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Anjana Sharma, CC '06
Date:
September
22, 2006
Anjana Sharma, CC ‘06, holds a strong conviction: “You can’t
hope that any student will change their behavior if they don’t have the
information on how to do so.”
That’s why she jumped at the opportunity to compile and
write the very first “Guide to Green Living at Columbia.” The Green Guide is a companion to
the “Guide to Living at Columbia,”
an annual compendium of university policies and procedures.
The Green Guide evolved from meetings last spring of the
Green Umbrella Coalition comprising administrators, faculty, staff and students
working in various ways on sustainability issues and possibilities. It was at one of these gatherings, Sharma says,
that Director of Housing and Dining
Scott Wright “floated the idea of getting all the information we’ve accumulated
as resources for all students, and helping everyone be ‘all green.’”
Wright then came up with a part-time summer job opportunity
for this work. Sharma was hired.
“I compiled a lot of information from different departments
– Facilities, Operations, and Purchasing – and from other students,” she says.
“I also did on-line research for off-campus resources in the New York Metro
area.”
Sharma says the Guide “went through many different
iterations and Green Umbrella and Environmental Stewardship Task Force reviews
before it was finally done.”
“Ideally,” she says, “every year it will undergo review as a
constantly evolving document.”
Referring to the Green Guide with its cover photo of shiny
green grass and handsome layout, Sharma says, “Heather (Tsonopoulos) made it
beautiful.” Tsonopoulos is Housing and Dining’s marketing and communications
manager.
Sharma, from San Mateo, Calif., remembers that as a child, she and her family
participated in clean-up activities around San Francisco Bay.
“I was always interested in the relationship between the human quality of life
and the quality of ecosystems,” she says. But it wasn’t until she came to Columbia that she became consistently
involved in environmental concerns, especially as a member of Students for Economic and Environmental
Justice.
Sharma was initially involved with the SEEJ initiative,
begun in 2002, to influence CitiGroup and its environmental standards. She
talks about the power of students at Columbia
and elsewhere to promote change on behalf of the environment and speaks proudly
of the effects at CitiGroup: “They are the first financial corporation to
implement environmental standards in their operations. Because this is now part
of every financial decision they make, they have spurred others. This is really
big.”
The recipient of a Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarship, Sharma
spent the 2004-2005 academic year in Managua,
Nicaragua. She
studied environmental engineering and interned with a public health non-governmental
organization.
On her return to Columbia for
her senior year, she rejoined SEEJ – this time with the effort to make recycled
paper Columbia’s
choice. “As environmental stewardship was becoming recognized,” Sharma says,
“we were going into new phases. It was a big deal to get the endorsement” of
the administration for the use of 30 percent recycled content paper.
Sharma, whose concentration at Columbia was Environmental
Biology, has just started working at a new food cooperative in East New York,
Brooklyn, where she’s organizing a health screening desk. The coop is sponsored
by Mt. Sinai Hospital.
Her next step, consistent with her vision of a better world?
Completing applications to medical schools “all over the country.”
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