Showing posts with label Local Action Projects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Local Action Projects. Show all posts
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Serve & Celebrate

This weekend was our annual Serve & Celebrate day, to kick off Homecoming week by helping others. I worked with a group in my neighborhood (Independence Plaza in Historic Northeast Kansas City) doing a neighborhood cleanup. The Neighborhood Council does a cleanup about once a month throughout the summer, and the help of the Jewell students made a huge difference in what we were able to accomplish this time. Here are some highlights:

  • We collected two huge roll-off dumpsters, one of trash and the other of yard waste. A lot of it was larger items that neighbors came to drop off, but much of it was just blowing around on our streets. Litter is a constant problem in poor neighborhoods, and we greatly appreciate the extra help in gathering up this garbage.
  • With the help of the local Jackson County representative Scott Burnett, we cut down some overgrown weed-trees in an 80 year old woman's back yard that were threatening her power lines. This problem had been plaguing this elderly neighbor for a long time, and our service would have cost her hundreds of dollars to get taken care of, which on a fixed income would have been impossible for her to get done.
  • The Jewell students found a large sum of cash lying in a vacant lot, so they deliberated about what to do with it and decided to turn the money that was very likely originally meant for bad and make a donation to some friends making a positive difference in the NE, Cherith Brook.
  • We picked up about 60 tires that were illegally dumped on the streets and alleys to be recycled.
  • One of my neighbors has been clearing out an empty and neglected lot (owned by a real estate firm in Colorado, one of many absent landlords who take poor care of urban lots in cities around the country). There are many kids who play in and around this lot, so this neighbor is clearing it out for their safety. The Jewell students hauled four or five truck loads of this yard waste over to the dumpster.
  • Even if taken great care of, there is more yard waste in our city lots that the City will actually pick up, so cleanups like this are a way that the Independence Plaza Neighborhood Council tries to alleviate this problem. Thanks to the help of the Jewell students, we were able to assist many neighbors who do not have the resources for hauling this waste away at their own expense.









What did you do for Serve & Celebrate? E-mail your stories to honset@william.jewell.edu and we'll add them to the CJS blog.

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Results!

The results of our 350 Green Project are in!

362 people joined up with the Center, SIFE, and Bridging the Gap to reduce their individual carbon footprints. This surpassed our goal of 350 people!

Together, all 362 of us have contributed to a total annual carbon savings of 1,334,661 pounds.

We had our prize drawing on Friday to celebrate our success, and the winners were Matt Drabenstott, Phillip Cuendet, Rebecca Ewing, and Alixandra Dennis. Congratulations to the winners, and to the whole Jewell community for making such a huge difference!

This marks the end of our Jewell campaign, but you can continue to sign up at Bridging the Gap. If you haven't done so, join this important effort and Do Five Green Things!

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Is 350 your number?

Welcome to a blog that talks about issues of justice and sustainability. What is important about the number 350? This is the acceptable level of parts per million of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere. Right now we are at approximately 387. Awareness needs to increase so that the number decreases. To learn more go to http://www.350.org. Here at Jewell we are interested in two numbers. We need 350 people to pledge that they will do 5 things to reduce their personal carbon footprint. The other number will be the tons of carbon dioxide that is reduced through these voluntary reductions. Can the actions of one person make a difference?