Take Action:
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Take Action At Work
Commute for the environment
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EPA uses alternative fuel cars and buses vehicles nationwide to reduce emissions. |
Green your building
- Apply green building principles to your office buildings. They affect natural resources, land use, energy use, worker and public health, and community well being. With sustainable design - or green building - tools, the federal government can protect human health and worker productivity, reduce costs and risks, and build with greater responsibility towards future generations. Green Building principles lead to building in greater harmony with the environment, consciously sustaining and renewing natural resources. (http://ofee.gov/sb/sb.asp)
- Go Green with GSA. The U.S. Government Services Administration has many environmental initiatives to help federal agencies Go Green. These initiatives range from green products to constructing and leasing green buildings. (http://www.gsa.gov/Portal/gsa/ep/home.do?tabId=10)
- Clean Green. Using environmentally preferable cleaning supplies helps reduce pollution. (http://www.epa.gov/epp/pubs/products/index.htm)
Reduce energy use
Reduce, reuse, and recycle office products
- Buy recycled content, remanufactured, and recyclable office
products, and recycle them when appropriate (including e-cycling
electronics). At a minimum, buy recycled paper and recycle
it again. See the small business guide to pollution prevention for more information: http://www.epa.gov/ecycling/index.htm.
- Clean Out Your Files and recycle papers you no longer need.
Many organizations sponsor cleaning weeks; check with your
office management staff.
- Use spell check and proofread before you print or copy. Print
double sided whenever possible. Minimize the amount of paper
you use.
- Buy reusable office supplies instead of disposable supplies.
- Set up an area to store and exchange reusable office supplies,
such as binders
- Recycle fluorescent bulbs properly to prevent hazardous mercury
from entering the environment.
In addition to these items, check the Environmental Protection
Agency's "At
the Workplace" page http://www.epa.gov/epahome/workplac.htm.
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