Sioux Falls Green Project
Every one counts.
Live Greener At School
Water
- Step one: educate students, teachers and parents about the importance of environmental concern.
- Hold contests for students to capture their best ideas on going green and get them involved.
- Conduct a water audit. Check faucets for dripping and toilets for incessant running. A leaky faucet wastes more than 20 gallons of water a day.
- Upgrade all toilets. Older models use as much as 4.5 gallons per flush.
- Install automatic water switches in bathrooms.
- Install waterless urinals. Incorporating 22 waterless urinals would save 1 million gallons of water a year.
- Use low-flow shower heads in locker rooms.
- Keep hot water pipes insulated.
- Encourage cleaning crews to use less water for mopping.
- Install motion sensor lights where possible. Otherwise, post signs near light switches reminding students to turn them off after leaving the room.
- In the cafeteria, reuse water from heating tables to water plants.
- Wash school vehicles and buses less often.
- If you have a pool, lower the water amount to reduce water splashing out.
- Set your lawn sprinklers for more days in between watering. Install an automatic rain shut-off device on sprinkler systems. Or, best of all, plant native plants in your lawn that don’t require additional water.
- Have a recycle bin in every classroom. Buy 100% recycled content paper.
- Print tests, worksheets and other documents on a double-sided printer.
- Reuse the second side of single-page documents.
- Reuse paper clips.
- Set up a composting system. This can serve as an educational opportunity for children as well.
- Buy trashcans made from recycled steel, instead of plastic.
- Seek out a recycler who will take electronics—old computers, cell phones, etc.
- Encourage students to pack lunches in reusable containers: lunchbox, drink containers, silverware, etc.
- Buy crayons made from soybean oil, not paraffin wax (made from petroleum). Buy markers that are water-based and that do not use toxic ink.
- Use refillable pens. Pens are made from nonrenewable resources and contain harmful chemicals.
- Install adequate bike racks and encourage students who are close to bike to school.
- Set up carpooling systems. Better yet, reward families for using the bus. A full bus can travel five miles on the energy it takes a car to go one mile.
- Keep classrooms between 69 and 73 degrees.
- Instead of letters, communicate electronically with families.
- Install motion sensor lights where possible.
- Install whiteboards instead of blackboards (chalk is bad for air quality). Use non-toxic, dry-erase markers.
- Maximize natural lighting with windows.
- Improve indoor air quality with plants and energy-saving air filters. Open windows when possible. Incorporate a fresh-air ventilation system to replace stale indoor air with fresh air from outdoors.
- Avoid solvents, adhesives, sealants and paints with toxic chemicals. Use brands that are water based rather than petroleum-derived.
- Install motion sensors and dimmable controls for lighting.
- Outdoors, consider landscaping that will provide shade and cooling to your building: leafy trees, awnings and eaves.
- Replace your cleaning products with natural ones— non-toxic cleaning products are as easy as baking soda, vinegar, lemon and soap.
- Install ceiling fans to take the place of air conditioning when possible.
- Look for carpets made from recycled materials.
