Named a Top Green College

The Princeton Review has recognized Southeastern in its 2025 Guide to Green Colleges. The university was ranked among the top 100 in the country for efforts towards eco-friendly and sustainable practices.

According to the Princeton report, data was collected from institutional and student surveys that highlighted key factors relating to green colleges. The notable criteria for the ranking included student reports of a high-quality of healthy and sustainable living on campus, the school’s efforts to prepare students for future employment in a growing green U.S. economy, and the university’s policies that reflect environmental responsibility.

The statistics provided by the Princeton Review mark high levels of sustainability for the universities that met the standards for their Guide to Green Colleges. According to Princeton Review’s website, for each university on the list, “28% of their energy comes from clean and renewable sources, 46% of their waste is diverted from incinerators or solid-waste landfills, and 98% offer a sustainability-focused undergraduate major or degree.” Additionally, every school recognized has a campus sustainability officer who focuses on issues such as energy usage, conservation, and anti-pollution efforts.

Rankings and additional information on the Princeton Review’s 2025 Guide to Green Colleges can be accessed here.

Collecting Discarded Christmas Trees to Enhance Local Wetlands

Southeastern is asking area citizens to give the environment a gift after Christmas.
 
Turtle Cove and its partners are providing Christmas Tree Recycling, allowing discarded Christmas trees to be dropped off and used for wetland restoration rather than thrown out with the trash.
 
“Recycled Christmas trees can be put back to work in our area marshes, while also reducing the waste going into landfills,” said Rob Moreau, manager of Southeastern’s Turtle Cove Environmental Research Station, located on Pass Manchac between Lakes Pontchartrain and Maurepas.
 
Although grant funding from the state programs for Christmas tree recycling in many areas ended years ago, local partners stepped up to keep the project going. This marks the 30th straight year Southeastern has conducted its recycled tree program. Each year students from Moreau’s environmental awareness class, as well as volunteers from the local community, have helped to deploy the trees into areas needed most in the Manchac Swamp Wetlands. This year, Turtle Cove Education/Outreach Coordinator Ariel Ebanks is teaching the class and will lead students in the deployment of the trees in mid-March. Approximately 45,000 trees have been deployed through the Southeastern program in the past 29 years.
 
Southeastern scientists and volunteers at Turtle Cove use the discarded trees to help build up marshland in areas that have been impacted by erosion and other factors, said Moreau.
 
Moreau explained that the trees will be used in a variety of ways, creating new habitats for wildlife and, of course, helping to control erosion along various shorelines, most recently occurring on Galva Canal and in areas around the research station itself on Pass Manchac and the boatshed/parking lot area at Galva Canal.
 
This practice also provides hands-on environmental education opportunities for students and other volunteers who help with the project.
 
Collaborating on the project for the 10th consecutive year is the Southeastern Sustainability Center, which will serve as a drop-off point for area residents to leave their used Christmas trees. Other primary partners include the city of Hammond, city of Ponchatoula, Middendorf’s Restaurant in Manchac, and the Hammond Downtown Development District. Several local tree farms and other businesses usually jump in on the action as well in terms of providing leftover trees.
 
Trees can be dropped off through March 5 from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Hammond maintenance facility, located at 18104 Hwy. 190 next to Piggly Wiggly Supermarket. Trees should be dropped off using the gate on Falcon Dr. next to Piggly Wiggly. During these same dates, city of Ponchatoula residents can drop off trees anytime at 385 North 4th St. by the fence. 
 
The Southeastern Sustainability Center, located at 2101 North Oak Street, will collect trees beginning Jan. 6 through the end of the month from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Thursday, and 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. on Fridays. Moreau said a Turtle Cove trailer is maintained at Middendorf’s Restaurant, so diners going there can also drop off trees.
 
Starting this year, two new partners are joining the effort: The Hammond Farmers and Artisans Market will serve as a drop-off location with more information forthcoming, and St. John The Baptist Parish will also be collecting trees and bringing them to Manchac. Curbside pickup can be scheduled in St. John the Baptist Parish by calling Public Works at 985-652-4815, and will take place on Thursdays through Feb. 13.
 
“The city of Hammond will again provide transport of collected trees from Hammond and Ponchatoula to the Turtle Cove Galva Canal parking lot area in Manchac, where they will be stored until they are deployed in the marshes in the spring,” Moreau said. 
 
For all of these sites, no flocked trees will be accepted, and all trees should be stripped of any ornaments, lights, tinsel, stands, nails and screws, etc.
 
“This greatly helps our efforts to get the trees quickly deployed,” Moreau said.
 
For more information, contact Moreau at rmoreau@southeastern.edu, Ebanks at Ariel.Ebanks@southeastern.edu, or visit the website at southeastern.edu/turtlecove. 
 
Donations to help support the activity can be sent by check payable to Southeastern Foundation – c/o Turtle Cove and mailed to Southeastern Box 10585, Hammond, LA 70402, or can be made by credit card through the Turtle Cove website under the donations link.