Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Playing catch-up

This post from Treehugger just gives me an excuse to berate Queen's about how much catch-up they have to do on the sustainability front. Basically, it's a story about University of Calgary's initiative to provide free bikes for students to travel around campus. And while we have the Yellow Bike Action here in Kingston, it's a community group effort, not the university. The bike program itself is part of a broader Sustainability Initiative.

Now, having done research on campus sustainability, we already knew that UBC and UVic were ahead of us in this category, not to mention many US universities. UofC pulling ahead just goes to show how hesitant Queen's is to change. A student position was finally created by the AMS to study and possibly coordinate sustainability efforts, and that was with much teeth-pulling from my friend Anjali Helferty.

The problem isn't that there isn't enough students willing to be involved. The problem is the lack of support from the Administration. And while Campus Planning can say that they've all these great projects in progress, there's no one to market them. There's no broad strategy to coordinate efforts. Queen's is planning to build this great LEED-certified building, but buildings won't create sustainability. A shift in mentality does. A change in how Queen's operate does. Now, Anjali deserves all the praise for her work, but until the administration is willing to put money behind creating a real sustainability officer within the administration structure and give it real power, Queen's will continue to fall behind with its piecemeal projects even as it's trying to catch up with the 21st century.

It's so easy too. It already has most of its students living in less than elegant housing in close proximity to the campus. Take advantage of that. You have engineers who construct an elaborate set piece for their formal. You have a show like "From the Ground Up", where professional contractors and subcontractors oversee youths building and renovating homes. Why not do a similar thing, except have the university pay the pros to oversee student volunteers who build a house or two over the summer. In exchange, they learn extra skills, they get to live there for a year rent-free and now Queen's has new housing to rent to other students. Incorporate some simple environmental design like strawbale walls, solar orientation, and efficient appliances, and you have a sustainable house. Obviously, it's not so clear-cut and there'd be some legal issues to deal with. But this is me coming up with an idea at 1:21 AM. Imagine someone who's paid to come up with these ideas and make them work...?

That's what we need. Or we won't even get to where U of C is.

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