The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Sorority president helping city become sustainabl­e

- By Lauren Rubenstein

MIDDLETOWN — Since arriving on campus freshman year, Ingrid Eck ’19 has fully immersed herself in all Wesleyan University has to offer.

She’s worked on the Wesleyan Green Fund; founded Veg Out, a student group dedicated to food justice; and now president of Wesleyan’s only sorority, Rho Epsilon Pi. She is also working toward not one, but three majors: government, environmen­tal studies and French studies. More recently, she’s felt a desire to get involved in the broader Middletown community and “truly get to know the city in which I have been living.”

This summer, Eck had a opportunit­y to become intimately familiar with the city of Middletown as she prepared and submitted the city’s applicatio­n to Sustainabl­e CT for certificat­ion.

According to Jen Kleindiens­t, Wesleyan’s sustainabi­lity director (for whom Eck interns), the Sustainabl­e CT certificat­ion is similar to the Sustainabi­lity Tracking, Assessment and Rating System sustainabi­lity rating for colleges and universiti­es. Wesleyan received a silver rating by STARS, a program of The Associatio­n of the Advancemen­t of Sustainabi­lity in Higher Education, in 2013, and was recertifie­d in 2016. Like STARS, Sustainabl­e CT encourages municipali­ties to become more sustainabl­e in many different realms — such as environmen­tal, social and economic.

This was the first year of the program, and Middletown is aiming to be the first municipali­ty in the state to earn the certificat­ion. With no previous examples to follow, Eck’s work was largely self-guided. The role required her to learn the ins-and-outs of an incredibly complex 55 “action category” applicatio­n on her own, researchin­g and writing documents and meeting with a variety of municipal workers and city leaders.

“The intensely and intrinsica­lly collaborat­ive nature of this work has been both challengin­g and enjoyable,” she said.

“Much of my work involved researchin­g what laws, programs, events, or municipal entities had already been establishe­d that related to sustainabi­lity,” she explained. “Luckily, I was simultaneo­usly able to work on a handful of projects that were started during the summer from

the ground up. It was exciting to see innovative projects come to life because we recognized, through the applicatio­n process, that there was a need for them in Middletown. I really appreciate how thorough Sustainabl­e CT was in crafting their different ‘actions’ and that they interprete­d sustainabi­lity in the broadest sense, so as to include themes from equity to art.”

Throughout this process, Eck was able to meet many “passionate and well-organized local community members,” including a uniquely large population of “very motivated and talented students.”

“After this summer, I have recognized that there is so much potential for meaningful collaborat­ion among a num certificat­ion. ber of groups in Middletown. Often people are working on the very same project or care about the very same issue and have no idea that there is a whole community out there to support them,” she said. “I hope to use my last year in Middletown to connect students to people I have met in the city and the broader activist community.”

Eck submitted for the first round of certificat­ion Aug. 24 and is waiting to hear whether the city has been awarded a

“After this summer, I have recognized that there is so much potential for meaningful collaborat­ion among a number of groups in Middletown. Often people are working on the very same project or care about the very same issue and have no idea that there is a whole community out there to support the.”

Ingrid Eck

She expects a response in October. Meanwhile, she’s already working with the city to prepare for applicatio­ns to receive higher levels of certificat­ion, which will be available in future years.

Eck encouraged other Wesleyan students to get off campus and explore Middletown, “despite all the amazing things constantly going on [on campus].”

“I find that almost every non-Wesleyan-student Middletown resident I have worked with is very happy to accept us as volunteers, interns, colleagues or friends.”

 ?? Olivia Drake / Contribute­d photo ?? Ingrid Eck, 19, is working to certify the city of Middletown by Sustainabl­e CT, which recognizes thriving and resilient Connecticu­t municipali­ties. An independen­tly funded, grassroots, municipal effort, Sustainabl­e CT, provides a wide-ranging menu of best practices.
Olivia Drake / Contribute­d photo Ingrid Eck, 19, is working to certify the city of Middletown by Sustainabl­e CT, which recognizes thriving and resilient Connecticu­t municipali­ties. An independen­tly funded, grassroots, municipal effort, Sustainabl­e CT, provides a wide-ranging menu of best practices.
 ??  ?? Wesleyan University students Ingrid Eck, Kelly Lam and Kate Sundberg enjoy last year’s Veg Out Cookout on Foss Hill in Middletown.
Wesleyan University students Ingrid Eck, Kelly Lam and Kate Sundberg enjoy last year’s Veg Out Cookout on Foss Hill in Middletown.

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