51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ

51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ’ Green Initiative Fund: Turning Student Ideas into Sustainable Action


51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ’ Office of Sustainability will award up to $2,000 for students’ sustainability projects (Naomi Friedman, left)

By Tess Miller β€˜27

College campuses are some of the best places to advance sustainable practicesβ€”and 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ is no exception. Recently, the College launched its Green Initiative Fund (previously called the Innovation and Sustainability Fund), to provide students up to $2,000 to fund sustainability projects on campus.

β€œThis fund was created to support student leadership and offer resources to help them implement projects themselves,” says Naomi Friedman, sustainability coordinator at 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ. , the College’s dining partner, helped establish the fund and contributes to it annually. 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ donors also can support the fund to create more opportunities for students to flex their creative muscles to promote sustainability.

For years, 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ has made strides toward becoming a more sustainable campus. In 2008, President Lori Bettison-Varga created the Presidential Advisory Council on Sustainability, which is now the Sustainability Committee. Over the next decade, the College introduced new initiatives, such as the , which allows students, faculty, and staff to rent bikes on a 24-hour basis and provides a raffle where students can win a bike to use throughout the academic year. 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ Scrapps, launched in 2017, encourages students to donate dorm items to promote reuse and decrease waste, and the campus olive harvest invites the 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ community to collect the olives from the campus trees to make Additionally, 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ has revived publishing its to track progress toward carbon neutrality.

β€œClimate change is already impacting our campus,” Friedman says. β€œAnything that we can do to mitigate effects or adapt to changes is so important for 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ’ longevity and to ensure that future students have the best planet that they can.”

A mechanism for student leadership at 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ

Students have a significant influence on campus sustainability efforts. In addition to the Green Bike Program, 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ Scrapps, and the Olive Harvestβ€”all of which included student leadershipβ€”every year 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ hosts the Sustainability Fair to connect clubs, organizations, and departments from The Claremont Colleges that focus on sustainability. Not only does the fair bring the 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ community together, says Friedman, it also inspires students, faculty, and staff to establish their own sustainable practices on campus.


Student clubs like 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ Scrapps have a long history of leading campus sustainability initiatives

β€œColleges are great places to innovate and try to find creative solutions for the climate crisis,” Friedman points out. β€œNo one knows the 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ campus like the people who live and study here every day. [They] can use that intimate understanding of campus to develop creative, innovative solutions to help make 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ a more sustainable place.”

These collaborations are only one of the many reasons college campuses like 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ are incubators for earth-conscious practices. Here, students can share outcomes from their sustainability projects with peers and other institutions to expand their impact. Access to funding is another benefit, allowing students to experiment with theories in a low-stakes, high-impact environment.

β€œStudents are why we’re here, so I try to meet with them to understand the issues they’re seeing and discuss proposed solutions. They have a great influence on what I prioritize,” adds Friedman. β€œAs 51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ invests more in student-led sustainability practices, it empowers everyone in our community, including students and faculty, to get involved. That’s really exciting!”

51ΑΤΖζΘλΏΪ’s 2025 Day of Giving is raising support for sustainability initiatives! to make a gift.

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