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Cake and Iceberg

On Earth Day office parties

By Umbra Fisk
14 Apr 2008
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question Dear Umbra,

Earth Day seems like a good opportunity to raise environmental awareness in the office. Do you have any ideas for an Earth Day office party? The best I can come up with is vegan cupcakes in the park and an inter-department "use less paper" competition.

I work for a publishing company that is relatively eco-apathetic ... sometimes we toss paper into the regular trash, and sometimes we toss non-recyclable trash into the recycling bins. Plastic bottles, cans, and glass definitely go into the trash can. We use plastic cups instead of the glasses and mugs in the cupboard (ew, germs!). We leave our lights and computers on at night ... I've always been afraid to say anything, because I don't want to sound preachy, especially since I'm a permatemp. However, I think people would be open to an Earth Day office party, and I believe that it's extremely important to green the office.

Melissa
New York, N.Y.


answer Dearest Melissa,

Hooray for the Earth! I like your own ideas quite a bit. A game and a treat are a sound basis for an excellent party.

Celebrate bad times, come on!
Photo: iStockphoto
Given the size of your company and your permatemp status, there may be more strength and success in numbers. Do you have any coworkers who might want to join you in planning an Earth Day event? If you can find a few friends willing to make up a "party committee" -- there must be a more enticing term -- and then invite others to join said committee, the Party and its agenda will gain more traction organizationally than it would if you operate solo. Even better would be involvement of the Powers that Be -- who, once convinced of the merits of and interest in greener operations, could authorize CFL purchase, mandate turning off computers, change the dress code to lead to less wasteful heating and cooling, and exercise other useful powers. But let us assume, for now, that they are uninvolved.

When you invite your fellow peons to join the party committee, make it clear that the point of the event is ecological progress coupled with fun, emphasis on fun. Ensuite when you end up discussing the best ways to green the office, which can be a bit dry, at least it will be in the overall context of, "How can we get people to participate by making the process enjoyable?"

My editor, who has seen her share of parties, has great suggestions for livening up the proceedings. Her first choice (as usual) was eco-liquor, but since you might be in the park, let's go with her second choice: green versions of children's party games. Can you get ahold of, or make, a topical piñata? A car filled with Rolos, for example. Or how about a game of darts (the adult version of pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey), covered with the faces of the Bush Administration? Or, since I'm not allowed to be partisan, how about 'Round the Clock with faces of famous and infamous eco-related people, like George H.W. Bush, or Al Gore, or Leonardo DiCaprio?

As for the "competition" element of your party, I have a few ideas to add. Your paper-use reduction contest puts me in mind of a power-use reduction contest. Can the company as a whole reduce its power use by a certain amount between one power bill and the next? There are simple, low-commitment actions everyone could do to participate: send computers into sleep mode sooner, and shut off lights and computers at the end of the day. The difference here, of course, would be that the company is competing against itself as a whole; I don't think it's possible to check power use by department, although who knows.

If you devise a good reward (other than altruism), there might be enough motivation to see serious results. Ideally you would get the Powers that Be to buy in, and after the first month of measured effort, they would take the saved money and do something nice for the employees who participated. We can dream, right? In the absence of the Powers, you could bake more cupcakes or make laudatory posters ("We prevented X tons of carbon from entering the atmosphere! Zowie!") -- on recycled paper, of course.

Another obvious workplace Earth Day contest, in which you would also dangle prizes to increase motivation, is Who Can Improve Their Commuting Emissions? I see, however, that you work in New York City. I have to assume that most folks already take the subway and bus to work.

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One other idea is a friendly suggestion sheet to help fellow peons know how to prioritize their eco-actions. Most people know that driving is a poor idea and that recycling is a good idea. But we are swimming in good and bad ideas, all undifferentiated from one another in our daily life, so we do nothing. You can help by giving out -- or better, posting in a central location to reduce copy needs -- a Tips Sheet about how everyone can participate in greening the office and their own lives, a more specific version of my Top Ten. Choose seven or fewer tasks related to life at your particular office: instructions on things like recycling paper, setting up a carpooling program for those who don't use public transit, reducing computer power usage, making use of the reusable cups in the kitchen (and saying no to germophobia!), and so on.

OK, it may not be as rockin' as New Year's Eve. But everyone says to start with small steps -- so your plan, with or without my additions, is perfect.

Earthily,
Umbra



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The claims made in this column may not reflect the views of this magazine. Neither the magazine nor the author guarantees that any advice contained in this column is wise or safe. Please use this column at your own risk.
Umbra Fisk is Grist Research Associate II, Hardcover and Periodicals Unit, floors 2B-4B.
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Comments: (9 comments)

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A Greener Office

Thanks for the great suggestions on how to green the office through an Earth Day party. I do have a few questions though. I've recently been asked to do an environmental audit, poll employees on how green they are and come up with a way to get them to be...well...greener. I was wondering if anyone could give me advice on the following:

  1. How to do an environmental audit.

  2. What questions to ask my fellow employees (so far I've come up with daily transportation and how many electronics are on/plugged in in their offices)

  3. How the heck do I persuade my fellow colleagues to be more eco-friendly?

Thanks, everyone!

~NickieC

Permatemps!

Wow, I had never heard that term and I love it- so yogic... we are all permatemps.  So "Be Here Now"ish.... We thought our species was just plain Perma but our whole species is permatemp.... Finally I can get some cards made up.... [My Name Here] Permatemp....

An ounce of practice is worth twenty thousand tons of big talk. -Vivekananda
green auditing

There are books on this topic, surely. However in the interest of helpfulness I'd suggest (not knowing how your company is organized)

Review products that your company is selling, find out how much green content they do or don't have. Compare to others in the field who are setting the pace toward sustainability.

Review usage of paper, water, electricity. Ask for info from those who have it. Divide by number of employees, shifts, and/or number of widgets that your staff produces.  Attempt to see if those numbers may be improved or optimized for efficiency and resource savings.

Check the lighting in the building. Is it on when folks aren't there? Is it the most efficient type? T-8 fluorescent tubes are better than fattter old style T-12 lighting. Is the light where it's needed, or willy-nilly?   I think over 50% of lighting in offices is wasted.

Check the cleaning supplies. Are they green or toxic?  Share the info.  Paper towels in bathrooms? are they recycled content?  How about the copy paper?  Look for post-consumer content asa high as possible.

Accept that seeking sustainability is a continuum we are all (hopefully) making progress on, not a destination to arrive at and put your feet up at.  Celebrate progress in big and small ways.

Extra credit:  Examine the company policies toward sustainable lifestyles and health. Do they promote bike commuting, walking at lunch, clean air initiatives and recycling?  

Recycling at most workplaces sucks and can be greatly enhanced.  It's the first step on a road toward sustainability.  Make it fun and consider a contest with prizes!

Note: the old way of doing environmental auditing merely loooked at whether a company was in minimum compliance with environmental laws.  The new way seeks to make environmental sustainability ingrained in the corporate culture. If that can be done, everyone wins!


Moving toward sustainability with hopefulness, one revolution at a time.

Polling and persuading

This is to NickieC.

I've recently run up against the fact that many if not most people feel threatened by the idea of  making their ecological imprint known. There is a fear of being judged, there is a certain amount of guilt that gets stimulated, there is resentment at being forced to go public with what feels like a private matter.  (Consider it analogous to asking both skinny and overweight persons to keep food logs and let everybody see them)

If you can come up with any way to make the polling anonymous, use it.  Or at least don't plan to go public with any individual results.  

As for getting people to green up, I like Umbra's suggestion of getting a baseline, making it public within the company, translate it into tons of carbon or something else that can be visualized, and get the whole company to lower the footprint. That will get people involved in peer pressure in a positive way, rather than a competition that will lead to gloating on the one hand and cringing on the other.  The success of the company as a whole can then be celebrated (party! party!), and new ideas for beating the new record can be generated by the group.  I can see people really getting into it, expecially if it's a techie crowd.

For the audit you'll want to get the company's electric and heating bills.  Make a count of how many "disposable" cups, dishes, whatever, are used in a month, and see how much it can be reduced.  

For travel, there can be privileged parking places set aside for carpoolers with 3 or more riders, some kind of bonus for bikers and/or walkers.  A company I once worked for paid for (half the cost of?) monthly bus passes for employees who would use them rather than drive.  

The main thing, if you want people to get on board, is not to create a judgmental atmosphere.  The resentment, etc. can take you all where none of you wants to go.  

Mary G

Polling and persuading

This is to NickieC.

I've recently run up against the fact that many if not most people feel threatened by the idea of  making their ecological imprint known. There is a fear of being judged, there is a certain amount of guilt that gets stimulated, there is resentment at being forced to go public with what feels like a private matter.  (Consider it analogous to asking both skinny and overweight persons to keep food logs and let everybody see them)

If you can come up with any way to make the polling anonymous, use it.  Or at least don't plan to go public with any individual results.  

As for getting people to green up, I like Umbra's suggestion of getting a baseline, making it public within the company, translate it into tons of carbon or something else that can be visualized, and get the whole company to lower the footprint. That will get people involved in peer pressure in a positive way, rather than a competition that will lead to gloating on the one hand and cringing on the other.  The success of the company as a whole can then be celebrated (party! party!), and new ideas for beating the new record can be generated by the group.  I can see people really getting into it, expecially if it's a techie crowd.

For the audit you'll want to get the company's electric and heating bills.  Make a count of how many "disposable" cups, dishes, whatever, are used in a month, and see how much it can be reduced.  

For travel, there can be privileged parking places set aside for carpoolers with 3 or more riders, some kind of bonus for bikers and/or walkers.  A company I once worked for paid for (half the cost of?) monthly bus passes for employees who would use them rather than drive.  

The main thing, if you want people to get on board, is not to create a judgmental atmosphere.  The resentment, etc. can take you all where none of you wants to go.  

Mary G

Plan B: We will rock out indoors

Thank you so much for answering my question Umbra! I will definitely make an eco-tips sheet -- if they can hang hygiene tips in the bathroom, some recycling tips by the copying machine should be ok too. I will mention the power-use & recycling ideas to the office manager also.

@NickieC: Carbonrally.com might have what you're looking for. It lets you measure the impact of individual and group actions online.

As for my office party idea, going to the park was way too ambitious, even with the lone vegan & the holiday-cubicle-decorator on board. It would've been great to have a pinata.

The new party plan is to: (1) hold a cd/dvd/book swap; (2) collect batteries, cell phones & gadgets for recycling; (3) have a green-themed quiz contest -- the winners will be forced to take an extended lunch break, away from their monitors; (4) serve vegan treats & hope people talk about environmental issues.

We just have to walk into the president's office & see if he approves. Thanks again!

@karenc: lol, i've never thought of it that way. 'permatemp' is usually said with a sigh and rolling eyes.


Suppose there was an Earth Day and nobody came.

Earth Day should be an international holiday on which every one does, consumes, as little as possible. Nobody goes to work. If people do gather, they walk there. No electricity is used. Ideas about what else we could do without doing damage?

Suppose there was an Earth Day and nobody came.

Earth Day should be an international holiday on which every one does, consumes, as little as possible. Nobody goes to work. If people do gather, they walk there. No electricity is used. Ideas about what else we could do without doing damage?

Nalgene water bottles

I wonder if anyone knows which number is the "important" one to pay attention to on the bottom of the Nalgene water bottles.  My bottle has a number 7 inside the recycling triangle and then it also has a number 4 on the bottom - just as large font as the other and just on its own.  Anyone know?
ds

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