
A UF researcher and 2 Flagler County educators, together with their students, sparked several initiative to herald recyclable paper lunch trays into the county’s school cafeterias.
The Bio-d-GREAT-able project, which launched in November, has been in the benefits above eighteen months.
Maia McGuire, a Florida Sea Grant agent with all the UF Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension, said the most crucial purpose of the work should be to reduce the range of microplastics, small parts of plastic lower than 5 millimeters long, within the oceans, as well as the volume of lunch trays exploring landfill.
Flagler County schools send 1.4 million styrofoam lunch trays to the landfill each year, depending on school district officials.
McGuire first mentioned the individual in October 2015 while meeting up with two teachers about planting sea oats on county beach dunes.
She said she was invited approach Ellen Asher’s second-grade class at Old Kings Elementary School and Courtney VandeBunte’s 10th grade class at Flagler Palm Coast High School and did a test on microplastics with them at Marineland Beach.
“During the course of their learning more about microplastics – they came up with the prospect of looking for their school to relieve the plastics which they were using, and specifically in the cafeteria, simply because they were using Styrofoam food trays,” McGuire said.
The negative effects of microplastics inside the environment can be a newer division of research, and a lot of different marine life consume microplastics, treating them like food, McGuire said.
“Microplastics are rather challenging to use, and for that reason do not possess data specifically for Florida at that point,” she said.
McGuire said the plastics inside environment can wind up in the ocean and freshwater systems ultimately breakdown into smaller bits.
Once Asher and her class started learning more about this environmental hazard, she said her students became excited about finding choices to what they were using from the cafeteria.
Janina Aue, students in Asher’s class, said, “I want to help the sea animals which were plagued by the microplastic problem, we needed to alert people about precisely how plastic was hurting all sorts.”
Asher said she integrated this project on microplastics into her curriculum, as well as the students read everything they could about these plastics and nurdles, or really small pellets of plastic.
“We went down with Dr. McGuire on the beaches, so we calculated how much plastic there seemed to be per sq . ft ., so there we integrated it into math [studies],” Asher said.
After doing research as well as more mindful of the issue, the students eventually protested the application of regular plastic trays, planning to use something different.
“This whole unit, one fact grew upon additional until it kind of exploded, plus it was exciting given that the kids, not only did they protest, they did market research over the two schools,” Asher said.
In addition, Asher said her students did a price analysis and reached to different companies to determine who could provide them with a viable alternative.
Asher and VandeBunte’s students also created a presentation to Food Services Director Angela Bush with the schools to start using biodegradable materials like recycled paper products.
According to Bush, the modern trays are almost $.01 more costly per tray.
“The additional cost in accordance with current usage is roughly $15,000 per year,” Bush said. “Our current finances are $5.5 million dollars. I’m confident you can have some areas to stiffen inside offset this expense.”
Students made infomercials and posters about reducing the amount of plastic waste and using new lunch trays, sufficient reason for slogans like “Nix the nurdles, Protect the turtles!” and “No more plastic, make our oceans fantastic!” to run other schools to modify.
Asher said the modern lunch tray program is currently ready in any respect Flagler County schools, and Nassau and Indian River counties have begun making use of these recyclable paper trays as well.
She said the concept because of this initiative was deliver to 40 other counties while in the state; 30 have accepted it and will increase the risk for switch.
The school board has praised this initiative, including District 5 school board member Maria Barbosa.
“The students, installed loads of energy in to the program, and that would be the good thing,” Barbosa said. “And I do believe they actually an admirable job. It had been just creating a new idea.”
Some students say feel and may capable of making an impact on this planet.
“The idea that these folks sea life and that we will be able to develop a alter in the modern world really interested me,” said Leah Ruddell, considered one of Asher’s students. “I love that we have been able compare unique car features.”
