



I have been the environmental contact for Buckingham School for over 18
years. In that time, we have completed over 1000 environmental projects,
have won the Minister of the Environment's Youth Award, which we flew to our
capital city Victoria to accept, and have won the City of Burnaby's Youth
Award for our environmental work in the city. Both awards highlight groups
that have gone the extra distance to enhance, preserve or protect the
environment.
My own personal inspiration was Clinton.
My school, Buckingham Elementary, is quite small, with about 230 children
from kindergarten to grade 7. It is tucked away in a lovely neighborhood
with trees everywhere and gorgeous views of the local mountains. There is a
strong sense of community here and the parents are very supportive. The
children have been excited and ready to jump on board with new ideas and
have loved our involvement in environmental activities.
When I first came to this school, everything was thrown away. There
wasn't any kind of environmental work going on at all. I started taking
paper from each classroom from the garbage cans and lugging it to the
recycling depot in the back of my car.
We made use of Waste Audit programs to plan strategies for our garbage
to be reduced and have succeeded in going from two huge industrial
containers a week to one very small container a week.
My class is the official "Garden Club" and I have taught each class to
plant, tend and prune. The children have learned about root structure,
proper watering, weeding and spacing. Kids actually take books out in the
warmer weather and lie down in the grass by the garden to read.
Fifteen years ago, the school was signed up for the "SEEDS"
program — an environmental program funded by industry and educational
groups in Canada. They run this program like the Olympics, having
project goals in the bronze, silver and gold categories and then urging you
to continue into the green, jade, emerald and Earth school groups.
We have gone through each level and two years ago completed the final
goal. The huge Earth School banner is now framed and hangs in the school
foyer.
The projects completed include the usual recycling projects, letters to
industry (we wrote to Coke to protest the use of sharp pop can tabs which
can hurt wildlife and small children, and wrote to several publishers to ask
them to stop sending our books in Styrofoam chips.)
We have regular used battery recycling, printer cartridge recycling,
poll the parent body about home recycling status and keep in touch with the
school district's environmental programs.
The custodian is vigilant about keeping the heat turned down and outside
doors closed in the cold weather. Light bulbs are changed regularly to keep
lighting efficient and energy efficient bulbs are used. We are all
encouraged to turn out the lights when we leave a classroom empty for more
than half an hour.
Our Salmonid program has been a regular feature for one primary class
and my own class buddies with that class to go to outdoor school every year.
One of the last projects for the Earth Level was outstanding and took a
lot of thought. We had to put together a shoebox full of items to show
another part of Canada what our environment was like here in Burnaby. The
items ended up being things like crow feathers, beach pebbles and sea
shells, articles from the local newspaper, pictures of the natural
environment around the school, pressed leaves and fresh fronds of
cedar, etc.
Our kids bring letters to school, articles from newspapers, problems
they see in the environment around us. They have become inquirers.
The whole climate of the school has changed and
rather than specific projects, there is just a higher sense of doing the
right thing.