May 17, 2008

Font Size


         Subscribe in NewsGator Online   Subscribe in Bloglines

Green Cleaning: Positive Support

Oct 1, 2007 12:00 PM, By Stephen Ashkin

Kermit the Frog was right or wrong, depending on how you look at it. It still may not be “easy being green,” but it appears to be getting easier.

A few noteworthy examples: the U.S. Council of Mayors unanimously approved a resolution supporting green schools. This is especially important because much of public education is handled at the local level, and local political support means good things for the green movement.

Another example comes from the state of Illinois, which recently signed new legislation to help schools use green cleaning. The Green Clean Schools Act calls for all elementary and secondary schools in the state to purchase environmentally sensitive cleaning supplies. The state worked with the Healthy Schools Campaign (www.HealthySchoolsCampaign.org), a founding member of the Green Cleaning Network. Other states are sure to follow.

The U.S. Green Building Council's recent release of its revision to LEED for Existing Buildings Rating System (LEED-EB) may have the most impact. The revision to LEED-EB is not perfect, but it includes some important changes and is another very good step toward making green cleaning (among other operational issues) easier in education institutions.

Some of the important changes specific to the cleaning credits:

  • Changing the name to LEED for High Performance Operations to help clarify that this rating system is for maintenance and operations, and not for doing a major renovation on an existing building.

  • Making green cleaning a prere-quisite. This requires just a basic plan, but it means that green cleaning now is required of every green building; there are still plenty of credits to reward leadership and encourage innovation.

  • Adding a credit based on APPA's “Custodial Staffing Guidelines” for conducting a custodial effectiveness audit. This is the council's first effort to identify “effective” cleaning; it recognizes that using green products is only the beginning of the journey, and only by combining green products with more effective cleaning can institutions create a high-performing building.

  • Increasing the focus on health by, for example, rewarding the development of an effective hand-hygiene program, which includes both handwashing and the use of hand sanitizers, and the use of more effective janitorial equipment.

  • Offering additional compliance paths. For example, LEED-EB has added the Environmental Choice Standards that are comparable to Green Seal.

  • Encouraging product innovation, such as expanding the janitorial paper credit to include the option of products made from tree-free fibers and those made from trees that are rapidly regrowable (as compared with only using recycled content) and the use of microfiber products.

Ashkin is executive director of the Green Cleaning Network, a 501(c)3 not-for-profit educational organization. www.GreenCleaningNetwork.org SteveAshkin@GreenCleaningNetwork.org

Most Recent Story

Armed and Dangerous

Mike Kennedy

Just when you think you've heard everything! A lawmaker in Nevada plans to introduce a bill this month that would allow teachers to carry guns in classrooms. (Yes, you read that correctly.)

Most Popular Articles

Subscribe to RSS headline updates from:
Powered by FeedBurner

Essential Reading

The Subtle Stuff

Vikas Nagardeolekar and Edwin Merritt

It's hard to win passage of a school construction bond — whether through a citizen referendum or the vote of a town council or general town meeting.

Hear and Now

Michael McKeon and Lincoln Berry

When acoustics are mentioned with regard to schools, many people first think of performing arts.

Making it Readable

Peter Gisolfi

When my daughter was 10 years old, she left the comfort of her elementary school for the unfamiliar territory of the middle/high school building — a crazy quilt of pieces from the 1910s, 1930s, 1960s and 1970s.

Echo Boom Impact

Phillipe Dordai and Joseph Rizzo

Like their baby-boomer parents, the echo-boom generation is reshaping the college and university landscape.

Spotlight On:

Now Accepting Entries Architectural Portfolio 2008. Entry forms due June 3. VView more information on the 2008 Architectural Portfolio.

Top 10

How does your institution rank? Including enrollment and expenditures, growth rates and more!

AS&U 100

American School & University highlights the largest 100 school districts each September| Who's growing and who's slowing

Back to Top

Browse Back Issues

ASU May Cover ASU April Cover ASU March Cover ASU February Cover ASU January Cover ASU December Cover ASU November Cover
BROWSE BACK ISSUES