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- Associated Project(s):Attached Files:
EPA's 10th Annual Campus Rainworks Challenge
Associated Project(s):“Dear Faculty Members,
I hope you and your students are enjoying a safe start to the academic year.
EPA is pleased to launch its 10th annual Campus RainWorks Challenge, a green infrastructure design competition for American colleges and universities that seeks to engage with the next generation of environmental professionals and showcase the environmental, economic, and social benefits of green infrastructure practices. Stormwater pollution is a problem that impacts public health and water quality in communities across the country. The Campus RainWorks Challenge invites today’s students to be part of the solution.
To learn more about Campus RainWorks check out the official 2021 Campus RainWorks Challenge Competition Brief. The brief contains details on the challenge's design categories, submission requirements, and rules for participation.
Calendar
Registration: September 1 – October 1, 2021
Deadline for Entries: December 10, 2021
Winners Announced: Spring 2022
Please share this announcement with college students and faculty in your networks. If you have questions about the Campus RainWorks Challenge please direct them to RainWorks@epa.gov.
I hope that you and your students will consider participating and help celebrate 10 years of Campus RainWorks.”
-Matt King
“Good afternoon: several of you were involved in an email chain about establishing a interdisciplinary student chapter of the IAFSM, others were involved in the USEPA Campus Rainworks Challenge in previous years, others have been part of the ISEE Land & Water SWATteam. I am writing to see if we can coordinate among our disciplines/departments and help interested students put together a team for this challenge.
As you know, in 2017 UIUC won this design competition with a team that represented many disciplines across campus. I strongly believe that our success in 2017 was directly related to the many disciplines/perspectives of the team. I have forwarded the announcement for this challenge to students in my classes and already have a few that are interested. I am hoping that this year we can help our students from our different disciplines connect for this challenge. I am willing to serve as a faculty advisor; I think it would be great if we could have advisors representing our different areas. Please let me know your thoughts/interest in this.
Thanks for your consideration.”
-Art Schmidt
“Hey Professor Schmidt,
Thank you so much for working at this! Sorry for not responding right away. We are interested and I just asked the group if they would like to meet with you (web meet) next week. I figure they will, but it’s nice to ask. What is your availability? Did you get much feedback from other campus sectors? Rolph Pendall seemed very interested.”
-Brian Chaille (09/14/2021)
“Hi, Brian:
Really good to hear from you. I would love to meet and see what can happen. I had about half dozen CEE students express interest. Eliana Brown said that she would be happy to help. No response yet from anyone else. I wonder if some other groups/areas are already doing a team by themselves or more likely my email got buried in all the beginning of semester emails. I really hope that we can get a cross-disciplinary cohort of students interested in this. I’ve copied many of the people from the original email in case this did get lost in the shuffle.”
-Art Schmidt (09/14/2021)
“Hi all, especially faculty/instructors:
To back up Prof. Schmidt's comments in his original email, I strongly encourage the CEE students to work together with LA and UP students on the Campus RainWorks Challenge. For obvious reasons, it makes the project stronger, the solutions better, and helps the students gain an experience of the working world and appreciation for the skills, knowledge, and talents across campus. Other disciplines would enhance the project further.
What's the easiest way for the CEE students to meet potential collaborators outside of their disciplines? Back in 2017 while guest lecturing for LA 452, I invited the CEEs to pitch the project for 5 min and they did the rest. Could be as simple as that. As Art mentions below, that team won first prize.
I added Bridgette Moen, current LA 452 instructor, to this email. And Prof. Andrea Faber-Taylor as her students in HORT 344 Biodiversity and Aesthetics may be interested too.”
-Eliana Brown (09/15/2021)
2021 Recognition from Tree Campus Higher Education
Associated Project(s):Attached is a letter from the president of the Arbor Day Foundation congratulating our campus for once again receiving recognition as a Tree Campus Higher Education institution.
Attached Files:Bike Day 2021 held on September 14, 2021
Associated Project(s):Bike Day 2021 was organized on September 14, 2021! Here are some of the numbers from the events from Bike Day 2021.
Bike to Work Day:
- Held in the morning from 7 - 10 am
- Record-breaking event with 16 welcoming stations in Champaign County, including 9 on-campus
- Record 802 pre-registrations to attend the event and more than 150 walk-in registrations
- University Housing provided refreshments to all campus welcoming stations
- iSEE produced a video highlighting the event
Light the Night:
- Held in the evening from 4 - 7 pm
- Three locations: Alma Mater, Hallene Gateway, and Campus Bike Center
- 40 volunteers for the event
- installed nearly 750 light sets (front and rear)
General feedback was very positive from the campus community members. Several mentioned that holding these events in September felt like a welcoming event and gave the returning and new students an opportunity to explore the campus and community on bike and learn about the bike program at the beginning of school year!
The Bike Month Planning team and Light the Night Planning teams are considering organizing both of these events in the fall semester going forward.
Green Rooftop Proposal for Newmark Civil Engineering Lab
Associated Project(s):President of "Students for Environmental Concerns", Alec Van Patten, reached out to propose a green rooftop project for a building on campus. Morgan White replied suggesting the Newmark Civil Engineering Lab first floor roof as the building for the project. A meeting to discuss further details was scheduled between Morgan White, Alec Van Patten, Betry Liggett, and Brent Lewis.
Picture of the Newmark Civil Engineering Lab roof is attached.
Attached Files:iCAP Transportation Team 2021-22 Charge Letter
Associated Project(s):Today, Madhu Khanna, Interim Director for the Institute for Sustainability, Energy, and Environment distributed the following charge letter to the members of the iCAP Transportation team.
Attached Files:iCAP Energy Team 2021-22 Charge Letter
Associated Project(s):Today, Madhu Khanna, Interim Director for the Institute for Sustainability, Energy, and Environment distributed the following charge letter to the members of the iCAP Energy team.
Attached Files:Zero Waste Team Charge Letter
Associated Project(s):iSEE's Interim Director Madhu Khanna sent the Zero Waste iCAP Team a formal charge letter on Tuesday, September 14 detailing their campus sustainability duties this academic year. Full letter is attached.
Attached Files:Engagement Team Charge Letter
Associated Project(s):iSEE's Interim Director Madhu Khanna sent the Engagement iCAP Team a formal charge letter on Tuesday, September 14 detailing their campus sustainability duties this academic year. Full letter is attached.
Attached Files:Land and Water iCAP Team 2021-2022 Charge Letter
Associated Project(s):Charge letter from Interim Director Madhu Khanna to the Land and Water iCAP Team for the 2021-2022 academic year
Attached Files:Resilience Team Charge Letter
Associated Project(s):iSEE's Interim Director Madhu Khanna sent the Resilience iCAP Team a formal charge letter on Tuesday, September 14 detailing the team's responsibilities for the upcoming year. The letter is attached.
Attached Files:City of Urbana Sustainability Advisory Commission September 2021 meeting
Associated Project(s):Scott Tess, at the City of Urbana presented the results of an analysis of tree canopy as it related to environmental justice at the Sustainability Advisory Commission meeting for the City of Urbana. Follow the link below for the results!
https://www.urbanaillinois.us/node/9608
Sensor Pilot Update
Associated Project(s):From: Hiser, Daniel William <dwhiser@illinois.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, September 14, 2021 9:25 AM
To: Trimble, Syd <sydneyt2@illinois.edu>; Varney, Peter W <pvarney@illinois.edu>
Subject: RE: Sensor Pilot Update?*Update
I don’t have access to the app that would allow me to program the RFID tags. The tags were purchased from atlasRFIDstore.com and the watch that is supposed to do something with them is SLS RFID Solutions www.slsrfid.com. I took a minimal amount of time to try to piece those clues together with no success and have not returned to the subject. The system is still just a pilot and will remain as such until we have a dedicated Zero Waste Coordinator.
The arm system on our truck had the ARM400 and power cable go bad on it so between calls with loadman to diagnose the issue and for them to finally get us the parts resulted in a 3-month lapse in data and the parts are evidently not covered under warranty (not that it's significant other than I think they should be) The system itself when working “properly” requires frequent calibration and it “learns” the driver. This is not good for us as drivers change and the results are frequent negative loads and misreadings.
I think you can get data from these trucks to an extent, but at the same time I would be hesitant to use it as a method to charge customers or with great certainty know the weights are accurate. At this time we are not equipped to consistently troubleshoot the system or have garage staff on standby to fix issues with the system as they arise. Long story short, it's almost good at what it's supposed to do but it will require more babysitting than I am willing to put into it at this time.
Thank you,
Dan Hiser
F&S Fleet Operations
Direct (217) 300-8545
From: Sydney Trimble <sydneyt2@illinois.edu>
Sent: Friday, September 10, 2021 2:22 PM
To: Hiser, Daniel William <dwhiser@illinois.edu>; Varney, Peter W <pvarney@illinois.edu>
Subject: Fwd: Sensor Pilot Update?Sounds like we gotta talk about this pretty soon. Dan, hopefully you got the time to come up with an update on this?
Best,
Syd
From: Janssen, April Lynn <alj5@illinois.edu>
Date: Fri, Sep 10, 2021 at 1:55 PM
Subject: Sensor Pilot Update?
To: Trimble, Syd <sydneyt2@illinois.edu>
Cc: Samaras, Zach <zsamaras@illinois.edu>Hi Sydney,
I hope this new semester and planning for your October audit is going great!
Quick question for you, we know from Shantanu (and keep referencing admirably) that F&S is/was implementing a six-month pilot program with weighing sensors installed on the lift arms a waste hauling truck, and that the weight recording, paired with the bar codes on each dumpster, enabled the University to track the weight of material collected from each dumpster. You know this story.
The point - could you provide us a brief update on how that’s going? Is the pilot over or is this now a standard practice? Is it Sensoneo technology or another? I definitely want to stop by next time I am in Champaign and see how this all works 😊 We just spoke with a hauler on that services a university here in Chicago and they could definitely benefit from this technology.
Enjoy your weekend!
April APRIL JANSSEN MAHAJAN
Sustainability Specialist
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Prairie Research Institute
Illinois Sustainable Technology Center
217-244-0469 | alj5@illinois.edu
www.istc.illinois.edu
Under the Illinois Freedom of Information Act any written communication to or from university employees regarding university business is a public record and may be subject to public disclosure.Get your office, chapter, and event certified green!
Associated Project(s):Reduce Energy Use on Campus By Going ‘Green’
The start of the semester is the perfect time to "green" our campus environment! Visit the Certified Greener Campus Programs page to learn about simple steps students, faculty, and staff can take to improve the sustainability of their workspaces, activities, and living environments through the Certified Green Office, Certified Green Events, and Certified Green Chapter programs.
Facilities & Services and iSEE have also developed a Greener Labs Inventory Toolkit to help analyze the energy used by lab equipment and identify opportunities for more sustainable lab practices. Together, all of these programs support the Illinois Climate Action Plan's goal of reducing energy consumption and promoting campus sustainability!
EJ Plan Summer 2021 Summary
Associated Project(s):Throughout the summer of 2021, I (Kimmy Chuang, iSEE intern, supervised by Meredith Moore) accomplished the following tasks to further the Environmental Justice Plan. Relevant documents documents attached.
1. Compile contact information for focus groups
Number and type of contacts were organized into the following:
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- Champaign Neighborhood Associations (16)
- Urbana Neighborhood Associations (8)
- Community Groups (10)
- Government Organizations (13)
- Social Justice Groups (8)
- Relevant UIUC Advisory Groups/Personnel (12)
Contacts were primarily found through Internet searches. Many of the groups were identified as relevant during Environmental Justice Committee meetings. Where possible or necessary, I’ve included notes and additional links.
2. Research other EJ plans to draft focus group questions
I drafted possible questions for focus group interviews through what I learned from the following EJ or similar Climate Justice Plans:
City of Providence’s Climate Justice Plan
- First, trained frontline community members in energy democracy through workshops by working with One Square World (equity and sustainability process consultancy). Then, conducted interviews of frontline community members along with citywide survey (survey results here)
- Favorite takeaway: Must fundamentally change the way policies are created and prioritize historically excluded communities. “Zip codes shouldn’t determine your health or economic outcomes.”
Little Village Environmental Justice Organization (LVEJO)
- Also hired consultant to conduct interviews and outreach
- One of their goals was “Base Building” where they have a local base of families, school/community/youth/labor/business leaders as well as strengthening coalitions with other EJ groups in the region
- Warren Lavey has worked with Kimberly Wasserman (LVEJO Director of Organizing)
National City Health and Environmental Justice Element (San Diego County, CA)
- First jurisdiction in California to adopt an EJ element and nationally recognized
- Contains useful definitions of “healthy food supply” and “universal design”
- Similar format to iCAP, ends every objective with “why is this important”
- San Diego county is currently conducting outreach for their county-wide EJ plan with an online survey that can be found here
3. Compile contact information of other municipalities with EJ plans
For the plans I reviewed above, I collected contact information for each municipality into a spreadsheet. The EJ Committee suggested that we reach out to other municipalities that had successfully written EJ plans to inform our process.
4. Review local engagement efforts to identify salient local environmental issues
Meredith and I’s original goal for the focus groups was to identify 4-5 of the most salient environmental issues in our community that our plan should address.These are issues that have been identified multiple times during EJ Committee discussions or through my research:
- Flooding (especially in the Garden Hills neighborhood)
- Toxic waste clean-up (mainly in the 5th and Hill neighborhood)
- Mahomet Aquifer contamination from Clinton landfill (allowing PCBs/toxic waste disposal)
- Heating/cooling centers (climate change preparedness)
Through my research, I identified four local public engagement efforts that could be relevant for our EJ plan:
Champaign County Community Health Plan 2021-2023
- Champaign Public Health Department conducted 4 assessments, 2 of the following contained engagement with residents
- Survey 634 community residents about strengths and weaknesses of the community – identified mental health, child abuse, gun violence, and infectious disease as top health concerns
- 25 community leaders from different agencies brainstormed about major threats/opportunities that they perceived with various issues and filled out a survey. Some issues include climate change, Mahomet Aquifer threatened by Clinton landfill, toxic waste disposal, drought
- Appendix includes all surveys used
- Useful maps showcasing racial diversity and other important demographics
Storm Water Management Plan
- Identified their own EJ areas
- Contains survey about storm-water specific issues
Champaign County Soil and Water Conservation District
- Currently soliciting feedback through customer survey here
- May be useful for phrasing questions about environmental services
Urbana Comprehensive Plan
- Ongoing engagement survey for Urbana’s new Comprehensive Plan, suggested for EJ by Scott Tess
Here are ideas from the iCAP as it was listed in the Appendix “Acknowledgements for future considerations” that may be relevant for EJ:
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- Reduce pollution in Boneyard Creek
- Identify places of heavy erosion, such as channel buffers and farms
- Implement curbside food and lawn waste pickup program for UC community to decrease per-household garbage volume
- Reduce mowing by 10% by 2022 to increase natural areas
5. Start conversations with other community members about EJ
Other than the Resilience iCAP Team and the EJ Committee, Meredith and I met with the following community members about EJ:
Gabe Lewis (Planner at CCRPC)
- Reached out through email and made him aware of EJ Plan efforts
Jessica Lehmkuhl, James Corbin II (Sustainability Advisory Commission)
- Met over Zoom, SAC is open to collaboration and want to be a part of our plan
Cassie Carroll
Met over Zoom about Cassie’s expertise in interviews/focus groups. The following are notes from our discussion:
- Suggested for us to reach out to Dr. Robin Jarrett (rjarrett@illinois.edu) at UIC who has experience in Human Dimensions to develop training for interviewer and more
- Told us that charettes (multi-day interviews/workshops) had been conducted in Washington Street Basin (possible follow-up item for us)
- Start with organizations we’re friendly with who have a broach reach and start base building
- Need to clarify how we will follow up with people after interviews and how much they want to be involved
- We should get buy-in from groups so they can actively participate in what we’re working on
- Possibly incentivize focus group participation through offering lunch etc.
- Recommended having person from community to lead focus groups, but they will need training
- They had 7 people actively working at her job where they worked with Ameren to understand how people could be more connected to energy-efficiency jobs
Moving Forward…
In this section, I will summarize what I had hoped to accomplish this summer, why we weren’t able to do so, and questions to consider as the EJ Plan moves forward.
Initially, I had planned to conduct focus groups this summer and analyze the results. However, after discussions with Meredith and the EJ Committee, we decided to delay the focus groups until we had more thorough knowledge about the best way to conduct them. The following are questions we have in mind, but aren’t sure how to proceed.
1. Scope of the EJ Plan
- What is the geographic range of the EJ plan?
- The iCAP cites the urbanized areas of Champaign, Urbana, and Savoy. But since EJ goals may be different from the iCAP goals, how do we define which areas will be included/excluded in the EJ Plan?
2. Vulnerability Assessments
- Geography students working for Meredith in Spring 2021 submitted a report that used available data but did not identify specific EJ areas.
- EJSCREEN, Solar for All, the previous Storm Water EJ Areas, and the Champaign GIS consortium can all be used. EJSCREEN may be sufficient for identifying vulnerable communities. All data and maps gathered can be found here.
3. Possible funding
- I researched groups in Illinois that have received Environmental Justice Grants from the EPA. There weren’t very many, but it may be helpful to reach out in the future
- Metropolitan Tenants Organization (MTO) “Chicago Healthy Homes Inspection Collaborative” (2016)
- Legal Council for Health Justice “Building Community Capacity to Address Lead Poisoning: Creating a Blueprint for “kNOw LEAD” App Development” (2019)
- Center for Neighborhood Technology “Helping the Chatham Neighborhood of Chicago Become Rain Ready” (2015)
4. Ownership of the EJ Committee
- Everybody on the committee is very passionate, but since they are all volunteering their time and have other commitments, it is sometimes difficult to determine ownership on initiatives.
This update is also attached as a report and was sent to Stacy Gloss, a member of the Resilience iCAP Team, who will be leading the EJ efforts this Fall.
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Update on Registration and Advertising for the 2021 Sustainability Competition for Undergraduates
Associated Project(s):“... We have 12 registered teams so far.
The registration deadline is Sept. 20...
We have seen an uptick in visitors to the competition website. Last week we were up from around 50 visitors in the first week of the semester to 2000 visitors in week 3.
But, those numbers have not translated to an increase in registrations.
We also have ads in The Daily Illini and on digital advertisement boards around campus. The Daily Illini last week reported 600 visitors a day to our digital ad.
Students will also be bombarded with social media messages this week. Illinois Public Affairs are doing that for us…”
-Leon Liebenberg (09/12/2021)
Teaching Associate Professor
Fellow: Center for Innovation in Teaching and Learning
Department of Mechanical Science and Engineering
University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignGFX Intro to Sustainability Presentation
Associated Project(s):Morgan White and Meredith Moore discussed sustainability programs and iCAP initiatives with GFX 177 Students.
Attached Files:iCAP Team Charge Letters
Associated Project(s):Attached are the charge letters sent to each of the iCAP Team members, on September 10 by iSEE interim director, Dr. Madhu Khanna.
Attached Files:
Energy iCAP Team Charge Letter 2021-2022.pdf
Engagement iCAP Team Charge Letter 2021-2022.pdf
Land and Water iCAP Team Charge Letter 2021-2022.pdf
Resilience iCAP Team Charge Letter 2021-2022.pdf
Transportation iCAP Team Charge Letter 2021-2022.pdf
Zero Waste iCAP Team Charge Letter 2021-2022.pdf
Education iCAP Team Charge Letter 2021-2022.pdf
SSC Semesterly Report: NSRC Composting
Associated Project(s):SSC received a semesterly report for Spring 2021 for the NSRC Composting project on 9/9/2021. Please see attached.
Attached Files:Video promoting Bike to Work Day and Light the Night 2021
Associated Project(s):iSEE produced a video to promote Bike to Work Day and Light the Night 2021 on Tuesday, September 14, 2021.
See the video here Bike Day 2021 on September 14 - Bike to Work Day and Light the Night!
