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A Push for Green Campuses
Education: Activists pressure community college trustees to use
taxpayer funds for environmentally friendly structures.
source: Zanto
Peabody LA Times 2001.10.31
To environmentalists, the $1.2 billion that taxpayers approved
for the Los Angeles Community College District to upgrade its nine
campuses provides an opportunity to think green.
Groups from the Sierra Club to newly formed student chapters of
Greenpeace have joined forces to pressure the college trustees to
construct their new classrooms
and offices as "green" buildings using recycled wood,
solar power and super-efficient air conditioning.
The activists say the massive project could set a standard for
environmentally friendly construction across the state and give
the movement its highest visibility yet.
Scattered public and residential green projects in Southern California
do not approach the scope of the district's venture, which will
add 50 to 60 buildings in the city. But supporters and opponents
agree the costs associated with such innovation would mean fewer
new buildings in the overcrowded 120,000-student district.
Activists estimate that such technology could raise construction
costs by 10% to 20%, but could reduce energy bills by 50% over the
long term.
District trustees, scheduled to consider the issue Nov. 14, will
have to balance the short-term costs of construction against long-term
savings expected from lower
energy bills and longer-lasting buildings.
District Chancellor Mark Drummond said he will "aggressively
press for ecologically friendly campuses." He acknowledged,
however, that some may view the
proposals as expensive bells and whistles that would mean sacrificing
classroom space and parking.
But Martin Schlageter, Los Angeles/Orange County conservation coordinator
for the Sierra Club, said environmentally friendly construction
on the campuses could
help "others overcome fear of the unknown. "The sheer
quantity of the investment would make this project stand out worldwide,"
Schlageter said.
Examples of green construction include the Santa Monica Police
Station, where toilets are flushed with waste water from sinks;
and the Lake View Terrace branch
of the Los Angeles Public Library, where floors made of easily renewable
bamboo were installed.
Campus activists sponsored three public forums in the last two
weeks to rally support. About 1,000 students signed petitions and
letters to the board of trustees
urging members to consider an eco-friendly approach, said Glenn
Hurowitz, field organizer for Greenpeace.
Anticipating the need for an ethnically diverse coalition, Hurowitz
urged campus leaders at Southwest, Valley and East Los Angeles colleges,
with their heavily black
and Latino student bodies, to support the effort.
Maria Grunwald, the district's student trustee and a Valley College
sophomore, said organizations on all nine campuses have voted to
support the environmentalists,
although most current students will have graduated before the first
building is erected. "We are young, and we were brought up
in an environmentally conscious time," Grunwald said. "Besides,
we will still live here when the buildings are there 40 years from
now, and our kids will go to these colleges."
Environmentalists have at least two allies on the seven-member
board: Mona Field and Nancy Pearlman. Field, a Glendale Community
College politics instructor,
said she will support any conservation measure the district can
afford. Pearlman was elected in April and represents more constituents
than any other Green Party
officeholder in the nation. "It will be very telling whether
my colleagues want to make a major policy stand on green buildings
now that we finally have the money," Pearlman said.
Although there has not been much vocal opposition, the effort will
likely meet resistance when a vote nears. Kris Vosburgh, executive
director of Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Assn., said if the public is
going to get fewer structures, the district should have told voters
before the election in April. "It says to me there's a possibility
they won't get all the project completed, which will compel them
to come back and ask for more bond money," Vosburgh said.
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