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[X] CLOSEMENU

Current Member Spotlight

Yale Office of Sustainability & HW Green Company

We are proud to welcome two new Supporting Advisory Members to Northeast Recycling Council: Yale Office of Sustainability & HW Green Company

Yale Office of Sustainability

The vision of Yale Office of Sustainability is “of a Yale where sustainability is seamlessly integrated into the scholarship and operations of the university, contributing to its social, environmental, and financial excellence and positioning Yale as a local and global leader.” The Office focuses its sustainability priorities in three primary areas:

  • Climate Action: take urgent action to mitigate climate change and proactively adapt to its effects;
  • Stewardship: plan and preserve resilient and sustainable infrastructure and landscapes; and
  • Materials: ensure sustainable consumption and disposal patterns.

Unsurprisingly for an office in one of the nation’s elite universities, the Office of Sustainability offers a wealth of information and research on its website. Focusing on the third priority—materials—we find that Yale was the first American institution of higher education to explore a Pay As You Throw program; has encouraged reuse of products via its annual Spring Salvage donation program for the past 18 years; and has included healthy furniture purchasing guidelines as part of its design standards, to eliminate the presence of flame retardants and other toxic chemicals in furniture. The Office’s website details how Yale advances its sustainability priorities through single stream recycling and numerous other initiatives. Among the nine ambitions of the University’s Sustainability Plan 2025 is the Procurement Department’s commitment to ensuring sustainable consumption and disposal patterns.

In a recent interview, Amber Garrard—who in January became director of the Office—described some of the challenges she encounters in her daily work.

“I spend a lot of my time thinking about big systems like energy, food, water, the built environment, and how they connect with issues of health, equity, and justice,” she said. “I consider where Yale can be an institutional leader with our policies and practices, how we can leverage our role as a major research institution through our purchasing power, and how we can test and set behavioral trends.”

During the recent Earth Week—April 16 – 22—Yale offered at least twenty events. “Yale community members can join a native plant walk led by Peabody naturalists; examine what a just energy transition looks like; sustainably unload old electronics at an e-waste collection; celebrate indigenous culture at a Powwow; hack down invasive vines in East Rock Park; explore the benefits of meditation; participate in bicycle safety training, and so much more,” the Office stated.

NERC is excited to have such a proven source of expertise on materials management join its Advisory Membership. Welcome, Yale Office of Sustainability.

HW Green Company

HW Green Company is a Connecticut-based scrap metal recycling facility with over 40 years of experience in metal recycling. In addition to purchasing recycled metals from individuals the company also services businesses and industrial accounts.

HW Green’s facility “offers ample space for large scrap handling needs with 20 acres for processing ferrous material and 32,000 square feet of warehouses to process non-ferrous material,” the company states. The company purchases a wide range of recycled scrap metal from individuals and businesses.

In what the company describes on its website as “new beginnings”, HW Green purchased the facility in late 2021 and embarked on a complete site renovation. As a result of the acquisition, the company is now a certified SBE/WBE with the State of CT. According to CEO Krista Ostuno, HW Green has “worked diligently to be a community partner through action and education. Initiatives that expose today’s youth to recycling is essential in fostering a positive future for our industry.”

The company also sponsors local schools with books from the Scrap University Kids program, as well as providing its own Metal ID Kits. This allows students and teachers to learn more about recycling in conjunction with offering “recycle drives” to get the younger generation involved and enthusiastic about metal recycling.

Other sustainable initiatives undertaken by the company include investing in a state-of-the-art solar system to power its buildings, reinforcing its commitment to utilizing renewable resources. Of course, scrap recycling—the company’s main line of business--itself “offers real solutions for balancing economic growth and environmental stewardship through sustainable initiatives,” the company states.

HW Green is also a member of longtime NERC Advisory Member and trade association Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries (ISRI).

“HW Green Company is thrilled to be a new member of NERC,” Ostuno said. “We are passionate about metal recycling and sharing the essential benefits of our industry with others. We are looking forward to collaborating with fellow NERC members who share the vision of seeking sustainable solutions through action and implementation. The future is truly bright for the recycling industry.”

NERC concurs with Ostuno’s optimistic outlook for the recycling industry and welcomes HW Green as a valued Advisory Member.