Mel Steinberg, Grade 7, Greenwich
Does GCS Reduce, Reuse, & Recycle?
My initial research question was this: Does
Greenwich Central School District (G.C.S.), specifically the
Junior-Senior High, use recycled paper products, and if not,
would it be cost-effective to do so? According to The
Resourceful Schools Project, recycling saves trees, landfill
space, and massive amounts of oil and electricity. Not only
would money be saved, but what about the environment? We wanted
to find the answers to these questions because G.C.S. currently
has a recycling program called S.T.O.P., Students To Oppose
Pollution. If our school is recycling paper, we want to know if
we are completing the recycling flow by also purchasing recycled
paper.
The answers to these questions were
searched for at the G.C.S. website,
www.greewichcsd.org, I couldn’t find them so I wrote an
email to Beth Ann Mosher of the Greenwich Central School
Business Office. We asked her a few questions about the school’s
2005-2006 budget and the paper products the school purchases.
Beth Ann Mosher informed us that the Greenwich schools purchase
their plain copy paper from Ricoh Corp. They buy 650 cases of
“virgin, not made from recycled product” plain copy paper, and
about 225 of these cases are used by the Junior-Senior High. The
plain white copy paper costs about $20.13 per case, thus the
high school spends about $4,500 on their copy paper. Mrs. Mosher
informed us that “…various amounts of pre 3-hole punched paper
and colored paper are also used,” and it is concluded from this
that this paper is not from recycled products either.
These were some of the questions that I had
asked Mrs. Mosher: “…how much of the Greenwich Central
Junior-Senior High School budget is spent on paper products such
as computer paper, lined paper, envelopes, and maintenance paper
products in the current of past school year?” This question was
not directly answered, but given the cost and amount of plain
white paper used, G.C.S. Junior-Senior High spends about $4,500.
But it is not know how much of the budget is spent on lined
paper, colored paper, or any other paper products.
I next asked, “…of those paper products,
what percent are made from recycled paper?”
This question was not directly answered
either, but it is concluded, to the best of our knowledge, that
little of G.C.S.’s paper products, other than the paper towels
made of 40% recycled fiber, are made from recycled paper.
“From where are the school’s paper products
purchased, and do they (the suppliers) offer recycled paper?”
www.ricoh-usa.com provided no information on their paper
products, let alone recycled paper products(edited).
My original hypothesis was that our school
used about 25% recycled paper products, but I was incorrect. To
the best of my knowledge, the Greenwich Central Junior-Senior
High uses little in the way of recycled paper products.