
I left the place feeling like somehow I made someone think about how small changes in our daily habits can make the difference.
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Watch the short video below to learn the basics.
You'll be an Campus Ecochallenge expert in no time!
""We don't need a handful of people doing zero waste perfectly. We need millions of people doing it imperfectly."Anne-Marie Bonneau"
I will avoid buying toxic plastics - including polycarbonate, polystyrene and polyvinyl - and instead replace them with durable non-plastic options.
My goal is to use less the dryer machine when doing laundry.
Exercise is a great stress blaster! I will exercise for 15 minute(s) each day.
I will spend 60 minutes researching environmental justice and environmental racism concerns in my region, who is affected by them, and local initiatives to address these concerns.
I will host a watch party to screen a documentary about an issue that matters to me.
I will switch to washing my clothes in cold water, saving up to 133 lbs of CO2 a month and 1,600 lbs of CO2 over the course of the next year.
If at all possible, I will not accept any disposable bags when making purchases.
Contamination prevents what is recyclable from being recycled. I will spend 10 minutes researching which materials are accepted by local haulers or drop stations in my community and recycle only those items.
I will reduce the amount of paper mail that I receive by 0.11lbs (0.05kg) a day or 3.3lbs (1.6kg) a month by opting into paperless billing, ending unwanted subscriptions and opting out of junk mail.
Cheap, single-use items and disposable packaging end up blowing around as litter more often in poor and POC-majority neighborhoods. I will find out how I can limit single-use items and do my best to limit the waste I generate.
I will decide which social or environmental issue in my community is most important to me and tell 1 friends and/or classmates each day about the issue.
I will save up to 20 gallons (75 L) of water each day by taking 5-minute showers.