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Annual Update
2006 - 2007
Elemental
Mercury Collection and Reclamation Program
Bowling Green State University's Elemental
Mercury Collection and Reclamation Program formally
began in January 1998. The program involves the collection
and recycling of uncontaminated elemental mercury that
are present in a variety of devices. These sources include
thermometers, manometers, barometers, sphygmomanometers
(blood pressure measurement devices), mercury-containing
heating thermostats, mercury switches, as well as individual
containers of elemental mercury. The program is available
and FREE to individuals, academic institutions, small
businesses, industries, medical and dental facilities,
emergency response and other governmental agencies,
spill response companies, and any additional entity
having unwanted, uncontaminated elemental mercury.
Collaborative partners in the program
include Bowling Green State University, Ohio EPA (Division
of Emergency and Remedial Response), Rader Environmental
Services, Toledo Environmental Services, and OSPPERA
(Ohio Spill Planning, Prevention, and Emergency Response
Association). Other Ohio county and municipal agencies
and departments have also assisted in this effort.
The process involved in the program
is relatively straightforward. Those having the mercury
make contact with Bowling Green State University or
one of the main participants in the program to arrange
for the collection of the mercury. At the time of the
initial contact, instructions are provided for the proper
packaging of the container(s) and the date/time for
collection are set. The container(s) of mercury are
then collected by one of the program participants according
to the specific arrangements. The containers of mercury
are taken to Bowling Green State University. Here, the
mercury is consolidated by Rader Environmental Services.
As often as necessary, containers of
consolidated mercury are shipped to either Mercury Solutions
in transported to Environmental Recycling, Inc. of Bowling
Green, Ohio for initial processing. BGSU then sends
the containers of elemental mercury to either Mercury
Waste Solutions of Union Grove, Wisconsin or to Bethlehem
Apparatus Products, Inc. of Hellertown, PA to complete
the reclamation process. Bills-of-Lading are used during
the transport to provide a tracking mechanism as well
as to maintain weight data.
Since the program began, mercury has
been removed from a variety of sources throughout Ohio
as well as from locations in Indiana, southern Michigan,
and western Pennsylvania. Thus far, over 10,000 pounds
of elemental mercury have been collected and recycled.
Bowling Green State University has also
assisted in the removal of mercury-containing fever
thermometers from citizens throughout Ohio. Through
thermometer exchange projects (digital for mercury),
the University has collected and recycled over 10,000
fever thermometers from citizens in southeastern and
northwestern Ohio. The University has also assisted
municipalities, water treatment facilities, medical
facilities, and local health departments throughout
Ohio by arranging for the purchase of the digital thermometers
as well as by collecting and recycling the mercury-containing
thermometers received during their exchange programs.
In December of 2003, BGSU's Elemental
Mercury Collection Program became a National Waste Minimization
Partner. This program is sponsored by the US Environmental
Protection Agency and was developed to address 31 PBTs
(persistent, bio-accumulative, and toxic chemicals)
in the environment. BGSU is currently the only representative
in the "State and Local Government" category.
Within the Partnership Program. BGSU
established a goal of collecting 3,000 pounds of elemental
mercury over a period of three years beginning in January
of 2004. That goal was achieved in August of that year
with almost a third of the goal weight coming from the
renovation of the Sandusky Wastewater Treatment Plant.
To recognize that accomplishment, the
USEPA presented an achievement award to the University
and its mercury collection partners. The award was presented
on October 25, 2005 at the WasteWi$e Conference held
in Arlington, Virginia.
The Mercury Collection Program has submitted
a new collection goal as a part of the USEPA Partnership
Program - to collect 3,750 from April 2005 to April
2008. Since April 2005, the program has collected over
1,300 pounds.
Additional information on BGSU's Elemental
Mercury Collection Program can be accessed through a
web page dedicated to the program at: http://www.bgsu.edu/offices/envhs/mercury.htm.
Fire and Ice: Solar
Panels Energize Arena
BGSU has taken its first step toward
renewable energy with the installation of photovoltaic
panels on the roof of the Ice Arena. The project is
a partnership between the University and Bowling Green
municipal utilities. It has been nurtured along by the
strong working relationship between utilities director
Daryl Stockburger and Donald Scherer, professor emeritus
of philosophy and a longtime proponent of "green"
energy.
The utility is paying for the panels
through its Green Power Program. Utility customers may
opt to pay up to a 1.38 kilowatt-hours surcharge on
their electric bills to help the utility invest in renewable
energy. About 3 percent of the city's residents have
chosen to participate. Their dollars have helped fund
such projects as the wind turbines on U.S. 6. Another
source of funding comes from "Green Tags"
that citizens statewide may purchase under an agreement
between American Municipal Power-Ohio and Green Mountain
Energy, which helps offset the higher initial cost of
providing green energy. The utility also received a
$35,000 reimbursement grant from the Ohio Department
of Development's Office of Energy Efficiency for the
University partnership project.
The solar panels, located on the eastern
side of the middle of the arena's roof, will produce
31 kilowatts of energy per hour on a sunny day. When
they are operational in mid-September, BGSU will have
the second largest array in Ohio, and the energy they
produce will be "on the grid" for use in Bowling
Green and across the continent, according to Scherer.
"We're taking a phased-in approach,"
said Stockburger. "I'd like to add another 10 kwh
of photovoltaic energy a year. It's part of our plan
for diversifying our power supply."
The Ice A rena is a particularly good
spot to utilize solar energy because it consumes so
much power to keep the facility cold, especially in
the summer months when both overall demand and costs
are highest. "The solar panels fit perfectly into
that niche because they're offsetting our most expensive
power just when they're at the peak of their production,"
Stockburger said.
The new panels, produced by FirstSolar,
are being installed by John Witte, a certified solar
installer with Advanced Distributive Generation in Maumee.
Tim Burns, senior project manager in the Office of Design
and Construction, is overseeing the job.
The new panels will be featured in northwest
Ohio's Solar Energy Tour on Oct. 2, along with other
area sites of renewable energy including the wind turbines.
Jessica Belcher, an environmental policy major, planned
the regional tour through an environmental studies internship.
"There's the potential for a lot
of technologies to be tested," Stockburger said
of the project, which has also drawn the attention of
other renewable-energy companies. Ballard Power Systems
of Vancouver, Canada, is donating for two years an advanced,
30 kwh inverter, the "Ecostar Inverter," which
will change the direct current produced by solar energy
into the alternating current required to power lights
and motors. In return, BGSU will allow the company to
remotely monitor the equipment. The company's head engineer
will be in Bowling Green Friday (Sept. 10) for a test
run.
The first thing the panels will power
directly will be the fluorescent lights in the eastern
third of the Hall of Fame area of the arena. The University
is also testing a special ballast from Nex-Tek designed
to allow more efficient use of the energy generated.
"Because these ballasts use direct current when
it is available but switch seamlessly to standard alternating
current when the sun isn't shining, they use the direct
current more efficiently," according to Scherer.
"It's one more way we're being
extra green as a university besides cooperating with
the municipal utility," he said.
Through BGSU's Project EXCITE, which
focuses on creating hands-on K-12 science curriculum,
Scherer, Amy Boros and Michele Shafer have created a
Web site with information about solar energy for schoolchildren
and curriculum for teachers.
Boros and Shafer have planned a workshop
this month for some Bowling Green teachers to show them
how the Web site can fit into their teaching about renewable
energy.
A separate plan is for the Project EXCITE
Web site to be accessible at an informational kiosk
at the governor's mansion in Columbus, where solar panels
have also been installed on the former carriage house.
"We want to raise awareness about the importance
of renewable energy and use Bowling Green as a showcase,"
Scherer said.
Update from don Scherer, October 11,
2005
The solar panels themselves went
into service on Sept. 14, 2004. As of Sept. 13, 2005,
we had collected 28803 kwh DC, which inverted to 26561
kwh AC. After the right breakers were put into the breaker
boxes, on Sept. 15, 2004, the system functioned flawlessly
for the entire year, using the inverter Ballard donated
to the project in exchange for donated data on the array's
performance. These kw hours were generated by 30 kw
of PV; an additional 1 kw produced DC used without inversion
to feed 19 special ac/dc ballasts, manufactured by Nex-Tek,
feeding 38 T-8 fluorescent fixtures at the east end
of the Hall of Fame. These ballasts use dc to the extent
that it is available but seemlessly switch to ac whenever
or to the extent that dc is not available. Bowling Green
Municipal Utilities has contracted to install 10 more
kw of PV on the roof yet this fall. 5 of those kw will
run through the Ballard inverter; 5 are projected to
run through another Nex-Tek application that will allow
a 10 hp brinepump to operate as do the fluorescent fixtures,
i.e., using DC when and to the extent available, but
using AC when needed. Besides avoiding the inefficiency
of inversion, the Nex-Tek application allows the pump
to operate at various speeds for greater efficiency.
The Electric Vehicle Institute is the assigned agent
to test the Nex-Tek application for the Electric Vehicle
Research Institute. A study of the feasibility of renovating
the ice arena is underway. How to incorporate the use
of PV-generated electricity in the arena is a part of
that study.
More information about the project can
be found at its website: http://www.bgsu.edu/colleges/edhd/programs/excite/SolarEnergyBG/
Project
Brings
Environmental Learning to 5-9th Graders
Through a seven-year National Institutes
of Environmental Health Science grant, the Project EXCITE
(Environmental Health Science eXplorations through Cross-disciplinary
& Investigative Team Experiences) team uses locally
relevant Environmental Health Science topics to engage
4th to 9th grade students in valuable learning experiences
across several disciplinary areas. Project EXCITE emphasizes
problem based learning, interdisciplinary connections,
collaborative learning, and the use of technology.
School teams consisting of four teachers
representing various disciplines and a BGSU student
teacher complete two years of professional development
to design, implement, refine, and publish local Environmental
Health Science units using problem based learning strategies.
Student success goals include improved performance on
standardized achievement tests, increased identification
of environmental social responsibility, and participation
in culminating service learning projects.
For additional information, contact
the Project
Excite office.
Orphan
Chemical Recycling Program
BGSU has another waste minimization
initiative in the Orphan Chemical Recycling Program.
Beginning in 1994, BGSU has served as a clearinghouse
for useable but unwanted laboratory chemicals (orphans)
that may be found in various facilities and institutions.
The program addresses unnecessary disposal of these
materials in consideration that they may be needed by
others.
In the program, academic institutions,
research and development laboratories, governmental
facilities, and other similar entities inventory their
useable but unwanted chemicals. The data are then submitted
to BGSU's Safety and Health Coordinator who subsequently
consolidates the listings and places them on an internet
web site. Chemical information received includes the
chemical name, number of containers, total volume or
weight, and whether the containers have been opened.
Facilities and institutions having the
orphan chemical(s) maintain them at their own location
until they are requested. BGSU does not collect them
for storage at the University. The facility/institution
wanting to obtain an orphan or orphans contacts BGSU's
Safety and Health Coordinator who, in turn, contacts
the individual(s) having the chemical(s) and makes the
arrangements for transfer. Transfers of the orphan chemicals
are made in accordance with DOT and other governmental
requirements. The program is also free of charge to
those participating in the recycling program.
The benefits of this program are not
only those to the environment, but they also involve
financial considerations. For each transaction, there
are dual cost savings - those to the "giver"
for disposal costs and to the "receiver" for
purchase costs. Thus far, the program has been responsible
for transferring over 4,000 pounds of solids and 1,500
gallons of liquids. This translates into between $370,000
and $460,000 in cost savings.
Additional information can be found
on BGSU's
Orphan Chemical program web site.
Campus
Urged to 'Power Down'
As the leaves outside turn red, a flurry
of green is sprouting indoors across campus. Stickers
advising faculty, staff and students to "Power
Down" are appearing on light switches, computers
and office machines. In keeping with the adage "less
is more," the University is encouraging everyone
to conserve energy whenever possible by turning off
computers, lights, copiers, printers and other equipment
that uses electricity.
Spearheaded by the Office of Finance and Administration
and led by Craig Wittig, director of BGSU's recycling
program, Power Down aims to raise the campus community's
awareness that simple changes such as turning off a
light can have a large, cumulative impact. "There
are thousands of us using lights and office machines,"
Wittig said. "By making even these small changes,
we can have a very positive effect on our energy use
and cost savings."The mantra
for recycling is "reduce, reuse, recycle,"
which the University is attempting to apply to energy
consumption. While campus is doing well with recycling,
reducing consumption is also very important. "Recycling
has more of a global or national impact, but reducing
our consumption is something that really affects us
locally," Wittig said. "It all ties together."
The initiative began about two years ago when BGSU Environmental
Programs students conducted a study to estimate how
much power the University uses. They found that 96,347,000
kilowatt-hours of electricity are used on campus per
year-enough to supply more than 12,000 average American
homes with power for a year, Wittig said.Student
employees in recycling are now placing the Power Down
stickers in offices and academic departments. The stickers
are scheduled to go up in residence halls over winter
break. "We can all try to think of other small
ways we can save energy, such as setting our computers
to go to sleep after a period of time," Wittig
said.
Move-Out
Program
For the past three years the Office
of Residence Life has sponsored the "When You Move
Out, Don't Throw It Out" program in residence and
dining halls at the end of the spring semester. The
program is designed to encourage students to donate
food, clothing, personal items, furniture, and other
things that they might normally simply throw out. Each
year the amounts collected have increased dramatically
to the point where almost twenty different organizations,
shelters, and food pantries were able to benefit from
the donations after the May, 2004 collection was completed.
Students learn the value of philanthropy as well as
how to reduce, reuse, and recycle to further the sustainability
efforts of the university. In November, 2004 the program
was recognized with the "Outstanding Project of
the Year" award at the annual conference of the
Great Lakes Association of College and University Housing
Officers in Cleveland, Ohio.
Residence Hall Programming
The Educational Initiatives area of
Residence Life is highly supportive of programming and
other efforts to educate residential students on the
value of sustainability. Examples for the 2004 fall
semester include:
- Creation of a program assignment
for RA's on some staffs for the purpose of focusing
on environmentally-based and sustainability programs
to be conducted in the residence halls;
- Internal policies which decrease
or prohibit the use of Styrofoam and other non-recyclable
materials at events and programs;
- Continued support for the university
recycling program by having recycling containers in
every residence hall room, and larger containers on
every floor and in lobbies;
- Support for the Recycling Wars competition
within the residence halls;
- Coordination of recycling effort
to take place with university-sponsored off-campus
apartments beginning in January, 2005.
BGSU
Teams with Toledo Neighborhood Group to Rid Homes of
Lead
Residents of a Toledo neighborhood are
being recruited to reduce the risk of lead in their
homes.
Doing the recruiting is a neighborhood
group that has joined with public health advocates in
the city and at BGSU in an effort to minimize children's
exposure to the dangerous metal.
Together, they're hoping that 100 households
in the Lagrange community will participate, learning
cleaning techniques to lower the amount of dust containing
lead in and around their homes.
Most of the homes in the economically
stressed neighborhood are older, built before 1978,
when the federal government banned lead-based paint
from housing. When that paint flakes off, it is easily
inhaled or ingested by young children, who can suffer
developmental, neurological and other acute problems
as a result of high levels of lead in their blood, says
Gary Silverman, director of BGSU's Environmental Health
Program.
"It's a huge issue" in terms
of pediatric care costs, adds Hailu Kassa, public and
allied health, who is working on the project with Silverman.
The Environmental
Health Program, part of the College of Health
and Human Services, is using a two-year, $49,000 grant
from the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency's Environmental
Education Fund for the Toledo training effort.
It began this summer with recruitment
of representatives from the Lagrange Development Corp.,
a privately funded community development group. Jennifer
Wise, a Lagrange staff member, found three residents
to take training on how to reduce children's exposure
to lead.
The primary trainer was Andrea Cook,
lead coordinator for the Northwest Ohio Regional Resource
Center. Representatives from the Toledo-Lucas County
Health Department and the Toledo Department of Neighborhoods
were also involved.
The training included demonstrations
of how to clean. Because paint rubs and chips when windows
are opened and closed, lead is often found on windowsills
and nearby, according to Silverman. Windowsills should
be cleaned regularly using "common-sense cleaning
techniques" to lower the availability of dust containing
lead, he says. For example, adds Kassa, surfaces should
be dampened before cleaning to keep dust out of the
air.
The state and local health departments
are helping provide cleaning supplies for the project,
and the neighborhoods department is supplying vacuum
cleaners with special, high efficiency particle arresting
(HEPA) filters. The intent is to provide a vacuum for
every house-a goal the organizers may need to meet with
additional support from the business community.
The importance of hand washing and other
personal hygiene will also be stressed to project participants,
as will the role that nutritional vitamins-especially
iron and calcium-can play in warding off lead in the
body.
When a household agrees to participate,
local health department representatives visit the house
for an evaluation of environmental lead and blood lead
levels in the children living there. If levels are high,
the residents are advised what actions to take in conjunction
with the health and neighborhoods departments.
The children's blood lead levels will
be tracked for a couple years, Silverman notes, calling
that "a very good indicator of how effective this
(project) is."
To participate, individuals must live
in the Lagrange neighborhood, in an older house with
potential for lead contamination, and have at least
one child under age 5. Clusters of homes that meet the
criteria have been identified and are being targeted
by recruiters.
Research has indicated that one-time
lead abatement training hasn't been effective in other
areas, Kassa says. But the Toledo training will be reinforced,
and by people the participants know from the community.
"With these two key elements added, we think it's
going to work," he says, calling it a "very
good example" both of cooperation among agencies
and BGSU's engagement with the larger community.
If the project is successful, he adds,
"it could be a model for the whole country."
Licensing
of BGSU Hybrid Diesel/Electric Propulsion System Patent
Approved by Trustees
The board of trustees agreed to license
a hybrid diesel/electric propulsion system for use in
small transit buses to Goshen Coach of Elkhart, Ind.
To encourage local business development and job creation,
the University also has offered to forego 25 percent
of its licensing fee if the systems are manufactured
in Bowling Green.
The hybrid motor evolved from the Electric
Falcon race car, College of Technology Dean Ernest Savage
told the board, expressing thanks to Congresswoman Marcy
Kaptur (D-Toledo) for helping obtain a NASA grant for
continuation of the project.
The diesel-electric hybrid bus uses
unique ultracapacitors that replace batteries and endure
for the life of the bus. The motor conserves energy
lost during braking and stores it for use in accelerating,
Savage explained, saving fuel and money. "We're
very excited about the project," he said, adding
that the bus would be on display at Homecoming.
President Ribeau commented that the
commercialization of the patent and effort to bring
jobs to the community help the University "take
the next step from becoming the premier learning community
in Ohio to an actively engaged university."
Students get REAL experience in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics.
High school juniors and seniors are learning about environmental health through BGSU's Regents Environmental Academy for Learning (REAL). Funded through a $340,000 grant from the Ohio Board of Regents (OBOR), students are encouraged to study science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM disciplines). The OBOR program is particularly focused on increasing the number of students considering secondary teaching in the STEM disciplines.
During the summer of 2007, 55 students will spend three weeks on campus, earning college credit while receiving room and board and a $600 stipend. The experience will focus on problem-based learning approaches building from work completed as part of the Environmental Health Program's project EXCITE (Environmental Health Science Explorations through Cross-disciplinary and Investigative Team Experiences.) Topical material included in the summer experience includes "factory" farming, mosquito control and the West Nile virus, and food safety. Students earn three college course credits in Environmental Health.
Owens Community College and local teachers are collaborating with BGSU faculty in crafting and delivering the academic program. While on campus, students also will start a course in basic college chemistry which they can complete on-line during late summer and early fall. Additional college academic credit is available to participating students during the 2007/2008 academic year through distance learning.
Rural community network to reduce lead poisoning
Funding by the U.S. EPA's National Lead Outreach and Training Grant Program will enable BGSU's development of a network supplying lead education to rural areas typically underserved by lead poisoning prevention services. BGSU will coordinate four to seven county health districts in providing services throughout the Northwest Ohio region.
A variety of educational techniques will be employed to serve the various populations at risk. These will include participation at health fairs and community festivals, programs targeting pediatricians, programs targeting renovators, remodelers and painters, presentations to church and community groups, widespread distribution of educational materials, and public service announcements.
Project management will be through the Environmental Health Program and Public and Allied Health Department. Each participating Health District will contribute services of a lead coordinator. As a separate but complimentary service to the community, health districts will provide opportunities for environmental and blood lead sampling.
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