Students have been lining up to visit Lindbergh High’s newest feature: a water bottle refill station. It was installed November 2018 after months of work by the school’s Environmental Club. Despite fundraising difficulties and installation delays, the refill station is now delivering water and changing behavior. Students are buying fewer bottled drinks from school vending machines and even talking about the refill station in conversation. Club treasurer Ithalia Muñoz described how “people talk about it…like ‘Let’s go get water here,’… which is cool ‘cause I’ve seen a line up to get water.”
Not all club members were always concerned with the environment. Ithalia’s interest in conservation blossomed during a two-week trip in the Cascades with the YMCA Earth Service Corps last summer: “That’s when it really hit me, like I gotta start doing stuff because if I don’t who is, so that really inspired me.” Thalia used to take long showers and let the water run when doing the dishes, but now she teaches her little brother, who is on Tiffany Park Elementary’s Green Team, what to do.
Club vice-president Sam Hipol didn’t know much about waste prevention or energy conservation until club president Sharon Chen prompted him to join the club. After completing a community service project weeding invasive plants, his interest grew: “We were weeding and I thought ‘This is pretty fun,’ and the next day I see that the courtyard looks nicer, and I thought, ‘This is a club that I want to be a part of.’ Now I’m learning more about the projects that we can accomplish and integrate, like…energy conservation, and [we] could implement timed electronics and sensors to save energy.”
For her part, club president Sharon Chen enjoys being a source of conservation knowledge for friends and family: “I think it’s interesting that some people, people at school and people at home, they start asking me whether something goes in the recycling bin or the garbage bin, and when they ask me and I actually know [I think] ‘Wow, I actually know stuff.’”
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Up next for LHS’ Environmental Club is a move to the next level of King County’s Green Schools Program. To do so, club members will work on energy conservation projects and start food waste recycling at the school. Members also want to raise money to purchase two more bottle refill stations so that there is one on each school floor. In recognition of their work to prevent waste in our community, we are delighted to name Environmental Club members Sharon Chen, David Xu, Sam Hipol, and Ithalia Muñoz as Waste Prevention Leaders.