One
hundred students at Duchesne Elementary School in Florissant
take shifts working in their Paper Recycling Factory after
school. They create and sell a variety of reusable and decorative
items made of used colored paper. They have also recycled
more than 91 tons of white and other paper fibers in a "Paper
Retriever" bin which raises funds, too!
4
area schools, one youth
win environmental awards
Four St. Louis area schools and one Chesterfield youth have
been given regional awards for their efforts to improve
the local environment.
Schools
honored were:
- Duchesne
Elementary School in Florissant, Mo.
- St. Jacob
Elementary School in Madison County, Illinois.
- Fox Junior
High School and Rockport Heights Elementary School in
Arnold.
Also,
student Carter Stomberg won the Young Peoples' Environmental
Excellence Award for a unique individual project. He is
a junior high student in Chesterfield.
In
addition, two St. Louis area teachers received environmental
excellence awards. They were Janet Crews of Wydown Middle
School in Clayton and Marcie Young of McCray-Dewey School
in Troy, Ill.
A
dozen other businesses, non-profit groups, communities and
government organizations were honored at ceremonies held
Monday, May 20.
The
awards were given by the Choose Environmental Excellence-Gateway
Region (CEE-GR) organization. The non-profit group recognizes
area efforts to clean and preserve the environment.
Stromberg's
award was sponsored by the St. Louis Metropolitan Sewer
District (MSD).
Laura
Neuman is the director of CEE-GR. She said this year's environmental
"champions" took extraordinary steps to help the
environment. She added they did so "in economical,
creative and fun ways that will inspire others to follow
their lead."
Information
on how you and your school can participate can be found
on the CEE-GR's website at www.ceegr.org.
The website provides hundreds of environmental project ideas.
CEE-GR
serves greater St. Louis metro counties on both sides of
the Mississippi River.
Chesterfield
student Stromberg's MSD award honored his efforts to post
pollution warnings on area storm water drains. He got fellow
boy scouts to help him stencil warnings on 50 drains in
the Chesterfield area.
The
signs said: "Dump No Waste; Drains to Stream."
That meant that water going down those drains didn't go
through any water treatment plant. Rather, the rain water
went directly into surface streams.
The
areas marked by Stromberg included several schools and two
Chesterfield parks.
Here
are details of the school programs that attracted CEE-GR
attention:
- Duchesne
Elementary School in Florissant, Mo.
Teacher
Steve Marsden started an Environmental Club in 1998. This
year, over 100 students were involved.
As
an after-school project, the club runs a paper factory that
generates new products from the school's colored paper waste.
Also, nearly 100 tons of white paper has been recycled since
1999.
Recycling
efforts also involve aluminum cans, plastic bags, six-pack
rings, printer and ink-jet cartridges, clothing and textiles.
The
group also beautifies school grounds with bird feeders,
gardens, recycled plastic benches and trees.
- Rockport
Heights Elementary and Fox Junior High in the Fox C-6
School District.
Kids
have hosted six drive-through recycling collection events
which collected 200 vehicle loads of materials. They also
have recycled more than 200 tons of fiber through the Abitibi
"Paper Retriever" program.
They've
recycled printer and ink cartridges and plastic bags. Also,
over 300 pounds of cafeteria waste have been composted.
Another
project involves collecting old linens for the Jefferson
County Animal Shelter. The kids have donated nearly 900
clean stuffed animals to disadvantaged families. The Fox
Recycling Club sells hundreds of reused-material items at
the school's craft fair.
- St.
Jacob Elementary School in St. Jacob, Ill.
The
school has received the Earth Flag/Banner from the Illinois
Department of Commerce for seven straight years. That's
for their efforts to collect at least three different types
of recyclables each year.
The
kids used their proceeds from the 2000 Madison County Recycling
Coordinator of the Year award to create a butterfly garden
for the school.
Also,
penny collections at the school have purchased 24 1/2 acres
of rainforest through the Nature Conservancy programs.
In
addition to collecting paper and plastic for recycling,
the school collected more than 1,200 pairs of eyeglasses
for use in the Lions Club's reuse program.