Front page article from The Cornell Daily Sun, Nov.
27, 2006, Ithaca, NY:
C.U. Store Pushes Sustainability
By Masha Rifkin
Nov 27 2006
We hear and make them all the time — the infamous complaints
against the Cornell Store: the textbooks can be bought online
for considerably less than store price; the clothes and supplies
are too expensive. We walk out of the store after textbook rush
with any cash we may have had in our wallets gone, credit cards
overdrawn and — to add to our frustration — we are
dragging home about 70 pounds of books.
But what the average Cornellian does not know is the “life” of
the Cornell Store, outside of the business aspect. Throughout
recent years, the store has taken the initiative to assist and
work with various student groups, dealing with everything from
the state of the environment to workers’ rights.
The store’s newest project is assisting students to advocate
the Designated Suppliers Program (DSP). This will ensure that
all factories producing clothes with the Cornell logo operate
under fair working conditions: lawful labor environment and salary
as well as the right to assemble for representation.
“We are trying to help make a difference in these factories,” said
Thomas Romantic, director of Cornell Business Services. “There
are certain factories that were declared as [unfair] that we
won’t do business with.”
Recently, the Workers Rights Coalition (WRC) along with DSP
has identified nine factories which show an interest in meeting
the criteria of a just working environment. The Cornell Store
is on its way to doing business solely with these factories and
would like to see other universities join in on the campaign.
“We’d like to get some leverage to actually change
the behavior of these brands,” explained Romantic.
The store has also worked with Cornell’s Society for Natural
Resources Conservation to increase the use of recycled goods.
In the past, the standard for organizations has been to use 30
percent recycled paper.
However, “[the store] has been trying to educate the campus
about 100 percent usage and not just that — but the use
of post consumer waste paper.”
The store not only predominantly sells this type of paper, but
also uses it in its offices and supports the general reduction
in the use of paper.
Recently, members of the Green Purchasing Task Force, a volunteer
group on campus comprised of staff looking to represent their
departments in making beneficial changes, decided to take on
a solar panel project. Solar panels were donated by an alum to
the solar panel decathlon team. The team will install approximately
36 panels in Day Hall and eight in the store. With the help of
the store, the team will set up a website, where anyone may log
on and monitor the daily usage of energy within these two buildings.
“We are trying to … use our buying power to change
the way things are in the world,” said Dean Koyanagi ’90,
Cornell Sustainability Coordinator.
So how do students go about utilizing the store?
“Many times it manifests itself as a complaint, and we
say ‘it’s a valid complaint, let’s sit down
and talk about it,” described Romantic.
That’s how it worked for Esther Blodau-Konick ’06.
Troubled by the store’s waste of approximately 350,000
plastic bags a year, she approached management about potentially
purchasing bags from various vendors that recycle — or
at the very least not requiring that students always receive
a plastic bag upon a purchase.
Although the store did not always prove easy to work with, and
many of Blodau-Konick’s ideas did not materialize, she
achieved her underlying goal.
“They were very open to suggestions and did take time
to meet with us,” she said.
Today, the store uses only recycled plastic bags and asks students
if they would like a bag.
“The store is very interested in seeing what they could
do to use the store to educate and not just sell goods,” Koyanagi
said.
Romantic explained that the store is very well situated for
this cause, being in the center of campus wide activity.
“We view it as our mission on campus to support these
various things,” he said.
So, next time you’re fussing about your overly priced
Cornell sweater, you can rest assured that it was made by someone
in a healthy working environment.
And next time you grudgingly stuff your textbooks into the plastic
bags, you will know that at least you can use the excuse of “helping
the environment” with your frantic parents.
So, even though we may occasionally feel that the Cornell store
bill should be included as an extra section on the expected cost
of the University, we can relax — slightly, knowing that
by making our purchases we are in a small way assisting various
causes as well.
The Cornell Store, 135 Ho Plaza, Ithaca, NY 14853
(607) 255-4111 (800) 624-4080 (M-F 8:30am-5pm EST)
Fully owned & operated by Cornell University; store revenue
supports university operations, facilities & programming. |