Published: May 19, 2017
Bogle

Powell Hinson, a sophomore EVEN student and new president of SEVEN (Society of Environmental Engineering), is teaming up with EEF to teach the importance of properly disposing hazardous waste. Hinson is working alongside Ralph Bogle, a Chemical Treatment Specialist, to illustrate the importance of hazardous waste disposal to students - especially for听engineering students, as engineering generates more waste than most other colleges.

On CU Boulder's Campus,听the Environmental Health & Safety building听is in charge of processing around 50 tons of hazardous waste produced by the campus each year. Each of the neatly organized and stinky drums costs $400 dollars to incinerate, and that does not include labor, liability or transportation. To save on costs, Bogle treats some of the waste on campus, which is a large piece Hinson is interested in learning about.

Hinson's proposal is to video a tour of the facility and work small demos of hazardous waste disposal into the curriculum of several engineering classes.听

鈥淲hen people think research, they think grad school,鈥 Hinson said. 鈥淭he more we open undergraduates to research opportunities, the better we鈥檒l prepare them. Everything we do in school is so conceptual. Through research you can reinforce that what you鈥檙e studying is actually something you鈥檒l enjoy, and EEF is a great catalyst for finding, or making your own听research project.鈥

The (EEF) is designed to听bridge听the gap between ideas and their manifestations for engineering students at CU Boulder.听听A committee of 12 members manages the fund: six undergraduate students, three graduate, and three non-voting baby直播app/staff advisors.听Students vote on how to spend and fund their peers鈥櫶齧oney听and projects, a unique opportunity among major universities and colleges. As the fund comes from engineering student fees, it is meant to benefit engineering students with an innovative idea or unique project proposal that have yet to establish themselves in their given field.听

Check out the full article written by the College of Engineering