In Perspective: Big change at the U of I
Updated: November 8, 2012
The university re-vamped the way it
feeds students.
From waste, to waists, the university
is making some pretty hefty claims about cutting back.
But just how much is the U of I
gaining from losing something in the dinner line?
WCIA 3's Cynthia Schweigert puts that
in perspective.
I asked U of I student, Tapan Chete if
he thought there was anything missing from his lunch.
His answer?
"Yeah, the green vegetables I guess."
"The only thing missing from my lunch
today would be fruit-," said another student, Matt Hill.
But these students are missing something else, something U
of I students got for decades before them.
They're missing trays for their food.
"I'd actually rather have a tray,
that'd be a lot easier to carry a few plates and a cup," Hill said.
"I'd rather have a tray because you
can see my green beans are touching my pizza and if I had a tray I could have
more space for my food," student Daniel Levin chimed in.
"Having a tray would allow me to get
more food, which isn't good because I'd eat everything. And, I'm really short
so that wouldn't look good," their friend Allison Pauley added.
Turns out, a lot of students would,
and did eat more when trays were available.
They also threw more away.
So in 2008, the U of I decided to go
trayless.
Dawn Aubrey works in the Housing and
Dining Department at the University.
She says, ditching trays has lead to
students ditching less food.
"It means on a daily basis, we have
reduced our waste by 9,616 pounds per day. By more than 9,000 pounds which is
the equivalent to almost two smart cars,"
Aubrey said.
Staff at the dining hall say it all
comes down to something you probably heard from your parents- your eyes are
bigger than your stomach.
If you have a tray, that can
definitely prove to be true.
You can fit up to four plates on a
tray, and pile each one high with food.
But now, students just grab a plate.
It's a lot smaller and there isn't as much
room to pile on food.
Since only 40% of students come back
for seconds, that means there's a lot less waste.
"Maybe it would make my life easier to
carry my cup and plate at the same time, but I think I can do without if it
helps other people be fed or save food," Hill said.
But, the savings don't stop with the
food. Now, there are fewer dishes to clean.
Aubrey says since getting rid of the
trays, the university has reduced its water usage by 110,000 thousand gallons a
year, and cut back on chemicals by twelve tons a year.
"It has been our single most
sustainability initiative.It's the best thing we could've done," Aubrey said.
The U of I saves about $80,000 a year
by cutting back on chemicals. She also says, reducing waste means the
university doesn't have to buy as much food- she estimates that as a savings of
$2 million
The U of I isn't just saving cash, it's
saving on calories.
The university did a study after going
trayless and found students are eating, on average, about 500 fewer calories
per meal.





