GREEN
FLAG SCHOOL
Churchill High School |
|
MEDIA RELEASE
FOR SEPTEMBER 19TH, 2003
LOCAL CONTACT:
Lisa Arkin
541-465-8860 (Phone)
larkin@oregontoxics.org
School Launches National Environmental Program
WHAT: Churchill High School is receiving national recognition for its outstanding environmental work. The school is the only Oregon school and one of more than a dozen schools launching the national Green Flag Program. The student-driven Green Flag Program will recognize Churchill’s Rachel Carson Program for its outstanding environmental education record, and will hold a launch event featuring Eugene’s mayor, School District Officials, students, teachers, and local leaders.
WHO: Mayor Jim Torrey
Superintendent George Russell, 4J School District
Mitzi Colbath, CPA PC, Eugene Planning Commission
Lisa Arkin, Oregon Toxics Alliance
Tim Whitley, Rachel Carson Program
Denise Gudger, 4J School High School Instruction Coordinator
Dan Fuehring, 4J School District Facilities and Maintenance
Students
Teachers
Churchhill's Media Event
Article from the Eugene Register Guard
http://www.registerguard.com/news/2003/09/20/d1.cr.greenflag.0920.html
September 20, 2003
Students give school chance to come clean
By Scott Maben
The Register-Guard
Students will don detective hats at Eugene's Churchill High School this year,
looking for evidence
of an unhealthy environment.
They'll peek inside the janitor's closet, probe the groundskeeper's pesticide
supplies and delve into
the consequences of the nearly windowless school's dark, stale interior. Then
they'll report what
they find to school officials and work on ways to improve the safety of the
school environment.
The investigations are part of the Green Flag Program, a new effort to
help schools around the country become
healthier places while teaching students about environmental responsibility.
At Churchill, 16 juniors and seniors in the Rachel Carson Center for Natural
Resources will lead the charge under
Green Flag.
"The importance of this program is that it gets students directly involved
in investigating environmental health,"
said Tim Whitley, one of two Carson Center teachers at the school.
The students, who are pursuing certificates of advanced mastery in natural
resource systems, will choose what
areas they want to check in the school environment, which includes air, water,
plants, furnishings, supplies and
building materials.
They'll likely begin with a general survey of the school's status in four
areas: pest management, recycling, indoor
air quality and toxic chemicals.
Churchill already has made strides in switching to nontoxic methods of
pest control and encouraging students and
staff to recycle and conserve resources.
But there's room for improvement in air quality, school officials said.
Churchill was designed with almost no exterior
windows, making its classrooms and hallways dark and allowing for little natural
air flow through the building.
"It probably isn't an environment that's overly conducive to learning," Principal John Sappington said.
He said he looks forward to the students' findings.
"I think we'll probably come up with some good ideas that hopefully aren't totally cost prohibitive," he said.
Four of the participating students outlined the goals during a presentation
before Superintendent George Russell,
Sappington and others.
"In taking on the Green Flag Program, we are committing ourselves to prevent
costly problems before they start,"
said senior Sarah Coon, who's interested in investigating the use of chemicals
at Churchill. "The Green Flag
Program teaches students about environmental health, and helps them turn
their knowledge into action."
The Oregon Toxics Alliance also presented the Rachel Carson program with
a Green Flag Award of Environmental
Leadership in recognition of outstanding environmental achievement. Churchill
students conduct a unique
wetlands study program, and the school has received grants for its environmental
program.
Churchill also is the first school in the Northwest to adopt the Green Flag Program.
The program is a project of the national Child Proofing Our Communities
Campaign, coordinated by the Center for
Health, Environment and Justice in Falls Church, Va.
The center was started by Lois Gibbs, the mother-turned-environmental activist
who helped expose underground
toxic pollution in upstate New York 25 years ago. That calamity, known as
Love Canal, led to the creation of the
federal Superfund law, which forced polluters to pay for cleanups.