A new grant to the United Negro College Fund should help a cross-section of minority-serving institutions – including Hispanic-serving universities and tribal colleges – promote environmentally friendly building practices in the years ahead.
The $1.8 million grant from The Kresge Foundation will go to UNCF for the Building Green at Minority-Serving Institutions Initiative. The chief goals are to build knowledge and capacity so these under-resourced colleges and universities can build faculty expertise and develop more sustainable, energy-efficient facilities.
The goal is for MSIs to build “better, smarter, more intelligent” buildings, said William F.L. Moses, program director at the foundation. While environmentally friendly, such buildings also can reduce long-term operating costs by up to 50 percent through less use of electricity and water.
“Minority-serving institutions want and need to become as green as possible as fast as possible,” said Michael Lomax, UNCF president and chief executive officer.
Activities will begin early in 2010 when UNCF will sponsor three Green Building Learning Institutes, one each in Atlanta, Minneapolis and San Antonio. Those who attend these workshops will be eligible to apply for $20,000 mini-grants to develop green “action plans” for their campuses, said Elfred Anthony Pinkard, executive director of the UNCF Institute for Capacity Building. Ten institutions ultimately will receive these grants to pursue green building strategies.
In addition, the institute will offer six one-day technical assistance workshops to build on material covered during the Green Building Learning Institutes.
At a teleconference Thursday announcing the initiative, UNCF, The Kresge Foundation, and green design experts said one objective of the initiative is to increase the number of minority-serving institutions that join the American College and University Presidents’ Climate Commitment.