Recipients announced for 2024 Governor’s Awards for Environmental Excellence

INDIANAPOLIS – On Tuesday, the Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) awarded the 2024 Governor’s Awards for Environmental Excellence to seven recipients during the Indiana Partners for Sustainability’s Annual Conference and Tradeshow in Indianapolis.

The Governor’s Awards for Environmental Excellence are Indiana’s most prestigious environmental recognition awards. They are reserved for innovative, sustainable, and exemplary programs or projects that positively impact Indiana’s environment and demonstrate measurable environmental, economic, and social benefits. The selection process is highly competitive.

The 2024 Governor’s Awards for Environmental Excellence recipients were honored at the Indiana Partners for Sustainability’s Annual Conference and Tradeshow, held at the Mariott Indianapolis North (Keystone at the Crossing) on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2024. Not pictured: Representatives from the Muncie Sanitary District.

“It’s rare to have multiple awards for a single category, so I am especially proud of this year’s recipients and their dedication to bringing Indiana to the Next Level by creating solutions that impact the quality of life in their communities. Their work forever stands as a testament to the spirit of Hoosier innovation,” said Indiana Governor Eric J. Holcomb.

The awards were presented as part of Pollution Prevention Week in Indiana. A copy of the proclamation, signed by Governor Holcomb, is available on IDEM’s website. IDEM Assistant Commissioner Bob Lugar and Deputy Assistant Commissioner Carl Wodrich presented the awards on the Governor’s behalf.

The 2024 Governor’s Awards for Environmental Excellence categories and recipients include:

  • Environmental Education and Outreach
    • Dubois Co. Soil and Water Conservation District
      • The Vincennes University Jasper Campus Land Stewardship Initiative, a partnership between the Dubois County Soil and Water Conservation District and the Vincennes University Jasper Campus, continues to educate farmers and others about increasing crop yield through healthy soil practices.
  • Five-Year Continuous Improvement
    • Eli Lilly and Company (Indianapolis, Ind.)
      • Lilly’s commitment to reducing environmental risk through pollution prevention and sustainability practices and its dedication to continual improvement projects is demonstrated through employee education and internal communication, continuous improvement, innovation, and outreach. The company’s approach has reduced waste, hazardous waste, energy consumption, and costs.
  • Land Use and Conservation (Two Awards)
    • Delta Institute and Hobart Sanitary District
      • Delta Institute and the Hobart Sanitary District collaborated on restoring the Duck Creek Tributary, which reduced flooding by decreasing sediment and increasing rainwater capture while restoring native plant and animal communities. Outreach activities were conducted at the local and regional levels to ensure the project’s effectiveness, transparency, and ongoing community support.
    • Hendricks Co. Recycling District
      • In 2023, the Hendricks County Recycling District built a new recycling center in Lizton on a brownfield site that was previously a filling station. The new facility replaced an unattended but active recycling center in the community, experiencing increasing levels of misuse and abuse. Now, friendly, active, and knowledgeable attendants greet residents, answer questions, and enforce the recycling rules to ensure that only those materials that can be recycled are accepted. As a result, contamination is nearly non-existent. Since its grand opening, the Lizton Recycling Center has been visited more than 20,000 times and has collected almost 250 tons of recyclables.
  • Pollution Prevention
    • Electro-Spec (Franklin, Ind.)
      • Although Electro-Spec once used trichloroethylene (TCE) in a vacuum vapor environment to safely degrease metals, the chemical can cause environmental issues if not handled properly.​ Alternative solvents did not have the low surface tension required to clean small parts or work in ​Electro-Spec’s equipment. The purchase of a new vacuum vapor degreaser allowed Electro-Specto to eliminate the use of TCE in their facility and resulted in a three-year cost savings of over $10,000. The machine also helps employees with ergonomic issues by enabling it to be operated without heavy lifting and bending.
  • Recycling and Reuse (Two Awards)
    • Dearborn County Solid Waste Management District
      • The Dearborn County Solid Waste Management District has a robust group of reuse programs, including a reuse center for school and craft supplies, a formal dress exchange, a costume exchange, an event décor lending program, and a holiday item giveaway. The purpose of all of the reuse programs is to divert reusable materials from disposal in landfills while, at the same time, supplying residents with valuable, needed items. The programs help educators in Dearborn County save money on classroom items and provide a place for educators to donate items they no longer need. Meanwhile, local families save money on events and give single-use items, such as costumes, a second life.
    • Muncie Sanitary District
      • In 2023, the Muncie Sanitary District (MSD) received a grant from the Indiana Recycling Market Development Program. Through grant funding and the required 50% match, the district purchased one recycling truck, updated another, and purchased 3500 new residential recycling bins to update the city’s 25-year-old sort and bag residential recycling program. MSD’s online opt-in pledge program allowed residents to receive a free 96-gallon blue recycling bin after receiving information on how to recycle correctly and take a pledge to do so. Over 8,000 households took the pledge in 2023. As a result, MSD added another recycling route to their daily operations, runs three recycling trucks a day to accommodate the growing recycling curbside signups, offers a weekly curbside pickup to residents on their scheduled trash day, and partners with several local businesses and other organizations, to pick up their recycling. After five months of collecting recyclables at the curb in the new totes, MSD collected an estimated 490 tons (980,000 lbs.) of recycled materials and eliminated the need for residents to sort their recycled materials by type.