The
University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point will celebrate Earth Week April
17-23 with a mix of outdoor activities, volunteer opportunities,
exhibits and Zoom presentations that focus on sustainability,
alternative energy sources and environmental issues.
Earth Day
was founded April 22, 1970, by U.S. Sen. Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin as
a peaceful teach-in to raise environmental awareness and protection.
UW-Stevens Point has held educational environmental events each year
since, and has a long history of supporting sustainability, renewable
energy and environmental education.
On April 8, UW-Stevens Point
joined 75 colleges and universities across the nation in signing a
letter that urges the Biden-Harris administration to adopt a target of
at least 50 percent reduction in carbon emissions by 2030.
Among
the outdoor activities for Earth Week on campuses and in the community
(face coverings and physical distancing are required on campus):
- View
a "Bale Maze" recycling display April 17-May 7 at the Specht
Forum/Sundial at UW-Stevens Point. This will also be the location for
"Pedal for University Fossil Fuel Divestment" on Monday, April 19, from
2-3 p.m.
- Help plant apple, tart cherry and plum trees
at Bukolt Park from noon-4 p.m. Monday, April 19, with Central Rivers
Farmshed, UW-Stevens Point's Students for Sustainability and city of
Stevens Point Forestry department. Sign up at Farmshed volunteers.
- "Chalk the Walk for Earth Day" on Thursday, April 22, with chalk art at:
- UW-Stevens Point Old Main, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
- UWSP at Wausau's main entrance, 8-4:30 p.m.
- UWSP at Marshfield's Everett Roehl STEM Center, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.
- The
Central Wisconsin Children's Museum is hosting "Sarcastic Plastic?
Fantastic" and "STEM Sprouts Grass Heads" exhibits for children at 10
a.m. Thursday and Friday, April 22-23.
- The annual Eco-Fair will
be offered via Zoom from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Wednesday, April 21, with a focus
on "Soil, the Foundation of Life." It is sponsored by the Environmental
Educators and Naturalists Association (EENA).
Other free events presented on Zoom include:
- Monday, April 19, 6:30 p.m. – "Environmental Justice Coffee and Culture"
- Tuesday, April 20, noon – "How the Potty Trained Us," Shawn Shafner of the Poopcast Project
- Wednesday, April 21, noon – "Repairing Native Perspectives on Environmental Movements," Marin Webster, American Indian educator
- Thursday, April 22, noon – "How to Make the Environmental Movement Anti-Racist," Wawa Gatheru, environmental justice advocate
- Thursday, April 22, 6:30 p.m. - Earth Day Trivia Night, hosted by UW-Stevens Point's Museum of Natural History
For more information or registration for these events, visit the Sustainability webpage or the UW-Stevens Point Office of Sustainability on Facebook.