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Community Growth: Preventing Pollution
Communities and regions are coming together to determine pollution prevention
priorities. These usually revolve around demographics and a vision for quality
of life and economic issues. Coastal communities, for example, frequently key
on issues that impact the oceans. Among other things, the Puget Sound Water
Quality Work Plan details actions and controls necessary to protect and restore
fisheries and tourist businesses. Western states cooperate on air pollution,
water quality, and drought issues. Cities in the Southeast, because there are
few geographic barriers to sprawl, have "grown together" and are learning
to deal collectively with infrastructure issues that span state lines. Great
Lakes states see pollution prevention as the best way to achieve water quality
goals. The Southwest is pursuing sustainable community development through renewable
energies, such as solar and wind. Great Plains states are studying sustainable
agriculture.
Business
As areas deal with growth, a major issue is creating a viable, economic base
that can support the people. Businesses look for a "friendly environment"
when they look to open new offices or plants. Communities want to attract established
businesses that pay well and contribute to the area's quality of life, yet realize
most jobs are created by small businesses. Using concepts such as industrial
ecology, communities are using federal models to tailor regulations that specify
performance standards based on strong protection of health and environment,
but without mandating the means of compliance. This gives companies flexibility
to find the most cost-effective way to achieve environmental goals. Here are
some examples.
- WaterSolve International,
LLC is a manufacturer of advanced, cost-effective water purification
systems for industry and communities.
- Aspen
Ski Company (ASC) uses industrial ecology to manage its 5,000 acres of
skiable terrain and provide services to 1.3 million visitors a year. This
article describes what goes right and what goes wrong as ASC works to be green..
- Sustainable
Eco-Industrial Park describes a sustainable development action strategy
in Northampton County, Virginia. Northhamption is home to a nationally recognized
rural development model. One outcome is the Port of Cape Charles Sustainable
Technologies Industrial Park for environmentally friendly businesses.
Transportation
Transportation is an integral part of community life. Design considerations
include road building and maintenance, zoning, pollution, public transit, and
access.
Building and maintaining a transportation infrastructure requires extensive
resources. As the nation struggles with unreliable oil exports and dwindling
supplies, answering infrastructure questions becomes more important. At the
same time, communities are investigating alternative fuels and trying to determine
if the public will ever strongly embrace mass transit.
Surveys show people want to live in "pedestrian
friendly" communities. So for an increasing number of communities,
the plan includes a "pedestrian friendly"component. It can also
be a key sustainability
indicator. Here are some things that have been done.
- There are increasing numbers of bicycle and pedestrian friendly land use
codes around the country. Planning for livability is a key to their implementation
at http://www.ibike.org/engineering/landuse.htm.
- Village
Homes Sustainable Community is a housing development in Davis, California
where there are more bike and pedestrian paths than roads.
- Sustainable Urban Transportation Planning in Curitiba,
Brazil serves as an international model of a city successfully integrating
transport and land-use planning.
- In Santa Barbara, California, the Coalition
for Sustainable Transportation
Coalition for Sustainable Transportation works towards a vision of well-planned
communities that encourage walking, bicycling and transit for access to all
daily needs.
Energy
Most communities spent millions every year to pay for energy. Naturally, they
would like to keep most of that money at home working for and in the community.
With improved building technologies, new energy efficient products and strategies,
and general conservation, individuals, businesses, organizations, and governments
have the option to invest money into local sustainable energy generation.
- Rosebud Sioux Tribe Wind Farm consists of one 750-kilowatt NEG Micon turbine,
which will produce enough electricity over the course of one year to power
300 to 350 homes. The two-dozen reservations in the northern Great Plains
have a combined wind power potential that exceeds 300 gigawatts (the capacity
to generate 300,000,000,000 watts at full wind), or about 1/2 of the entire
installed electrical generation capacity in the United States.
- Renewable Energy Mitigation Program is a program of the city of Aspen and
Pitkin County, Colorado, that taxes energy consumption. Launched in 2000,
the program requires homeowners who wish to exceed the city's strict energy
"budget" for new buildings to install a renewable energy system
or to pay a renewable energy mitigation fee. The funds are used for local
energy efficiency and renewable energy projects.
- Energy Conservation Savings Reinvestment Plan is an energy-management program
in Phoenix, Arizona that will save the city $42 million in energy costs. Half
of all energy savings are placed in a fund that finances the coming year's
energy projects.
Land Use and Community Growth
By understanding their "growing pains", as well as the processes
and opportunities for change, motivated communities and regions have created
new visions regarding land use planning. Increasingly, developers and communities
are coming forward with plans to revitalize blighted and abandoned areas. Land
trusts are buying land to conserve pristine natural areas and government entities
are aggressively protecting watersheds.
- After Boulder,
Colorado's population doubled in the 1960s, citizens voted to maintain
the city's small town character by instituting a unique plan that limits growth
to 2% a year. A city-planned greenbelt of hundreds of undeveloped acres of
land surrounds the city to help preserve its beauty.
- The Cambrini
Green housing project in Chicago, among the nation's most infamous, is
a symbol of decades of a failed public housing policy. "We've learned
since the 1950s that these islands where people are stacked and isolated from
the surrounding community just don't work," said Housing Authority Chairman
Sharon Gist-Gillian. The area is now being rebuilt on city property and provides
a creative mix of public housing, affordable housing and high-income housing
and access to civic amenities.
- The
Virginia Coastal Program is entrusted with preserving, protecting, and
restoring the rare natural beauty of Virginia's Coastal Zone, while fostering
appropriate economic growth and development.
- In 1996 New York City's Water
Department convinced taxpayers that allocating $1.5 billion to preserve
natural watersheds north of the city would save the $6 billion it would cost
to construct a new water treatment system.
- The city of Austin,
Texas established a desired development zone. Outside the zone, fees for
water and sewage would be up to 50% higher.
Construction
Commercial construction and home building, maintenance, and operation consume
tremendous amounts of resources, so offer substantial pollution prevention savings.
The Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Energy co-sponsor
the popular Energy Star
program. The program significantly reduces energy consumption for homes and
businesses. The U.S. Green Building Council sponsors the Leadership
in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program. LEED provides a complete
framework for assessing building performance and meeting sustainability goals.
Communities are partnering with such programs and provide training and incentives
to contractors and homeowners to "build green." This includes energy
conservation, using renewable energy sources, using nontoxic and renewable building
materials, and decreasing water use. The National Association of Home Builders
Research Center, as well as universities and non-profit organizations throughout
the country, support green building.
Tearing down and hauling off construction debris to landfills is also expensive.
Businesses and communities are finding new ways to reuse and recycle these materials,
often in new construction. And, as new materials are developed, building science
researchers are determining upfront how they can be reassimilated into the manufacturing
process after their lifecycle. Here are some examples.
- The Earthcraft
House project in Atlanta, Georgia is one of the most innovative green
home building and contractor training programs in the country.
- Summerset at Frick Park, is a first-of-its-kind energy efficient housing
development built in Pittsburgh on a former steel industry waste site. A pilot
project of the Department of Energy's Building America program, it is now
prepared for Phase 2 construction.
Building America projects
- The EPA
Science and Technology Center in Kansas City, Kansas recently received
a Gold certification through the U.S. Green Building Council's LEED program.
Many model industrial and residential communities are demonstrating the feasibility
of tackling multiple pollution prevention and community growth issues at once.
Highlighting numerous efficient design features in one community--such as energy-efficient
operation, water-efficient plumbing, services within walking distance, and xeriscaping
(landscaping with plants requiring minimal water)--not only conserves resources,
but provides an invaluable educational and awareness tool.
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