SCS gets high marks for recycling

SALISBURY — Salisbury Center School is doing well with its recycling program, according to Norm Staunton from the Northeast Resource Recovery Association. He visited the school  last week.

Staunton is part of a team that is visiting 220 schools between July of this year and December 2011, to evaluate recycling efforts and offer assistance, advice and resources.

Some of the visits (to towns with a population under 5,500) are funded by a grant from the federal Department of Agriculture; larger communities are evaluated with funds from the federal Environmental Protection Agency.

Staunton met with pre-kindergarten teacher Rebecca Gaschel-Clark, transfer station Manager Brian Bartram, Head Custodian Jeff Paine and Principal Chris Butwill.

They inspected the three recycling bins in the hallway leading up to the cafeteria; they took a look at the facilities in Gaschel-Clark’s classroom and the teacher’s lounge, and even went down to the garbage room.

Paine said that recycling has tripled in the last 12 months, with a corresponding drop in municipal solid waste (aka garbage) going to the transfer station.

Gaschel-Clark said that part of the program is to instill recycling in the students’ lives and daily routines, so it becomes automatic. She said her students will react if they see someone throwing recyclables into the regular garbage can.

Staunton, using an assessment survey called Star of Sustainability, asked a lot of technical questions — what does the school do with toner cartridges (they go back to Staples for a credit, and the school is eliminating individual printers and going to a network machine); what kind of educational initiatives are under way or planned (a booklet for the fourth grade, a student environmental group, assemblies with Bartram); how is recycling incorporated into the daily routine (announcements, recycling reminders, teachers go over what goes in which bin).

Staunton asked what the school’s biggest recycling problem was. “Milk cartons in the garbage,� said Paine.

“We try to make it a way of life with the pre-schoolers� said Gaschel-Clark. “Not a cute little project, but something that becomes second nature.�

“In an ideal world what would be next?� asked Staunton.

“Milk that doesn’t smell,� said Paine.

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