Sadler Center, like Caf, to go trayless

Adobe Flash Player and a browser with JavaScript support is required to use the media player.
  • Uc-trays-caitlin.jpg
Related News

The Student Assembly announced Tuesday that the Sadler Center RFoC would be joining the Commons dining hall in lessening the College of William and Mary’s environmental impact by adopting a trayless program.

The move represents one of many initiatives administrators and students plan on taking to improve food sustainability on campus.

The campaign to make Dining Services more environmentally friendly began three years ago.

“We learned that we were behind,” Commons Director Larry Smith said of the environmental footprint at the time.

Since then, efforts led by both dining services and the Student Environmental Action Coalition have included introducing biodegradable take-out containers and fair trade coffee. Now, the list will include trayless dining.

According to an article in The Guardian, cafeteria supply company Aramark estimates that 1.6 to 1.8 ounces of food is saved per meal by going trayless.

Last semester, SEAC’s Food Sustainability Campaign held a trial of the trayless program, measuring water usage and the amount of food waste, but deemed the results inconclusive.

“We were planning to continue with testing this semester,” SEAC member Connor Horne ’10 said.

However, at the beginning of this year, Smith and Director of Dining Services Phil DiBenedetto decided that making the trayless program permanent would be the best choice for the campus.

“It’s asking ourselves the question of ‘what do we want to do for the environment?’” DiBenedetto said. “It was time to make a move.”

During a tour DiBenedetto gave to the SA and the Food Services Advisory Committee of the dining hall two weeks ago, the topic of the trayless program came up.

“I was asked where we would be doing trayless next. At that time I thought … about the Marketplace as a possible location. The group thought that was a bad idea and suggested the SC,” DiBenedetto said. “I told them that if they thought it was a good idea, we would work on it.”

Even though he had reached a decision, he was surprised to hear of the SA’s announcement.

According to DiBenedetto, dining services still needs to figure out how the trayless program will be implemented at the Sadler Center.

As for a trayless Marketplace, DiBenedetto hasn’t ruled it out, but plans on asking diners for input before taking action.

SEAC co-facilitator Charlotte Davis ’10 was surprised but pleased by Dining Services’s initiative. According to Davis, the trayless program makes a substantial difference on the green front. She said removing trays eliminates an average of three-and-a-half hours of dishwashing each meal, saving both money and thousands of gallons of water each semester.

“I think we’ve got some good responses,” DiBenedetto said, adding he hoped that Dining Services and the students could continue working together to reduce the College’s environmental impact and improve its sustainability.

Both SEAC and DiBenedetto want to increase the amount of local produce in the dining halls. SEAC has been in contact with local farmers and the Williamsburg Farmers’ Market. The organization also has a close relationship with Dayspring Farm, a local farm with environmentally sustainable produce.

“We were connecting with the land and finding out where our food is coming from,” Davis said.

A campus garden, tended by SEAC members, was planted last year.

“It’s going really well,” Davis said. “We have two plots and we have students out there working every weekend.”

“We grew a lot of food over the summer as test crops,” Horne said. “Our goal this year is education and awareness-raising.”

Horne added that the food grown in the campus garden this semester will be donated to the local food bank.

The campaign is also hoping to expand its campus-wide composting program this year. The initiative will include composting students’ personal trash and teaching students how to compost.

Davis urged students to talk to the administration about the changes they want to see, especially with the creation of the College’s Committee on Sustainability last spring. The committee, composed of administrators and two students, will determine how the recently-instituted Green Fee will be spent and how to further improve campus sustainability.

He added that student involvement is the best way to effect change.

“Environmental sustainability needs social sustainability to succeed,” Horne said.

8 Comments

I live off campus and was

I live off campus and was invited by a friend to eat at the Caf once…not only were there no trays there were no forks! I only have 2 hands. It’s a bit hard to carry a drink, silverware, and a plate of food with two hands. Give me a break! Thank God I do not have a meal plan!

I’m sorry Jodi, but

I’m sorry Jodi, but having a bad job is not an excuse to be bad at it. In fact, if more of the workers excelled at their jobs they might actually get better jobs in the future. The reason that I’m going to college is so that I won’t have to work at the Caf.

Your idea that a paid service (i.e. The Caf/UC) shouldn’t offer a value comparable to the money that the customers pay is laughable. For upwards of $10 a meal I should get a tray at the very least and hopefully workers who at least pretend to be friendly and do their jobs.

I appreciate that the

I appreciate that the workers at the UC/Caf have it tough, but can’t help but notice that more than a few of them are actively bad at their jobs, and appear to be fully aware that they’re under virtually no supervision.

The chefs can’t even cook an omlette without using half a cup of oil, and breaking it into several pieces in the process. There are one or two who do a decent job, but it’s obvious that the majority have received absolutely no training for their job function.

How about hiring fewer workers, paying them more, and then making sure that they’re trained properly? This will improve efficiency and morale, reduce waste, and vastly improve the quality of the food and service.

Also, has anybody else noticed that the silverware has never been clean?

“Trays reduce foot

“Trays reduce foot traffic in a congested UC cafeteria”

Don’t you see? Your time is nothing. It means nothing. You mean nothing. The water we’re saving by going trayless will help prevent future water shortages (and trust me, they are coming), which is more important than us all.

“This is clearly a money saver for the food services, less water to pay for, fewer man hours for cleaning”

This is pure speculation. You have not done the math; you cannot possibly know. (Neither can I, but I assume wiping down a couple extra tables uses a lot less water and (wo)man hours than washing THOUSANDS of trays.) But what DO we know? That going trayless DOES save water, money, and hours.

“Also, if the food services wants to cut costs, they should fire everyone who works at the Caf and the UC and actually hire people who are motivated and good at their jobs. Half of the workers at the Caf stand/sit around and do nothing.”
...
...
...
How dare you. I’d like to see you try to do that job. You wouldn’t last a day.

Call it the fucking UC, ok?

Call it the fucking UC, ok? I am so sick and tired of having it called the ‘Sadler’ center.

Reasons to Keep the

Reasons to Keep the Trays:
-Trays reduce foot traffic in a congested UC cafeteria
-Trays help keep tables clean, and protect diners from tables that are already dirty
-Trays make it much easier to bring dishes to the clean-up area, again preventing spills
-Trays make it easier to transport food
-This is clearly a money saver for the food services, less water to pay for, fewer man hours for cleaning, etc … how about reducing meal prices instead of pocketing the profits?
-If you’re concerned about the environment, nobody is forcing you to use a tray. Imposing your views on everyone else at their expense and inconvenience is ridiculous.
-What’s next? No silverware? No heating the UC in the winter?

Also, if the food services wants to cut costs, they should fire everyone who works at the Caf and the UC and actually hire people who are motivated and good at their jobs. Half of the workers at the Caf stand/sit around and do nothing.

Awesome! I never use trays

Awesome! I never use trays in the SC anyways to try to lessen my own impact.

how are we supposed to

how are we supposed to teach the children to read if they don’t even have trays to eat off of? how will they carry their food?