| Campus invests in cleanup, maintenance
By Sarah R. Buchholz,
Chronicle staff
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| Brian Konieczny, technical assistant II in Grounds Management,
prepares to use the vacuum on the new VQuip truck purchased
to help spiff up the campus. "This vacuum picks up leaves,
small twigs, pine needles, and, supposedly, garbage and cigarette
butts," he said. "The rear of the truck opens for
easy dumping." (Stan Sherer photo)
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he core of the campus has been undergoing a major
cleanup since the hiring of 10 new staffers in Landscape Services
at the beginning of spring, according to Landscape and Construction
Services manager Pam Monn.
Freed up by the
new hires in the department, a team of six employees, which Monn
refers to as a "SWAT team," was selected to conduct an
intensive cleanup, one building at a time, moving through the central
part of campus as fast as it can, she said.
"We wanted
a well-rounded, well-crafted team with somebody who knows about
pruning, somebody who knows about floriculture, etc.," she
said. "We developed an attack plan for the SWAT team and started
at Whitmore on April 1."
After Whitmore,
they've moved north down the pedestrian walkway and expanded east
and west.
"They will
be working in tandem with the folks who take care of the general
lawn mowing. The mowers go first; then they'll string-trim, prune,
weed, edge, mulch and power wash. They will be aggressively cleaning
up the outside of each building."
Monn said building
entrances and large recycling containers will be power washed.
In addition to
the 10 staff members hired April 1, Landscape Services' efforts
are being bolstered by seasonal help from another 10 staff members
added in January who split their time between custodial efforts
in the winter and landscape work in the warmer months, she said.
This crew will
work to keep litter picked up, she said.
"We'll have
them through October," she said. Then they go back to Custodial,
and Custodial has its own SWAT response for the inside of the buildings."
In addition to
the investment in workers, Monn said, interim Vice Chancellor for
Administration and Finance Joyce Hatch supported the cleanup by
funding a pair of Ford F150 crew cabs and a Canadian VQuip multi-task
truck, which contains a power washer, vacuum and trash-collection
unit. The VQuip cost $70,000, and the other two trucks were under
$40,000 together, Monn said.
"It's in
response to the chancellor's 'curb appeal' initiative," Monn
said. "You might not be able to sell the difference between
the history programs at two schools, but what you can sell is how
the campus looks. So he wants to make the campus landscape look
top-notch. It's spiffing up and paying attention to the details
to make the campus look pristine.
"Joyce Hatch
gave us the people and the equipment after we did up a proposal
saying how many people and how much more in resources we would need.
We were hoping to get to each building four times between April
and October. I'm not sure we're going to [do that], but the goal
is to get to each building at least once.
"These guys
will be making choices about plant material being too close to the
building or not the right kind in the right place. They'll be working
closely with customer service, building coordinators, and E[nvironmental],
H[ealth] and S[afety]. They'll be working with building maintenance
[staff] to replace paint after a power wash, or letting me know
if a sidewalk needs replacing and providing me with a report when
they're done.
"Depending
on what they run into at each building, if we get to each building
by October, we're doing really well. We want folks to know they're
coming. We'll get to them. We encourage folks to go out and talk
to them, ask questions and thank them." |