Sixth-graders earn award from EPA
Article History
There are updates to this article.

WASHINGTON (Map, News) - A group of Arlington sixth-graders who were disgusted by litter in a stream has won an award from the Environmental Protection Agency.

The mid-Atlantic region’s 2007 President’s Environmental Youth Award was given to the H-B Woodlawn Secondary Program students after they collected 443 items — computer monitors, televisions, cell phones and even a rock tumbler — in a single day last year, said Kathy Molina, the sixth-grade science teacher who oversaw the project.

“We’ll Bring it to You,” a curbside recycling pickup program, was held March 24, 2007, after a group of students saw recyclables littering Windy Run stream during a cleanup.

Ibby Han, Grace Evans, Elliot Grace and Zack Shoultz approached Molina with their concerns over residents’ recycling habits.

“They said, ‘We think there’s a problem with electronic recycling in Arlington,’ ” Molina said. “I saw the potential right away … and I kind of just went forward with it with the kids.”

Six more students joined the effort, with no incentive other than “pure human interest,” she said.

After distributing a survey to 100 parents of children at H-B Woodlawn, the students determined that curbside pickup was a much-desired service among Arlington residents.

Before the students started the program, Arlington had only drop-off programs, which were often inconvenient and involved residents lifting heavy electronic items.

A group of high school students, parents and school faculty volunteered their cars to gather the discarded electronics and dispose of them properly. The County Board agreed to waive the fees associated with recycling electronics after the students presented their idea.

“This is the first time I’ve seen sixth-graders do anything of this magnitude,” Molina said, adding that all of the work was done in the students’ free time. “They felt so good about it at the end.”

A national awards ceremony will be held in Washington in April. “We’ll Bring it to You” also won the Staples Earth Force Award, which won the school $1,000 in supplies.


Name
Comments

characters left


Comments from Examiner Readers

11:59 AM MST on Wed., Jun. 4, 2008 re: "State joins lawsuit accusing EPA of loose ozone pollution standards"

Examiner Reader said:
These fools arguing about how many angels can sit on a pin head. The difference in human death rates between 0.06 ppm and 0.07 ppm of Ozone is not measurable and statistically insignificant. The law suits are total waist of time and taxpayer money. This is political theater for functionally illiterate voters, not science.

2 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree

 
 

(page generated in 0.14 seconds)