Skip site navigation
Campus Life

Sustainable Developments

Grant Program Greens Campus

fish, water bottle, frog, person holding bag of groceries, person holding stack of serving trays, dresser with two drawers
  • September 06, 2024
  • More articles By Karen Shih ’09
  • Illustration by Charlene Prosser Castillo

For today’s Terps, scraping stir-fry scraps into compost bins at the Stamp Student Union, picking up free lamps and cereal bowls from the Terp to Terp ReUse Store and swimming in a moss-filtered pool at Eppley Recreation Center are part of everyday life.

That’s thanks to the Sustainability Fund, which has funded nearly 300 environmentally friendly projects over the past 15 years.

“It’s really rewarding to see how these new initiatives have become successful,” says Scott Lupin, director of the Office of Sustainability. “They’ve grown from grassroots to become part of the culture of campus.”

Students, faculty and staff can apply each year for a grant to support sustainability-related research, internships and operational improvements. The fund has increased as the Student Government Association has voted to raise student fees; next year, a record $850,000 in grants will be disbursed.

High-impact projects include:

person hold stack of serving trays

A student idea to collect unserved food from dining halls and donate it to local shelters received a small grant over a decade ago. Now, the initiative operates on 195 campuses and has recovered more than 16.5 million pounds of food.

water bottle with UMD stickers

Long before Stanley cups went viral, a grant supported the installation of filtered water-filling stations across campus. Now, there are more than 100, preventing the use of millions of single-use plastic water bottles.

dresser with two drawers

This project collects gently used dorm essentials like lamps and storage solutions to pass on to other students for free—and keeps the items out of landfills.

fish

Slowing the flow of water as it heads toward the Anacostia River and stabilizing the creek bed have improved the region’s water quality and led to the return of wildlife like fish and toads.

Issue

Fall 2024

Types

Campus Life

Post a Comment

Leave a Reply

The name field cannot be left blank

A valid and complete email address is required

The comment field cannot be left blank

Related Articles

Winter 2025

Sports Briefs

Terp Races to NCAA Cross Country Championship; Men’s Lacrosse Defensive Coordinator Earns Top Assistant Coach Honor

Winter 2025

Shooting for Success, Fueled by Family

With Passed-Down Perseverance, Shyanne Sellers Eyes Championship Run