Categories
2024 Employee of the Month Facilities Management News

February 2024 Facilities Employee of the Month – Ryan Rue

Congratulations to Ryan Rue, Zone 3 HVAC Technician I for being recognized as the February 2024 Facilities Employee of the Month! Ryan was nominated by Zone 3 Supervisor, Gordon Lansdowne.

Since being short-staffed this past summer, Ryan’s hard work and dedication to Zone 3 have greatly supported both Facilities and the University. “Ryan always records his work daily, making sure every action he has taken was documented, dates the work [that] was completed, and details what he has done on the piece of equipment.” Says Landsdowne. In his continued efforts to improve his skills, Ryan has also recently earned a Journeyman license in HVAC.

Interested in submitting a GMU Facilities Employee of the Month nomination? Check out the new process here!

Categories
2024 All Together Green Facilities Management News On-Campus Solutions Sustainability

Mason Facilities Adds 23 Bigbelly Zero Waste Stations

 

Shoutout to the teams and people who participated during the installation process: 

Daniel Hughes (Recycling Worker, Recycling and Waste Team), Shawn Andrews (Recycling Worker, Waste Management and Recycling Team) David Cooke (Recycling Worker, Recycling and Waste Team) Kevin Brim (Supervisor, Recycling and Waste Team), Jody Robinson( Warehouse Supervisor, Warehouse Team), Colleen Regan (Zero Waste Specialist, University Sustainability Team), Jay Lang (Structural Trades Supervisor, Zone 6: Projects & Repairs Team), Corky Jenkins (Structural Trades Tech II, Zone 6), Stewart Tolentino (Structural Trades Tech II, Zone 6), Freddy Rubio (Painter, Zone 6), Corey Verrill (Electrician, Zone 3)

Story by: Colleen Regan
Photos by: Ben Auger & Colleen Regan

Due to the success of the Industrial Composting Pilot, Mason Facilities has just installed 23 Bigbelly zero waste stations.  These new additions to Mason’s campuses provide the Mason community with the ability to dispose of waste in solar-powered stations that support our Recycling and Housekeeping teams through zero waste design upgrades and capacity-based alerts. Check out these new locations below

In alignment with the university’s commitment to reducing waste, Mason Facilities’ initiative to deploy 23 new Bigbelly zero waste stations on the Fairfax and Mason Square campuses will scale the waste collection benefits achieved at the Industrial Composting Pilot site. Launched in August 2022, the composting pilot installed Mason’s first ‘zero waste stations’ throughout the Starbucks Northern Neck building. The successful implementation of building-level composting access was funded through University Sustainability's Patriot Green Fund (PGF), funded by Mason Facilities, which previously funded a 2021 student-led project to assess recycling benefits from using Bigbelly Solar’s smart-waste management system at the outdoor patio location. 

By reducing the frequency of the Recycling and Housekeeping team’s waste collections, the installation of 23 additional Bigbelly Solar zero waste stations on the Fairfax and Mason Square campuses support staff members’ capacity to advance industrial composting at new drop-off locations.  

Five of the new Bigbelly Solar zero waste stations on the Fairfax Campus include industrial compost bins at key food patio sites. Like the Industrial Composting Pilot, the expanded Bigbelly Solar zero waste station initiative is part of a long-term strategy to improve our campus diversion rate (the amount of waste composted, recycled, repurposed, or otherwise diverted away from trash) by expanding composting access for all Mason students, faculty, and staff! 

The addition of the 23 Bigbelly stations was possible because of the success of the first Bigbelly station installed at the Industrial Composting Pilot’s site. 

The Industrial Composting Pilot’s goals included: 

  • Testing zero waste design best practices at new ‘zero waste stations’ 
  • Assessing Bigbelly Solar’s smart-waste management system and the impact of zero waste design standards on the reduction of compost contamination (items placed in the compost that are not compostable) 
  • Collecting data to support industrial composting access for all Mason Patriots  

Thanks to our Facilities Management teams, Patriot Green Fund support, and the partnership of Mason’s Auxiliary Services and Dining teams, the composting pilot successfully installed zero waste bin upgrades at the Starbucks Northern Neck pilot site. Pilot bin upgrades created two ‘zero waste stations’, co-locating the university’s first public industrial compost bins. To co-locate compost, Mason Facilities Zone 6 and Recycling teams expanded the Bigbelly Solar waste and recycling station on the Starbucks patio by adding a compost bin and replacing waste and recycling bins inside the lobby with a new Max-R station.  

The Max-R zero waste station is made of approximately 1,655 reclaimed milk jugs – key to supporting post-consumer recycled (PCR) purchasing goals and guidance – and offered updated design features like waste stream co-location, restrictive lid openings, and color-coded messaging. To mirror design changes and composting access inside the building, the Starbucks patio’s Bigbelly Solar station was expanded to include a solar-powered waste compacting compost bin that could send bin fullness alerts to recycling staff in real-time. 

“Thanks to the daily efforts of Mason Dining and Facilities Recycling staff, Mason’s first site-wide composting pilot was able to consistently divert clean compost away from trash while informing best practices for adding composting access at future campus locations,” said Colleen Regan, Zero Waste Specialist on the University Sustainability team. “By successfully integrating composting with staff recycling processes, while supporting waste reduction improvements like replacing non-recyclable single-use plastics with better alternatives, their collaborative efforts improved the quality of both recycling and compost streams to divert more waste from incineration.”

To successfully divert food scraps and other third-party certified compostable items from Mason, the university must maintain a clean compost stream while it expands access at pilot locations. Pilot zero waste design changes were installed to support this essential waste contamination reduction goal. 

To benchmark the composting pilot’s progress toward this goal, weekly compost contamination audits were conducted throughout the pilot between September 2022 – February 2023. Volunteer compost contamination audits provided Facilities team members with crucial data to analyze the impact of the pilot. Zero waste data collected by volunteers complemented collections efficiency data recorded by the Bigbelly Solar station’s smart waste management system, which reports real-time waste data. The combined efforts of Facilities team members and audit volunteers informed the development of best practice procedures created in collaboration with Mason Dining staff members. 

"Bigbelly has a huge impact on our daily operations, the stations' technology makes us more efficient in performing our duties," said Kevin Brim, Recycling and Waste Management Supervisor within Facilities.  "Already, we’ve seen an immediate impact with both environmental challenges like wildlife, yellowjackets at the bin, wind-blown litter, and the operational challenge of keeping up with Mason's growth and overall university population day to day.”

The partnership with Mason Dining was crucial for the success of the Industrial Composting Pilot. Mason Dining staff quickly identified difficult-to-sort items, inventoried common contaminants identified during weekly audits, and piloted impactful behavioral and educational interventions to support appropriate waste disposal. When small plastic items, like single-use tea bag wrappers, were identified as a key contaminant, Mason Dining staff added countertop trash containers to co-locate disposal for this waste, despite space limitations behind the coffee counter.

By the end of the six-month pilot period, significant improvements from our pilot efforts were clear: 

 

  • 1,000%+ increase in clean compost produced during the final month of the pilot in comparison to the first 
  • 2,467 pounds of clean compost diverted from trash over the 6-month pilot period 
  • 79% improvement in compost contamination over the 6-month period 
  • 45% interior compost contamination rate during the first week 
  • 3% interior compost contamination rate during the final week 
  • 6% average monthly compost contamination rate, exceeding the local industrial composting facility’s maximum 10% standard for acceptance 

The Industrial Composting Pilot recorded a positive trend in contamination reduction and the data collection and assessment efforts supported: 

  • Updates to the picture-based messaging and Spanish translations included in Facilities’ new standard waste bin labels 
  • Mason Dining’s inclusion of composting guidance and training procedures in staff orientations 
  • The expanded deployment of Bigbelly Solar zero waste stations on two campuses with financing from Mason’s Strategic Investment Fund (SIF)

With the success of Mason’s Industrial Composting pilot, which resulted in a deployment of 23 more Bigbelly stations with SIF funding, the Bigbelly Solar initiative aims to advance Mason’s zero waste goals, improve university waste diversion, and expand composting access. Bigbelly Solar zero waste stations now provide public composting access outside of 6 total Fairfax Campus locations and support Mason’s next actions to become a zero waste university: co-locating all waste and recycling bins and installing standardized bin messaging across our disposal locations. You can get involved in Mason’s zero waste pilots and initiatives by visiting our Zero Waste Mason page!  

New zero waste sites are always being added to the Sustainable Mason Map, check back to find locations and resources near you! 

Sort your compost, recycling, and trash at the bin using University Sustainability’s Zero Waste Mason resources. 

 

BIGBELLY SOLAR LOCATIONS: 

ZERO WASTE STATION TYPE: 

FENWICK LIBRARY (NEAR FENWICK A)  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
EAST PLAZA/JC PATH  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
HUB FOOD PATIO  Recycling, Waste, Compost Triple Station 
MERTEN HALL (PANDA EXPRESS)  Recycling, Waste, Compost Triple Station 
MERTEN HALL (MANHATTAN PIZZA)  Recycling, Waste, Compost Triple Station 
SOUTHSIDE PATIO  Recycling, Waste, Compost Triple Station 
SUB I FOOD PATIO  Recycling, Waste, Compost Triple Station 
STARBUCKS NORTHERN NECK PATIO (PILOT SITE)  Recycling, Waste, Compost Triple Station 
SUB I UPPER ENTRANCE  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
WILKINS PLAZA (BETWEEN HORIZON AND JC)  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
WILKINS PLAZA (BETWEEN HARRIS THEATER AND JC)  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
CENTER FOR THE ARTS/BUCHANAN HALL PATH  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
ENTERPRISE/PLANETARY HALL PATH  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
THE GROVE/ENGINEERING PATH  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
THE RAC (NEAR BIKE RACKS/SHUTTLE)  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
WILKINS PLAZA (NEAR MASON POND PARKING DECK)  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
PATRIOT CIRCLE @SANDY CREEK LN   Recycling and Waste Double Station 
NOTTOWAY ANNEX PATH  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
PATRIOT CIRCLE @PRESIDENTS PARK  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
PATRIOT CIRCLE @LOT K ENTRANCE  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
PATRIOT CIRCLE @MATTAPONI R LN (LOT A)  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
PATRIOT CIRCLE @RAPPAHANNOCK PARKING DECK  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
WEST CAMPUS (SHUTTLE STOP)  Recycling and Waste Double Station 
VAN METRE HALL PLAZA (MASON SQUARE CAMPUS)  Recycling and Waste Double Station 

 

Categories
2024 Employee of the Month Facilities Management News

January 2024 Facilities Employee of the Month – Ben Auger

Celebrating Benjamin "Ben" Auger as the January 2024 Employee of the Month

Congratulations to Ben Auger, Engagement Coordinator, FAC Communications & Marketing, for being recognized as the January 2024 Facilities Employee of the Month! Ben was nominated by Megan Laures, Assistant Vice President for Business Services, and supported by Ariel Sierra, Communications and Marketing Mananger.

Ben has fully dedicated himself to his new role as Engagement Coordinator and has done a fantastic job at representing Mason Facilities at several different campus events. Throughout their time at Mason, Auger has been caring, thoughtful, as well as a dedicated employee.

 “I've heard from several people just how appreciative they are of the work Ben is doing in his Engagement Coordinator role, but none of this surprises me” Said Megan.  “His ability to connect with people he's speaking with makes him the perfect person to engage with the Mason community on behalf of Facilities. We're very fortunate to have Ben on the team and his hard work should be recognized!”

Ben also went above and beyond with their collaboration with University Sustainability in their effort for the 2023 Patriot Packout. They played an essential role and were a vital partner to Colleen Regan in the huge success of the event.

Interested in submitting a GMU Facilities Employee of the Month nomination? Check out the new process here!

Categories
2024 All Together Green Facilities Management News On-Campus Solutions Sustainability

Mason Facilities Launching Glass Recycling Pilot

George Mason University is launching a new Glass Recycling Pilot program in January 2024. 

  • Recycle your glass bottles and jars at two drop-off trailer locations on the Fairfax Campus: 
  • 1st & 3rd weeks of the month at Southside Dining Hall and Lot R (near Potomac Heights) 
  • 2nd & 4th weeks of the month at Rogers Hall and the Student Townhouses 

Glass Recycling Pilot Details: 
Did you know glass is endlessly recyclable?  


One of the new glass recycling trailers (left) where folks dispose of their glass bottles and jars, and the new zero waste labels for glass recycling (right). 

Recycling your glass bottles and jars locally provides a sustainable alternative to sand mining and new glass production. Every glass bottle and jar you recycle can help to protect the health of people who live and work near sand mining operations. More recycling means less mining and less production of new glass!  

Recycle your glass bottles and jars at Mason’s drop-off locations 

  • Glass bottles and jars are only recyclable at drop-off trailer locations 
  • Recycle clean glass bottles and jars ONLY: you cannot dispose of any other items inside purple trailers 
  • NO other glass items (ex. tempered glass food storage containers, glass cups, ceramics, etc.) 
  • NO food or drinks 
  • NO plastic or paper bags 
  • NO lightbulbs or lamps 
  • Review the glass drop-off trailers’ schedule  

Reach out to University Sustainability at gogreen@gmu.edu if you have any questions about glass recycling access. 

 

Categories
2023 Employee of the Month Facilities Management News

December 2023 Facilities Employee of the Month – Chris Dotson

Celebrating Christopher Dotson as the December 2023 Employee of the Month

Congratulations to Christopher Dotson, Shift Supervisor - CHCP, Facilities Management (FM), for being recognized as the December 2023 Facilities Employee of the Month! Chris was nominated by Faizullah A Shaikh, Boiler Operator - CHCP, FM.

"Mr. Dotson is an outstanding employee and makes a positive impact on our team in Central Heating and Cooling Plant. Mr. Dotson is a hard worker and Technically knowledgeable and very friendly shift Supervisor, who always goes beyond the goals set for our department. He is one of our best Shift supervisors," said Shaikh.

"Chris is a very responsible and reliable Shift Supervisor who ensures the physical plant facility is always running efficiently, and providing heating and cooling condition for the Mason community, including Fairfax campus housing, auxiliary and E&G buildings," said Rod Billones, AD - CHCP, FM.  "Chris has good work ethics—he is honest, professional, respectful, always punctual, hard worker, and a team player who guides and trains new staff as well as offer help to co-workers in fixing physical plant operations problems, even on his day off.  Chris takes personal initiatives—he is proactive in reporting and fixing equipment problems found inside and outside of the physical plant within his capacity; he is always willing to help fill out the daily management report over the weekend even though it is not part of his job. Chris helps other zones in troubleshooting and fixing things."

Interested in submitting a GMU Facilities Employee of the Month nomination? Check out the new process here!

Categories
2023 News

University Day Service Awards 2023

Mason Facilities celebrates years of service. The below Mason Patriots are completing milestone work anniversaries.   Congratulations!

Celebrating 5 Years of Service:

Julian Kidd (6 years of service)
Amy Millman
Louis Robinson
Nicholas Valadez
Andrew Naylor
Ronald Fasso
Joseph Illig
Virginia Steele
Martha Rodriguez
Said Bouiftilen

Celebrating 10 Years of Service:

John Forgy
Urbano Flores
Arthur Stewart
Tae Seok Seo
Edward Ziliox
Angeline Anteola
Mario Salguero
Joseph Knight
Kelly Hayward Stone
Alfonso Nazario
Christopher Dotson
Manuel Segovia

Celebrating 15 Years of Service:

Milton Perla Flores
Nauman Khan
James Small
Marylou Holly
Alex Iszard
Rod Billones

Celebrating 20 Years of Service:

Emeka Ezidinma
James Cox

Celebrating 25 Years of Service:

John Wickline (26 years of service)

Celebrating 30 Years of Service:

Dennis Herring (31 years of service)
Angel Washington (31 years of service)
Luis Longoria

Categories
2023 Employee of the Month News

November 2023 Facilities Employee of the Month – Jayjay Castillo

Celebrating Jayjay Castillo as the November 2023 Employee of the Month

Congratulations to Jayjay Castillo, General Maintenance II, Zone 3, Facilities Management (FM), for being recognized as the November 2023 Facilities Employee of the Month! Tan was nominated by FM' s Zone 3 Supervisor, Gordon Lansdowne.

It is a great honor for to nominate Jayjay Castillo as Facilities Employee of the Month.  "As I have worked with Jayjay for some time now, I know for certain that he always goes the extra mile in performing his job and always works overtime when he is asked and needed,' said Gordon.

Jayjay always helps his co-workers as needed, and he is very knowledgeable about the work we do in Zone 3. Also, he is known for completing his work orders in a timely manner. He is a good collaborator, and effectively supports his supervisor when work-related parts are needed to be ordered.

Above all, Jayjay always finishes his duties on time, and contributes responsibly to Facilities’ mission to Mason.

Categories
2023 Facilities Management News Sustainability Sustainable Innovation

2023 Patriot Packout (PPO) – a Success!

Patriot Packout (PPO) 2023, George Mason University's annual end-of-the-year donation initiative, collected and redistributed 5,700 pounds of donations valued at up to $29,614. 4,113 pounds of donations went to individual Mason Patriots and Mason’s on-campus resources, and the remaining 1,587 pounds were redistributed to local community resources. Mason FacilitiesUniversity Sustainability team supported PPO 2023 and the Patriot Packout Planning Committee led the planning, design, and implementation of this year's PPO.

PPO provides on-campus donation resources for all Mason Patriots affected by move-out to divert new, like-new, and gently used items from the trash into the hands of Mason students, faculty, staff, and community members who need them.  

PPO first began in 2003 when Mason Facilities staff collected clothing items and transported them to the local Salvation Army. It became a formal initiative in 2010, through a partnership between University Sustainability, Housing and Residence Life, Parking and Transportation, and Facilities Management. 

PPO volunteers collect like-new, gently used, and new donations at specific sites on the Fairfax Campus, the Smithsonian-Mason School of Conservation, and the Science and Technology Campus. Acceptable donations include clothing, non-perishable food and hygiene items, books and school supplies, small appliances, electronics, small furniture, and household goods.    

In 2023, University Sustainability launched the Patriot Packout Planning Committee to expand PPO’s impact and prioritize the free redistribution of donated goods to Mason Patriots in need. For PPO 2023, the PPO Planning Committee was co-facilitated by Colleen Regan, University Sustainability’s Zero Waste Specialist, and Ben Auger, formerly the Sustainability Engagement Coordinator with University Sustainability. More than twenty Mason community members served on the PPO Planning Committee and worked together to plan, design, and implement this year’s PPO with support from the Mason FacilitiesUniversity Sustainability team and more than 45 volunteers. 

Regan emphasized the collaborative nature of PPO 2023, saying that, “This year’s Patriot Packout would not have been possible without the commitment of the PPO Planning Committee and the collaboration of the entire Mason community. We set out to host a PPO event that was more reflective of the needs of Mason students, faculty, and staff across our campuses.”  

PPO 2023 occurred from May 5 – May 22 at the Fairfax Campus while being held from May 5 to the end of June at the Science and Technology Campus and Smithsonian-Mason School of Conservation. Donations were collected at four pop-up locations near the residence halls and three 24/7 sites on the Fairfax Campus, in the Beacon Hall lobby on the Science and Technology Campus, and in the lobby of the G.T. Halpin Family Living and Learning Community residence hall on the Smithsonian-Mason School of Conservation Campus.  

This year marked the first time the Science and Technology Campus and the Smithsonian-Mason School of Conservation were formally integrated into PPO, led respectively by Michal Galvin, the Associate Director for Regional Campuses with University Life, and by Kristal Miller, Resident Director, and Susie Mueller, SMSC Facilities Admin. 

Another first for this year's PPO was the inclusion of two clothing ‘Swap and Hop’ events hosted on May 7 and May 8 by PPO Committee member and current Mason undergraduate student, Mona Hassan. Students swapped their clothes with previously donated clothing they wanted or needed while being encouraged to donate items to PPO.  

After donation collections ended on May 22, donated items were transported to the Gillespie Gallery of Art, generously provided by the Mason Exhibitions team as a temporary storage location. All donations were carefully sorted, organized, and inventoried by volunteers for data reporting purposes. 

After the process of sorting, organizing, and inventorying was completed, the redistribution of donated items began. Approximately 903 pounds, valued at up to $5,802, of high-need items were redistributed directly to the Patriot Pantry, Trans Clothing Closet, Art Supply Sharing Closet, the First Gen+ Center, Parking and Transportation, INTO Mason, Computing and Engineering Diversity Resource and Information Center (CEDRIC), Mason Innovation Exchange (MIX), and the School of Art’s Painting Studio.  

On June 8, 304 pounds of food and unused, personal hygiene supplies (valued at up to $789) were donated to the Patriot Pantry to support Mason Patriots who are experiencing basic needs insecurity. This effort was made possible by Parking and Transportation’s integration of their end-of-semester Patriot Pantry Donation Drive with PPO, and Mason Dining’s partnership with Move for Hunger, who transported donated supplies. Move for Hunger brought another 100 pounds of donated food, hygiene, and emergency supplies (valued at up to $257$) that the Patriot Pantry could not accept to Food For Others, a Fairfax non-profit supporting people in the local community experiencing food insecurity.   

On June 26 and June 27, PPO’s first-ever Free Redistribution Event was hosted in the Gillespie Gallery. Thanks to this space, more than 110 Mason students, faculty, and staff attended the event and freely selected from the items donated during PPO. Mason Patriots received 1,815 pounds of items valued at up to $9,795 during this event, including academic supplies, clothing, bedding, household goods, electronics, and more.  

Following the Free Redistribution Event, 1,567 pounds of donations, valued at $9,590 that could not be redistributed to Mason Patriots were donated to the following local community resources: Committee for Helping Others, Food For Others, Immanuel’s Hope, Shelter House (Katherine Hanley), Women Giving Back, and the Fairfax County Animal Shelter. Additionally, items from the Science and Technology Campus and Fairfax Campus were donated to three non-profit thrift stores: House of Mercy, AmVets, and Green Drop. Non-perishable food donations collected at SMSC were donated to “Blessings Boxes” and all other items were donated to Page One. 

“Last year, less than 600 pounds of useful donations were distributed through on-campus partners, and this year we redistributed over 4,100 pounds of goods and supplies within our campus community – with 82% of that going directly to individual Mason Patriots for free. The greatest success of PPO 2023 was that it demonstrated the positive impacts that Mason students, faculty, and staff can make through our collective efforts,” said Regan. 

PPO provides Mason Patriots with items they need through free redistribution, and it educates the Mason community about appropriate waste disposal. The beginning and end of each semester are challenging for the Facilities Housekeeping and Waste and Recycling team members due to the tremendous volume of waste generated. Responsibly sorting and disposing of waste protects Mason workers from harmful exposures, facilitates efficient waste hauling to avoid overflowing bins, and ensures maximum recovery of waste resources by diverting them away from incineration through recycling and composting.  

By sorting waste materials and donating usable items, Mason Patriots helped save Mason Facilities and the University $1,414 in avoided waste hauling costs during Spring 2023 move-out. Kevin Brim, Facilities Waste & Recycling Supervisor, said that “As a Mason community, we continue to improve how we process our waste and recycling, which fall under strict rules and regulations. PPO demonstrates how donating usable items, instead of throwing them away, and appropriately disposing of waste is good for people, good for the environment, and good for the university!” 

To increase Mason Patriots’ access to donated items, approximately 567 pounds of items donated during PPO, primarily clothing and household goods, were put aside in a storage container provided by Mason Facilities Management for campus redistribution during the academic year. Mason Patriots can freely select any items they need, or swap items with others at the PPO ‘Swap and Hop’ table at Mason Dining’s monthly Farmers’ Markets on the Fairfax Campus.  

The upcoming Farmers’ Markets are scheduled from 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. on Wednesday, November 1, at the Wilkins Plaza near Southside Dining Hall and Wednesday, December 6, in the Southside Dining Hall Lobby. This monthly opportunity provides Mason Patriots with increased access to receive items they need or donate items they’re no longer using.  

Regan invites all members of the Mason community to participate in Patriot Packout. “Patriot Packout is a community-based initiative, and all Mason Patriots are welcome to join the effort to make PPO 2024 even better!”  
 
Folks participating in the monthly Swap and Hop events and all readers of this article are encouraged to join the Patriot Packout Planning Committee. 

 

PPO 2023 Impact Summary: 

  • 5,700 pounds of donations valued at $29,614 were redistributed during Patriot Packout 2023.  
  • Donations were redistributed directly to Mason Patriots in need as well as 9 on-campus and 11 off-campus partners.  
  • 88%5,016 pounds – of all PPO donations were redistributed for free to individual Mason Patriots, Mason campus resources, and local community resources  
  • 3,229.24 pounds of donations were redistributed for free and directly to Mason students, faculty, and staff.  
  •  82% of all freely redistributed donations went directly to individual Mason Patriots in need and Mason on-campus resources 

Want to support PPO and help make Mason even more sustainable? Submit your interest form to join the Patriot Packout Planning Committee  

Want to get involved? Attend PPO’s Donation Swap and Hops at Mason Dining’s Farmers Markets! 

Want to tell us about your experience during PPO 2023? Submit your Patriot Packout 2023 Feedback Form! 

Patriot Packout is people-powered and made possible with the support of volunteers, Mason partners, community partners, and the PPO Planning Committee. The Patriot Packout Planning Committee extends gratitude to all Committee members, Mason and non-Mason partners, volunteers, and everyone who donated to PPO.  

The authors recognize there are more PPO stories than can fit in a single article and invite folks to share their PPO stories by emailing facmktg@gmu.edu. 

Categories
2023 All Together Green Facilities Management News On-Campus Solutions

Tour the Fairfax Facilities Complex

Join us on a tour of the Mason Facilities complex on the Fairfax Campus. You’ll see the Customer Service Center in action and walk through the different trades’ zones like the sign shop, automotive, snow response, waste & recycle management, our warehouse, and our Central Heating & Cooling Plant. Participants will be able to ask questions while getting a sneak peak of the 24-hour operation that keeps the Mason campuses thriving. 

Tour dates scheduled per each semester.

 

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Categories
2023 Employee of the Month Facilities Management News

October 2023 Facilities Employee of the Month – Tan Nguyen

 

Celebrating Tan Nguyen as the October 2023 Employee of the Month

Congratulations to Tan Nguyen, Recycling and Waste Worker, Facilities Management (FM), for being recognized as the October 2023 Facilities Employee of the Month! Tan was nominated by FM' s Recycling and Waste Management Supervisor, Kevin Brim.

Tan has consistently demonstrated outstanding commitment to his work, making valuable contributions to our department since joining as classified staff in August 2021. Before Tan's promotion to a classified position, he served as a wage worker for over a decade and has maintained the same level of exceptional performance throughout his career at Mason.

"I'm nominating Tan as the Employee of the Month to not only honor his hard work and contributions as a classified staff member in our department, but in recognition of his diverse skill set, proactive problem solving, and long-standing dedication to improving our recycle operations," said Kevin.

Tan's versatility and attention to detail sets him apart as an exceptional employee. He speaks English as a second language and possesses a wide range of trades and job skills that often go unrecognized. Tan's always making repairs around our shop and takes the initiative to respond to equipment and mechanical issues that affect the entire team.

Tan's dedication to our goals as a dept is unmatched, and he approaches his job with a positive attitude every day. He is a self-starter and continues to improve each day. His performance and ability to quickly learn new things speaks to his commitment as a Facilities employee and makes him an excellent candidate for Employee of the Month.