WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congresswoman Jahana Hayes (CT-05) and U.S. Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) reintroduced the Green Ribbon Act, bicameral legislation designed to expand environmental education, promote health and wellness, and strengthen sustainability literacy in schools nationwide. The bill builds on the success of the ED-Green Ribbon Schools Program at the Department of Education, first established in 2011.
The ED-Green Ribbon Schools (ED-GRS) Program is a federal recognition initiative highlighting schools, districts, postsecondary institutions, and early learning centers that implement cost-saving, health-promoting, and performance-enhancing sustainability practices. Since its launch, ED-GRS has honored more than 700 awardees—over 40 percent of whom serve resource-constrained communities—helping drive the adoption of environmentally responsible practices across the nation’s education system.
The program last issued awards in 2024. The Trump Administration quietly wound down the program last year, ending more than a decade of recognitions.
“Expanding the Green Ribbon Schools program would encourage more students, faculty, and administrators to incorporate sustainable practices in schools, especially those in underserved communities,” said Congresswoman Hayes. “I am pleased to introduce the Green Ribbon Act with Senator Booker to strengthen environmental education and sustainability initiatives in schools.”
“Schools across the country are demonstrating that sustainability initiatives can lower costs, improve student health, and strengthen educational outcomes,” said Senator Booker. “This bicameral legislation builds on the success of the ED-Green Ribbon Schools Program by helping more schools—especially in underserved communities—adopt sustainable practices that improve air quality, reduce energy costs, expand environmental learning opportunities, and create healthier environments where students and communities can thrive.”
The Green Ribbon Act includes three major components:
- Give the current program greater impact by strengthening the pipeline of school applicants for the award through greater engagement by participating states.
- Provide federal award winners with a modest honorarium, which would further encourage more applicants while enabling winners to join their peers in Washington, D.C. for the annual award ceremony.
- Extend the program to include awards for non-formal learning institutions (museums, libraries, zoos, aquaria, etc.), with the award program managed by the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
The Green Ribbon Act is endorsed by endorsed by 21st Century School Fund, Action for the Climate Emergency, American Federation of Teachers, Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education, Campaign for Climate Literacy, Captain Planet FoundationCenter for Green Schools at U.S. Green Building Council, EcoRise, Go Green Initiative, Green Schools National Network, Green Schoolyards America, International WELL Building Institute, National Center for Science Education, National Education Association, National Wildlife Federation, New Buildings Institute, North American Association for Environmental Education, SEI (Strategic Energy Innovations), State Education and Environment Roundtable, The Cloud Institute for Sustainability Education, The Wild Center, Ten Strands, UndauntedK12, US Partnership for Education for Sustainable Development, and Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation.
The full text of the bill can be found here.