Schools
Stamford School Receives Recycling Program Grant
The RecycleCT Foundation awarded grants to just 12 schools around the state.

A Stamford school has received one of the first grant awards from the RecycleCT Foundation for projects focused on recycling, waste reduction, reuse, or composting.
The Connecticut Forest & Park Association (CFPA) also received one of the 12 grants that total $21,000 for initiatives that strengthen environmental education centered on waste reduction.
“The 12 schools receiving grant funds stood out for their efforts to develop programs that integrated education with waste reduction and reuse or recovery of materials through composting and recycling,” Department of Energy and Environmental Protection Commissioner Robert Klee said in a statement. “We are pleased that this first round of grants from our new foundation can make the connection between positive approaches to reducing the volume of waste and learning in the classroom.”
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In this first round of grants to schools, nine of the recipient schools are part of the state’s GreenLeaf program.
The Stamford school receiving the grant is:
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- Trailblazers Academy Middle School, – $1,500; for Recycling.
RecycleCT was created in an effort to raise public awareness and participation in recycling. The foundation will lead the way in implementing a key goal of the legislation: increasing the recycling diversion rate from the current level of about 25 to 30 percent to 60 percent by 2024. Klee is chairman of the Board of Directors of RecycleCT.
The Greenleaf program is a partnership of state agencies and organizations, and environmental and educational groups who provide resources and guidance for schools to comply with federal and state laws and adopt voluntary programs that make their schools ‘greener’. The GreenLeaf program is a free statewide initiative open to any public or private schools in Connecticut.
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