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OPINION & EDITORIAL

Not easy being green with lazy students

Henry Weiner

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by Henry Weiner
Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Madison students and residents have been known to take pride in their environmental awareness, concern and practices. But, if walking down Mifflin Street on a Monday night in November is any indication, that pride may be slightly misplaced.

Often on my way to the library, for example, I simultaneously stub my toe on a Carlo Rossi bottle half-smashed on the sidewalk, see multiple lights on in a house that a girl is leaving and locking and pass a trash bin with aluminum cans piled on top of a bunch of paper plates with Ian's crusts still stuck to them.

All of these signs point to young adults who are either unforgivably ignorant or unabashedly apathetic about what they do to the environment they live in, all the while campaigning against drilling into our pristine Alaskan wilderness.

While I grew up in a metro area — the Twin Cities — with a population more than six times that of Madison's, I had never encountered such rampantly littered streets as when I first noticed the neighborhoods around campus. Bottles, cans, newspapers, cups, cigarettes, tipped over trash cans, puke, broken glass, fliers for free Domino's … the list goes on. I thought this place was a haven of progressive thinking on environmental subjects such as pollution and global warming.

Yet every day I walk into a world of misguided litter-ati where no one seems to care that it looks like a typhoon ripped through the Milwaukee's Best factory and dumped all of its contents onto the boulevard.

Madison residents produce 4.5 pounds of waste per person per day according to The Capital Times. With 41,466 students enrolled at UW-Madison, that's 186,597 pounds, or 93.3 tons, of waste created by students alone. This massive amount of garbage gets thrown into landfills where it will sit until well after we're gone (plastic bags can take up to 1,000 years to decompose).

With winter right around the corner, other energy issues, besides just litter and trash, are bound to rear their nasty heads. By leaving lights on and wasting heat and water, students harm not only Mother Nature, but also their own pocketbooks.

Recently, on Channel3000.com, a list of "Eco-tips" was posted with some eye-popping factoids on it. According to the site, a leaky toilet can waste up to 5,000 gallons of water per year, and lowering your thermostat two degrees before going to bed in the winter can reduce CO2 emissions by 400 pounds per year.

Or, for you true litter-ati out there, did you know that three quarts of oil are needed to make a brand-new ink cartridge?

Now, unless you somehow never go to the bathroom, turn on the heat or print out a paper at 3 o'clock the night before it's due — these statistics should concern you. 

Even though the United States has taken large steps in the right direction in terms of pollution and recycling — there has been fourfold increase in percentage of waste recycled from 1990 to 2000 for example — much more must be done. UW-Madison students, as the supposed best and brightest in regards to this issue, need to step up their efforts to help with environmental conservation.

It all starts with the individual. I hate to get all corny on you like this, but a quote by an 18th-century German writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe sums it up perfectly, "Let everyone sweep in front of his own door, and the whole world will be clean." If we start by taking responsibility for our own actions, waste and pollution can be cut drastically.

Next time you have the impulse to throw an empty cup into the bushes on a Saturday night, think again. Take the effort to walk an extra 45 feet to the nearest trash can — the city just gave out 67,000 new ones to Madison residents — and drop it in. The next time your roommate leaves the light on in his or her room, turn it off, and lower the temperature in your house when you're gone or asleep.

And please, jiggle the handle on that toilet. It's a small step that has a large consequence for the planet and for your own good.

Henry Weiner (hweiner@wisc.edu) is a sophomore majoring in political science.


Anonymous (November 7, 2007 @ 10:14am):

amen. good article.

Anonymous (November 7, 2007 @ 12:22pm):

Only 50% of Americans believe in conservation, the other 50% are "Conservatives." Ironic, don't you think?

Anonymous (November 7, 2007 @ 1:30pm):

What's ironic is that a huge anmount of money for conservation is provided by hunters and fishers - I think they are mostly "Conservatives."

What's ironic is all the "Liberals" who fly around in carbon spewing private jets to promote "conservation", or travel first-class in carbon spewing jets to useless "conservation" conferences.

Anonymous (November 7, 2007 @ 1:47pm):

"Conservatives?" Ironic?

You think many "Conservatives" will be on this junket?

The would-be regulators of the world's climate (and your wallet) will be jetting to Bali this December for Ban Ki-Moon's next UN weather fest: "UN Climate Change Conference 2007." UN policy allows even the lowlier UN staffers to travel business class on long-haul flights (your tax dollars at work), the better to arrive wined, dined and ready to hit the ground ...and the beaches ... and the golf courses ... and the tennis courts -- running. Apparently there is so much to discuss that the conference will run for a full fortnight, from Dec. 3-14, at Bali's seaside luxury resort of Nusa Dua.

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