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FOR RELEASE: Friday, September 26, 2008
Report Card: University of Arkansas Improves in Sustainable Practices FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. – The University of Arkansas has increased its sustainability score in just two short years from a D to a B minus, according to the 2009 College Sustainability Report Card, an organization that evaluates campus and endowment sustainability activities at colleges and universities in the United States and Canada. In the Southeastern Conference, Arkansas was tied for second along with Auburn University in scoring. Only the University of Florida scored higher at a B plus. “Being a sustainable campus is very important to the mission of the University of Arkansas, particularly in areas where we can reduce our carbon footprint,” said Chancellor G. David Gearhart. “The results speak for themselves. Going from a D to a B minus in less than three years indicates that we do take sustainability seriously and we will continue to do so.” Among the 300 schools surveyed this year, more than one-third earned an overall grade of B minus or better (38 percent or 114 schools). Five percent of schools earned cumulative A level grades, 33 percent earned B level grades, 44 percent earned C level grades, 17 percent earned D level grades and 1 percent earned F level grades. The survey focused on policies and practices in nine categories: administration, climate change and energy, endowment transparency, food and recycling, green building, investment priorities, shareholder engagement, student involvement and transportation. The survey scored Arkansas an A for its administration noting that former Chancellor John A. White was one of the first 100 to sign the Presidents Climate Commitment. It also cited the newly created University of Arkansas Sustainability Council that has formed seven working groups to begin addressing its goals. The university received Bs for its climate change and energy, food and recycling, green building, student involvement, transportation and endowment transparency. It received a C in investment priorities with the survey noting that the university aims to optimize investment return and does not invest in renewable energy funds or community development loan funds. Its lowest grade was a D in shareholder engagement. The survey found that the university provides its investment managers with guidelines that determine its proxy votes. Some University of Arkansas sustainable highlights from the 2009 survey:
For more information about the report card, visit http://wwwgreenreportcard.org/. ### Contact:Gina King, director of news and editorial communications Laura Jacobs, associate director
University Relations 479-575-7422, laura@uark.edu |