Savannah Schuermann ensures the trash from University of Virginia alumni reunions stays out of landfills.
Dr. Matthew Meyer helped swap carbon-heavy anesthesia gases for more Earth-friendly ones.
Track and field athlete Sadey Rodriguez uses social media to encourage other UVA athletes to make greener choices.
Sustainability takes many paths at the University of Virginia, and it has many faces – from faculty to staff to students.
Today, to mark the 52nd Annual Earth Day, we checked in with three Hoos who are taking specific actions to make the University and the community a greener place.
Savannah Schuermann
Savannah Schuermann, senior associate director of alumni events at the UVA Alumni Association, runs “zero-waste” events. By that, she means 90% or more of the trash from gatherings like Reunions Weekend is recycled or composted instead of being hauled to a landfill.
Schuermann and her team certified the Alumni Association as a Green Workplace in 2020, making “zero waste” a baseline for events at Alumni Hall.
Savannah Schuermann runs “zero-waste” events, which means that a 90% or more of the produced waste is diverted from the landfill. (Contributed photo)
“Our events team and marketing team have worked together to reduce superfluous paper or plastic handouts at events,” Schuermann said. “Instead of printing thousands of glossy events guides for our large alumni events, we use a mobile app to make access to information waste-free.”
She said items distributed to alumni are useful and high-quality, therefore less likely to be discarded later. And she works closely with UVA staff to develop the annual summer reunion programs.
“We first did this in 2019, saving thousands of pounds of waste from the landfill, and plan to do it again this summer for our first in-person reunions program since 2019,” Schuermann said. “This was, and is, a heavily coordinated effort between our team, the UVA Facilities Management team, UVA Office for Sustainability and our caterers. It is not a one-person job, by any means.”
The Reunions Weekend experience includes catered class dinners on the Lawn, with up to 600 guests per event.
“A large catered event has the potential to create a lot of waste – from disposable plates, utensils and barware to leftover food, and everything in between. Ensuring that we generate as little waste as possible requires clear and consistent communication between all of our partners,” Schuermann said.
While this is only the second year of the zero-waste effort for the annual Reunions program, Schuermann said that as the guests better understand it and the student workers remain flexible, the event will improve each year.

