Competition in Woodbridge has businesses vying to become better for environment

Woodbridge Mayor John E. McCormac announces the green challenge to township businessmen this week at the Woodbridge Office Tower on Woodbridge Center Drive. Photo: Woodbridge Township
WOODBRIDGE, NJ -- Township businesses are in the race for “green.”
A competition launched this week challenges Woodbridge business owners to become more environmentally sustainable.
Township officials hope the Green Office Building and Business Challenge will encourage businesses to implement at least 10 ecologically friendly practices. The business with the most points by Earth Day on April 22 next year will be crowned the “champion.”
Points are awarded for such things as tracking energy consumption; documenting how much waste is produced; installing energy-efficient doors and windows; getting involved in “buy local” and other community programs; and using energy-efficient light bulbs.
“Participating corporations, businesses and business owners may very well reduce operating expenses, cut costs and save hard earned dollars and cents all the while contributing to a healthier and cleaner environment,” Mayor John E. McCormac said in his invite to join the challenge.
The township itself is already a state leader in the green movement. Last year the township was named “Sustainability Champion” among large municipalities by Sustainable Jersey, which offers grants and resources to towns that go green.
Woodbridge initiatives include installing solar panels on municipal buildings, opening an environmental museum of the future at Woodbridge Center mall and promoting a business park in Sewaren for start-up green technology companies.
Nick Minderman, a consultant with Greener By Design, a firm that reviewed the township’s challenge task list, says the Woodbridge competition is one of the more comprehensive plans his firm has seen.
“Businesses that are looking for direction can read this challenge and see what the questions are that need to be asked, and the answers, and use that to help make the process a lot simpler,” he said.
Some business have already been implementing these tasks.
Ivan Sobel of the Atlantic Realty Development Corp., which owns seven office buildings in the township, says getting involved in the challenge “is good for the town.”
Sobel said his company has invested $1.3 million on an energy management system that controls lights and building temperatures though a central computer.
Atlantic has also changed light bulbs at its buildings and has moved away from paper towels.
“Some of the steps are really easy,” he said.
Click for Woodbridge GREEN news












