and think more about Reusing, Reducing, and Recycling. Check out this great interview with Chris and Steven Colbert on the Colbert Report.

Recently, the NY Times featured this issue in the Sunday Magazine, and really delved into the issue of cell phone waste a recycling.

You can arrange a cell phone recylcing drive in your school, and send the phones to a number of places that will refurbish the phones, or recylce them. Some will also donate some money to the charity of your choice for each phone donated. For one example of this kind of organization, check out Collective Good.


Another Kind of Green – HANC

December 24, 2007
HANC
The Hebrew Academy of Nassau County is preparing for a revolution. And not just any revolution. HANC Eimatai Emissaries are leading the school on a mission to change the way students interact with their local environment and the larger global environment. The Eimatai Emissaries recognize that HANC students value giving back to those who give to them. HANC students understand that the world shares a responsibility to the future. So, the Eimatai Emissaries have instituted a new environmental initiative dubbed, “Another Kind of Green.” After all, “Im lo achshav, eimatai?”- if not now, when?
We live in a non-renewable world. Every day, valuable resources that are taken from the Earth are wasted. If nothing is done to preserve the precious materials we are so generously blessed with, we will be left with nothing. Only 27 percent of newspapers in the United States are recycled, and 500,000 trees must be cut down to produce each week’s Sunday newspaper. It is easy to think that we, as students, are powerless and cannot attack this problem. The HANC Eimatai representatives have decided to break free of this way of thinking and actively fight to save the environment. We may not be able to drastically alter our lifestyles to go entirely “green”. Yet, we can take the first steps in the right direction to save our planet and our futures. Therefore, HANC is launching its first environmental initiative: “Another Kind of Green”. We hope to diminish the amount of renewable products wasted through a school-wide recycling program in coalition with local sanitation departments. Remember, seventeen trees are saved for every ton of paper recycled! By starting small, we hope to spread our initiative to other schools.
The recycling campaign represents one facet of HANC’s efforts to preserve the global environment. We recognize another environment in need of protection. A city close to our hearts and constantly on our minds: HANC’s sister city: Sderot.Sderot, an Israeli settlement, lies one kilometer from the Gaza Strip and the Palestinian town of Beit Hanoun. Since the beginning of the Second Intifada, Sderot has been under constant rocket fire from Qassam rockets launched by Hamas and Islamic Jihad. These rockets have caused death and injuries, as well as significant damage to homes and property. In May, 2007, a significant increase in shelling from Gaza prompted the temporary evacuation of thousands of residents from their homes. We seek to aid those in need in Sderot by preserving and rebuilding their precious environment.
The devastating damage is occurring across an ocean, yet HANC students empathize with the residents of their sister city. The HANC Eimatai Emissaries seek to intensify the bond between HANC and Sderot by collecting money to support rebuilding and beautification efforts. To connect with rebuilding efforts overseas, display unity with Sderot and deeply root a sense of environmental appreciation in HANC, students will take part in planting a garden on school grounds. Through their initiative, HANC students hope to emerge into the future as leaders and pioneers with the goal of helping the environment and global community.

Tips to Green your Home

December 21, 2007
  • Unplug phone chargers, televisions, computers and televisions when not in use. It can be annoying, but in the average home, 40% of all electricity is used to power appliances that are turned off. Make it a family tradition to unplug appliances before Shabbat, and plug them back in after havdalah.
  • Make sure to turn off the faucet when you are brushing your teeth. Try to only turn on the shower when you’re about to get in; it will warm up pretty quickly. Try taking a shorter shower – even a few minutes shorter can help. The average shower flow is 5 gallons per minute.
  • Get timers for your lights over Shabbat. If you’re not using the lights anyway, why not have them turn off?
  • If it’s safe, ride your bike or walk to your friend’s house instead of driving. Try carpooling to school if possible.
  • Buy a couple of Compact Fluorescent Lights (CFL) to replace some incandescent light bulbs. If every family in America changed one incandescent bulb to a CFL, it would be as energy efficient as taking 1.3 million cars off the road.
  • On a sunny day, open the window shades instead of turning on the lights.
  • When you aren’t using real dishes, use reusable and recyclable plates and cups, such as paper, not styrofoam.
  • Find out what fruits and vegetables are grown locally, and try to eat more of those when they’re in season than produce that has to be shipped in from across the world.
  • When you go shopping, try to bring your own bag with you so you don’t have to get a plastic shopping bag. If you are going to a lot of stores, try to only take a bag if what you buy doesn’t fit in the bag you got from the last store.
  • Get snacks from the refrigerator like a surgeon -  get in and out as quickly as will get the job done. The longer you keep that door open, the more energy it will take to re-cool the fridge when you close the door.

Tips to Green your School

December 21, 2007
  • When you leave a classroom, make sure to turn the lights off. Schools can save up to $1000 a month on electric bills by turning off lights in unused rooms.
  • Conduct a recycling contest in your school between the different grades. Educate about which items are recyclable and which are not.
  • Use both sides of paper in your notebooks, and use recycled paper when possible.
  • Hang signs (with permission) by the photo copiers in school to remind people to make double-sided copies, and not make too many extra copies.

Greensumption

November 22, 2007

Everywhere you look, you can buy something green. Nearly every industry is trying to figure out a way to sell something that will save the planet. But maybe there’s something wrong with that whole notion. This video will give you a whole new perspective on what it means to “Go Green.”

As the great one once sang, “It’s not that easy bein’ green.”

Are you going to change the way you live your life after watching this video? Is it realistic to ask people to dump their cars and just ride bikes?

Isn’t it still better to buy green than buy something else?