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UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE STUDYING SUSTAINABILITY IN URBAN ENVIRONMENTS by Rachael E. Hurley An Analytical Paper Submitted to the Urban Affairs & Public Policy Faculty of the School of Urban Affairs and Public Policy in Partial Fulfillment for the Degree of MA of Urban Affairs & Public Policy Newark, Delaware December 2009

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UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE

STUDYING SUSTAINABILITY IN URBAN ENVIRONMENTS

by

Rachael E. Hurley

An Analytical Paper Submitted to the Urban Affairs & Public Policy Faculty

of the School of Urban Affairs and Public Policy in Partial Fulfillment

for the Degree of MA of Urban Affairs & Public Policy

Newark, Delaware

December 2009

2

STUDYING SUSTAINABILITY IN URBAN ENVIRONMENTS

by

Rachael E. Hurley

Approved: _______________________________

Edward J. O‟Donnell, AICP

Policy Scientist & Instructor

Institute for Public Administration, School of Urban Affairs & Public Policy

Chairperson of Analytical Paper Committee

Approved: ________________________________

Anthony Middlebrooks, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor, Leadership Program, School of Urban Affairs and Public

Policy

Member of Analytical Paper Committee

Approved: _______________________________

Danilo Yanich, Ph.D.

Associate Professor and Director of Urban Affairs & Public Policy

3

Table of Contents

Introduction ................................................................................................................................................................ 5 Problem Statement/Research Question ....................................................................................................... 8

Theoretical Framework ........................................................................................................................................... 9 Table 1: Variations in the Definition of Sustainability and Its Derivative, Sustainable Development . 10

Scott Campbell (1996) .............................................................................................................................. 10

Image 1: Campbell's Sustainability (Planners) Triangle ....................................................................... 11

Philip Berke and Maria Manta Conroy (2000) ......................................................................................... 12

Kent E. Portney (2003) ............................................................................................................................. 15

Edward J. Jepson Jr. (2004) ...................................................................................................................... 17

Maria Manta Conroy (2006) ..................................................................................................................... 19

Carla Chifos (2007) ................................................................................................................................... 20

Devashree Saha and Robert G. Paterson (2008) ....................................................................................... 22

Choosing a Measurement Framework ...................................................................................................... 26

Table 2: Sustainability Index by Researcher ......................................................................................... 26

Table 2: Sustainability Index by Researcher (continued) ..................................................................... 27

Table 2: Sustainability Index by Researcher (continued) ..................................................................... 28

Methodology ........................................................................................................................................................... 30 Table 3: Measurement of Sustainability for Case Studies .................................................................... 32

Case Studies ............................................................................................................................................................ 33 Case Study 1: Wilmington, DE ................................................................................................................. 33

Table 4: Sustainability Actions Outlined in Mayor Baker's Executive Order ...................................... 34

Table 5: Wilmington Delaware's Completed or Currently Active Initiatives ....................................... 36

Table 6: Future Climate Change Opportunities / Climate Change Strategies ....................................... 37

Case Study 2: Philadelphia, PA ................................................................................................................ 41

Table 7: Goals and Targets from Greenworks Philadelphia ................................................................ 42

Case Study 3: New York, NY ................................................................................................................... 45

Table 8: PLANYC 2030: Goals ............................................................................................................ 46

Table 9: PLANYC 2030: Plan of Action .............................................................................................. 47

Concluding Remarks ............................................................................................................................................. 51 Table 10: Sustainable Index Summary Whole City Analysis v. Sustainability Plan Analysis ............. 52

Future Research ........................................................................................................................................ 55

4

Appendix A: Case Study Analysis .................................................................................................................... 58 Table 11: Case Study Analysis of City Wide Policies, Programs, and Actions ................................... 58

Table 12: Case Study Analysis of Sustainability Plan Policies, Programs, and Actions ...................... 59

Appendix B: Greenworks Philadelphia: Goals and Initiatives ................................................................. 60 Table 13: Greenworks Philadelphia Goals, Targets, Initiatives, and Actions ....................................... 60

Appendix C: PLANYC 2030: Goals and Initiatives .................................................................................... 65 Table 16: PLANYC 2030: Goals, Initiatives, and Implementation Actions ......................................... 65

Bibliography ............................................................................................................................................................ 72

5

Introduction Sustainability has become one of the most prominent ideas of this decade (Saha and

Paterson, 2008; Saha, 2009) and while the concept of sustainability has been subjected to

greenwashing, defined as the “expressions of environmentalist concerns especially as a cover for

products, policies, or activities” (Merriam-Webster) by all sectors and diluted by the misuse of the

term, its ability to capture the attention and intrigue of millions of people cannot be denied. It has

become the focus of the private sector, in terms of marketing and finding ways to save money,

and the media outlets which are perpetuating the popularity of the word with articles encouraging

people to improve their lives and the world through sustainable actions. The world is in crisis; the

world economies are in a recession, the earth is becoming even more unpredictable due to climate

change, more and more of the US population is tipping the scale at morbidly obese, and our way

of life is being threatened by the looming depletion of the world‟s oil and other non-renewable

energy reserves. Something has got to give and while no one is certain what the future holds, one

thing is for sure; there is no quick fix. However, some researchers, political leaders, and

communities are turning to the concept sustainability to help address current problems and begin

to integrate sustainability into their research, governments and lives to create the fundamental

change needed to survive the inevitable challenges the world will face in upcoming years.

Environmental sustainability is often what people think when they hear the term

sustainability but in reality it is a multifaceted word because it reaches beyond environmental

impacts and into the social and economic impacts of actions as well. (Saha and Paterson, 2008)

Understanding how these three concepts of sustainability are interrelated and their need for

balance is key to achieving a sustainable world. Actually achieving a true balance in

sustainability is highly unlikely due to the conflicting nature of environmental, social, and

6

economic sustainability, which is discussed later in this paper, but steps can be taken to mitigate

the negative effects of our current lifestyle and establish the groundwork for a more balanced way

of life that is less taxing on our governments, resources, businesses, society, environment.

Based on the number of research studies being conducted, the establishment Sustainability

Offices in governments around the country, and the number of cities publishing sustainability

plans, the importance of sustainability seems to be a growing idea among planning researchers,

practitioners, and government officials. (Saha, 2009) The built environment (ie. streets, buildings,

parks, cities, etc.) plays such an integral part in guiding people‟s behaviors through its rippling

influence in almost every other aspect of our lives from how we travel to where we live. In

addition, the environmental impacts of the built environment cannot be ignored. The planning

field lends itself perfectly to the idea of sustainability because of a planner's role in creating an

overall vision for a community and the physical places in which the community resides. Through

the use of comprehensive plans, policies, and initiative, Planners help jurisdictions plan for short

and long term development. This often includes taking an overarching look at issues and aspects

of the community to determine the best method for meeting their future needs. Because the

Planner examines all of a community‟s needs, they have a unique opportunity to see where a

community can integrate sustainable practices and facilitate communications between

departments so resources are used effectively and a balance is achieved. Municipalities all over

the country are integrating sustainability in their comprehensive plans and even creating Offices

of Sustainability and sustainability plans. (Saha, 2009) Several researchers in the planning field

have studied the connection between planning, government initiatives, and sustainability and have

developed methods for evaluating how successful communities are at integrating the concept of

sustainability. (Berke&Conroy,2000; Portney, 2003; Jepson, 2004; Conroy, 2006; Saha and

7

Paterson, 2008) Their research methods will be discussed below.

8

Problem Statement/Research Question

Through this paper, the current literature will be examined to answer (1) how are

researchers identifying and indexing municipalities‟ sustainability efforts? And (2) What

sustainability practices are being taken in three cities in the US and, based on the chosen index,

are they successful and are they balancing the “Three Es” of sustainability? The different

sustainability indices will be compared and analyzed. One index will be chosen and used for the

three case studies in which Wilmington (DE), Philadelphia (PA), and New York (NY) will be

examined to determine the level and balance of sustainability in each city.

9

Theoretical Framework

Sustainable development is a topic that has piqued the interest of researchers for over 30

years. (Wheeler, 2000) Even within the United States, where acceptance towards the idea of

sustainability has been slow to take hold, researchers have been exploring the topic and, more

specifically, what role planners, municipalities, and government officials are and should be

playing in promoting the ideas of sustainability within an urban environment. The purpose of the

following section is to examine the current literature for indices of sustainability within a

governmental context. How researchers have indexed the sustainability efforts, actions, and

policies of municipalities will be complied, summarized, and to a brief extent, analyzed.

The United Nation‟s World Commission on Environment and Development published a

report titled, Our Common Future, in 1987. (WCED) This report put forth a definition of

sustainable development that has provided a common base for researchers to begin their studies

into the topic. The report defined sustainable development as:

"meet present needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their

needs"(WECD, 1987).

This is a vague definition that has led to a large amount of debate about its exact meaning

however there is an understanding and agreement about the underlying concepts of sustainability

provided by that definition. (Wheeler, 2000; Portney, 2003; Conroy, 2006; Saha, 2009) Many

researchers begin with the UN's definition, and the concepts it highlights, but create a new

definition they feel better suits the scope of their study while still maintaining the basic tenants of

sustainability. Table 1 provides a list of several researchers included in this paper and the

10

definition they have developed.

Table 1: Variations in the Definition of Sustainability and Its Derivative, Sustainable

Development

Definitions of Sustainable Development

United Nations World

Commission on

Environment and

Development (1987)

Campbell (1996) Berke and Manta

Conroy (2000) Saha and Paterson (2006)

Sustainable development

is development that meets

the needs of the present

without compromising the

ability of future

generations to meet their

own needs.

Sustainable Development:

"to move further towards

sustainable practices in an

evolutionary progression";

"to sustain, simultaneously

and in balance, these three

sometimes competing,

sometimes complimentary

systems."; "requires such

complex restructuring and

redistribution that the only

feasible path to global

sustainability is likely to be

a long, incremental

accumulation of local and

industry specific advances."

Sustainable development is

a dynamic process in which

communities anticipate and

accommodate the needs of

current and future

generations in ways that

reproduce and balance local

social, economic, and

ecological systems, and link

local actions to global

concerns.

"Movement towards

sustainability" is "changing

patterns of consumption and

production (that is… all the

ways we live, work, and play

at all levels of human activity-

-- institutions, firms,

households and individuals)

in a more ecologically

sensitive, economically

sound, and socially just

manner."

Sources: WCED (1987), Campbell (1996), Berke and Conroy (2000), Saha and Paterson (2006)

Scott Campbell (1996)

In 1996, Scott Campbell explored sustainable development and the conflicts that arise

between the three main principles of sustainability. He recognized three parts to sustainability;

environment, equity, and economy or the “Three Es”. These three concepts comprise the

sustainability triangle (Image 1). True sustainability can only be achieved where there is a

balance between the “Three Es” however, in reality, ever achieving a balance is unlikely.

(Campbell, 1996, p.297) This is because if one E is supported, it often means the detriment to

one or both of the other Es. He defines these conflicts as the property, resources, and

development conflicts. (Campbell, 1996, p.298-299) Campbell argues the role of the planner then

becomes one of mediation between the competing aspects of sustainability and to find ways for

the “Three Es” to support rather than work against each other. (Campbell, 1996, p.305) This

11

article set forth a basic guideline for defining sustainability efforts within the planning realm.

Using Campbell‟s triangle to measure how well and to what extent urban areas are balancing

environment, equity, and economy in their efforts to promote sustainable development became

the focus of many follow-up studies.(e.g. Berke and Conroy, 2000; Chifos, 2007; Saha and

Paterson, 2008)

Image 1: Campbell's Sustainability (Planners) Triangle

Source: Campbell (1996)

It is important to recognize that sustainability efforts cannot take place in an isolated

environment. The very nature of sustainability requires coordination on a large scale. Small areas

(depending on the context can include neighborhoods, towns, cities, states) can develop individual

sustainability plans to address specific issues but they cannot discount what is happening around

them and what others, outside their borders, are doing and planning. This also means larger areas

12

(depending on the context can include cities, states, metropolitan regions, or the entire country)

developing sustainability plans can address large, regional concerns but they should include the

smaller places, within the area they are planning for, to best meet the needs of everyone involved.

Planning for sustainability on a larger, or more specifically, on a metropolitan scale, can prove to

be challenging due to the need for political and institutional will and cooperation. (Wheeler, 2000,

p.133) However, a city promoting sustainable development and good urban sustainability plan

will recognize that their impacts will reach well beyond their borders. The cities must also

understand social movements, nongovernmental organizations, regional institutions,

intergovernmental coordination, performance standards, participatory planning and consensus

building, and educational efforts will have important roles in helping achieve sustainability

efforts. (Wheeler, 2000, p.138-139) Knowing if a city understands these concepts is not enough

to determine if and to what extent a city is effectively promoting sustainability. A sustainability

index still needs to be developed and applied. The following researchers developed a series of

indices to gauge sustainability efforts among cities.

Philip Berke and Maria Manta Conroy (2000)

Berke and Conroy were the first researchers to develop an index to help understand local

government sustainability efforts. (Saha, 2009 p.25) They evaluated 30 comprehensive plans

based on a set of analytical criteria applied to each plan. Ultimately, their goal was to answer two

questions; "Are plans that use sustainable development as an organizational concept more likely

to promote sustainability principles then plans that do not?" and "Do plans achieve balance by

supporting all sustainability principles, or do plans narrowly promote some principles more than

others?" (Berke and Conroy, 2000, p. 21-22)

13

Their definition of sustainability specifically focuses on a balance of the “Three Es" and

looking beyond borders when examining the consequences of actions (Table 1). A set of six

sustainability principles, found in Table 2 on page 25, were identified and, using a content

analysis method, the plans were evaluated for how well the principles were promoted throughout.

In order to determine how well the principles were promoted, the policies set forth by the plan

were assigned the appropriate principle based on its goal. Then the development management

techniques promoted by those policies were identified and finally, the policies were given a score

of 1 or 2 based on if they were suggested or required, respectively.

After the evaluation was completed, Berke and Conroy concluded the explicit inclusion of

sustainable development ideas within a plan does not translate into an increase in the promotion

of the ideas. In answering their second question they found the evaluated plans lacked balance

and instead, the weight of the plans focused on creating better living environments for

constituents which Berke and Conroy defined as “The locations shape, density mix, proportion,

and quality of development should enhance fit between people and urban form by creating

physical spaces adapted to desired activities of inhabitants; encourage community cohesion by

fostering access among land uses; and support a sense of place to ensure protection of any special

physical characteristics of urban forms that support community identity and attachment.” (Berke

and Conroy, 2000, p. 23) They discovered a third finding; many of the plans do not venture

beyond traditional content and into areas that would promote sustainable development techniques.

The analysis used by Berke and Conroy is based on a standardized analytical technique in

which intercoder reliability was tested to ensure consistency among the analysis. However, with

this type of analysis, direct participation from municipalities is lacking and the coders are basing

14

their analysis off of what they know about the comprehensive plans and on an outsider's

perspective of the programs. This can lead to in incomplete analysis because the coders may not

have knowledge of all the municipality‟s actions and initiatives.

Berke and Conroy completed another study in 2004 to address two questions brought forth

from their 2000 study; "Does support for dimensions of the planning process and the integration

of sustainable development as an organizing concept in plans lead to greater support for the

principles of sustainable development in local plans?" and "Does the presence of a state planning

mandate lead to greater support for the principles of sustainable development in local plans?"

(Berke and Conroy, 2004, 1382) Using the analysis technique they developed in their 2000 study,

in addition to telephone surveys, they studied 115 communities. From their analysis they

concluded state mandated planning, increased public participation breadth, and positive

population changes increase the likelihood for a plan to incorporate sustainable development

ideals. Interestingly, they again found a disconnect between the integration of the concept of

sustainability into the plan and the actual planning for sustainable development taking place

within the towns. (Berke and Conroy, 2004, 1392-1393) From this study, three factors can be

derived as important when analyzing a city on its sustainability efforts. First, does the state

require a planning document, second, has the city taken efforts to incorporate and engage the

public, from multiple areas within its borders, in the planning process and third, is there a positive

population change. (Berke and Conroy, 2004, 1393-1394) Alone these three factors will not

identify a city‟s sustainability efforts because the inclusion and follow through individual

sustainability initiatives is not taken into account, but according to the study, the three factors

provide strong indicators that a city is incorporating sustainable development into their plans.

For the second study, Berke and Conroy again used the protocol developed in their

15

previous study and tested for intercoder reliability. (Berke and Conroy, 2004, 1398) However,

this type of analysis can be unintentionally influenced by the coder and their knowledge and

experience with the municipalities. To add another dimension to their research, Berke and

Conroy developed a survey with open ended and closed ended questions that they conducted

through a series of telephone interviews. This gave the researchers feedback directly from the

cities but a self selection bias occurs because the cities could choose whether or not to participate.

(Berke and Conroy, 2004, 1390)

Kent E. Portney (2003)

Kent E. Portney conducted a research study in hopes of gaining insight into what extent

cities in the United States are moving towards enacting sustainability initiatives within their

boundaries. He selected twenty-four cities with actual sustainability policies on the books as of

January 1, 2000 (Portney, 2003, p. 64). The twenty-four cities were analyzed against an index

Portney developed, called the “Taking Sustainable Cities Seriously” index, in order to measure

how serious cities are about sustainability. The criteria for his index can be found in Table 2.

The twenty-four cities were cross referenced with the thirty-four program elements found in

Portney‟s index. If the city had a program element it was indicated with a „Y‟. If the city did not

have one of the program elements, an „N‟ was indicated. The totals were tallied up and the scores

ranged from six to thirty. (Portney, 2003, p. 68-71)

Through his analysis, Portney was able to address some of his research questions. He was

interested in examining “what cities actually seem to be doing in their respective pursuit of

sustainability”, does the answer to that question support or refute the current theories of

sustainability, can cities be compared for serious sustainability attempts using the same set of

criteria, and “why do some cities seem, at least on the surface, to be taking sustainability more

16

seriously than others?” (Portney, 2003, p. 2-3) He stated the goal of this research project was “not

to assess whether cities have become more sustainable” (Portney, 2003, p. 31) so ultimately he is

not concerned with the actual outcome and success of a city‟s sustainability initiatives but rather

the effort a city is putting into creating sustainability initiatives. At the time of his research,

Portney felt the concept and adoption of sustainability efforts was too new and even if cities had

adopted policies, initiatives, and programs, the effects of those enactments would not be felt for

some time. After the analysis, a detailed profile of eight cities with strong and, based on

Portney‟s analysis, serious effort towards sustainable activities was completed to try and identify

a common element between the cities, however very little was found to be similar between these

eight cities at the time of his research.

Portney‟s index is one of the longer indices examined in this paper. It breaks key

programs and activities into seven sections which are (1)Sustainable Indicators project,

(2)“Smart Growth” activities, (3) land use planning programs, policies, and zoning, (4)

Transportation planning programs and policies, (5) Pollution prevention and reduction efforts,

(6) Energy and resource conservation/efficiency initiatives, and (7) Organizational/

administration/ management/ coordination/ governance. (Portney, 2003, p.65) Under these seven

sections, the thirty-four elements of the index are distributed. From there Portney completes his

simple „Y‟/‟N‟ analysis. Points are awarded on a one-to-one basis with a maximum score of

thirty-four. While his index is broken down into several sections, he feels environmental

sustainability plays an important role in the analyzing a city‟s sustainability efforts (Portney,

2003, p.240).

If examined for a balance between the “Three Es”, Portney‟s index contains twenty three

environmental protection initiatives, five economic development initiatives, and six social

17

justice/equity initiatives. (Saha and Paterson, 2008, p.24-26) His index allows for a simple

analysis to measure sustainability among municipalities. He did not distribute surveys do the

analysis was done by someone with an outsider‟s perspective. Their knowledge and

understanding of the city and its sustainability efforts is based on researching available materials.

The municipalities are not directly included in the analysis.

Edward J. Jepson Jr. (2004)

Another researcher, Edward J. Jepson, developed his own method for analyzing the extent

to which sustainable development techniques have been integrated into local planning and

development policies. Through his study he aimed to answer three questions: "(1) To what extent

are sustainable development policies being enacted in U.S. communities, and what is their

nature? (2) What are the principal impediments to the enactment of such policies? and (3) What

is the role of the planning office in their enactment?" (Jepson, 2004, p. 229)

Based on a literature search he developed a list of thirty-nine tools and techniques that

contribute to sustainable development practices within a community which can be found in Table

2. This list is meant to represent a "comprehensive collection of the current state of sustainable

development as it can be operationalized at the local level." (Jepson, 2004, p.231) From 390

cities, 103 returned the survey in which they were asked to answer three questions about to each

of the thirty nine tools or techniques. The questions are as follows:

"Question 1: "Has your community taken legislative or administrative action relative to

the achievement of this initiative, either on its own or in collaboration with another unit of

government?" The response choices were taken, not taken, and not permitted (state-enabling

legislation needed)."

"Question 2: "What in your view is the principal reason that direct legislative or

18

administrative action has not been taken relative to the achievement of the policy?" The response

choices were fiscal constraints, administrative limitations, opposition from community groups,

lack of knowledge/information, low public interest, and not appropriate or necessary in relation

to community goals and objectives."

"Question 3: "As a result of your experience and observation, what has been the nature of

involvement of the community's planning office relative to the action that was taken regarding the

policy?" The response choices were took and retained lead role from the beginning, became an

enthusiastic partner, contributed appropriately as requested and needed, and was minimally

involved."(Jepson, 2004, p. 231)

From the responses Jepson found it is “probably true that more than 80 percent of

communities have taken action on less than half of the sustainable development policies” (Jepson,

2004, p. 235) he identified. His lists of thirty nine sustainability initiatives provided

municipalities with a wide range of options to choose from. He was also interested in looking

beyond whether they simply have or do not have such an initiative and into whether the

community has taken action on the initiative and if not, why. The initiatives identified in his index

included twenty two environmental protection initiatives, twelve economic development

initiatives, and five social justice/equity initiatives. (Saha and Paterson, 2008, p.24-26) Measure

the balance of the “Three Es” of sustainability would be impossible using his index because it

does not attempt to provide an balanced selection of sustainability initiatives for municipalities to

choose from.

His analysis required the direct participation of municipalities and the responses are based

on the individual experiences of the respondent. This allows for people with direct experience and

knowledge of the municipality to answer the survey questions. There is a self-selection bias to

19

this type of survey and this should be taken into consideration when reviewing the findings

because communities actively participating in sustainability initiatives will be more likely to

return the survey. (Jepson, 2004, p. 235) The survey was accompanied by a letter instructing the

recipient to forward the survey to the most appropriate person if they did not feel they were

qualified to answer and they were asked to record their positional affiliation but ultimately the

role of the actual respondent is unknown. (Jepson, 2004, p. 231)

Maria Manta Conroy (2006)

Maria Manta Conroy completed her own study, published in 2006, to examine if the

concept of sustainability was present within the local governments in Indiana, Kentucky, and

Ohio. Conroy felt the previous studies focused primarily on cities known for taking the lead on

the concept of sustainability. (Conroy 2006, p.18) In order for sustainability to be accepted as a

mainstream concept and really take hold as a basis for planning, Middle America and the

everyday, indistinguishable city has to be committed to the idea of sustainability and integrating it

into the planning process. (Conroy, 2006, p.20) To study this, she selected all 975 communities

in Indiana, Kentucky, and Ohio with populations between 2,000 and one million with a publically

available mailing address. The towns were sent a survey comprised of both open ended and

multiple choice questions and 436 returned the survey. Within the surveys Conroy asked for the

respondents to identify how familiar they personally were with sustainability, whether it was a

useful concept when planning, if they felt the town or city had an understanding of the concept, if

sustainability was discussed in the government, if there were activities with sustainability goals,

and if the word „sustainability‟ was used in conjunction with those activities. (Conroy, 2006,

p.22-23) The answers were selected through multiple choice. These questions, while not of

specific activities taking place within the municipality offer some insight into why there might be

20

a disconnect between an explicit acknowledgment of sustainability as a goal and the promotion of

sustainability ideals. In particular, 70% of the respondents indicated their community has

planning-related activities promoting sustainability but 81% indicated sustainability is not

explicitly mentioned in conjunction with those activities. (Conroy, 2006, p.22) In addition to the

questions above, sixteen sustainability activities, derived from a review of the comprehensive

plans used in the 2000 Berke and Conroy study, were included in the survey with multiple choice

responses (Table 2). An open ended response section was included to provide respondents a

place to elaborate as needed. Overall, her surveys took into account the importance of additional

factors with the potential to influence the level of sustainability and initiatives within a city, such

as knowledge dissemination, rather than only focusing on what activities are being implemented.

The sixteen sustainability initiatives within her index include seven focusing on environmental

protection, five focusing on economic development, and four focusing on social justice/equity.

(Saha and Paterson, 2008, p.24-26)

The analysis method employed by Conroy for this study allowed the cities to directly

answer questions relating to them however, since the surveys were sent to individuals, their

experience may have an unwanted effect on the survey responses and the actual person

responding to the survey is unknown. (Conroy, 2006, p.20-21) Again, this type of mailed survey

can have a self-selecting bias and should be taken into consideration.

Carla Chifos (2007)

Local municipalities are not solely responsible for encouraging sustainable development

programs and initiatives. Carla Chifos, an assistant professor from the School of Planning at the

University of Cincinnati, examined three federal programs aimed at improving the United States

commitment to sustainable development after the 1992 United Nations' Conference for

21

Environment and Development. The index she uses, shown in Table 2, is derived from guidelines

set forth by the President's Council on Sustainable Development and was used to compare the

U.S. Department of Energy's Center for Excellence for Sustainable Development, the U.S.

Environmental Protection Agency's Sustainable Development and Systems Preservation program,

and the U.S. Department of Transportation's Transportation, Community, Challenge

Grant. (Chifos, 2007, p.438) After more than twenty in-depth, guiding interviews with

government administrators, program directors, and federal employees as well as a literature search

and follow up interviews, (Chifos, 2007, p.436) Chifos assigned each guideline one of three

designations based on its inclusion in the programs; strong component, existing component, or

negligible or nonexistent component. The length of time the programs have been active, the

number of projects (assisted), the total amount of funding, and the award amounts were also

examined. (Chifos, 2007, p.438)

The index used by Chifos provide one section asking if the programs “balance social,

environmental, and economic concerns” but the guidelines do not offer any way to identify a

balance in the “Three Es”. This analysis method offers a simplified method that can be

transitioned from analyzing federal programs to city plans and programs promoting sustainability

efforts. Unlike the previous indices, Chifos takes into account how long the programs have been

active, the number of projects under each program, and the amount of funding for each program.

However, her index contains room for personal interpretation and judgment with items such as

"balance social, environmental, and economic concerns", and "improved quality of life for more

people". The ranking system she utilizes does not offer solid guidelines for how or what qualifies

under each term. Because of the personal interpretation involved, it is questionable whether, if

done again, the outcome of her study would be repeatable.

22

Devashree Saha and Robert G. Paterson (2008)

In 2006, there was still uncertainty as to what extent sustainability efforts are being

supported by local governments in the United States. (Saha and Paterson, 2008, p.21) Since the

study by Berke and Manta Conroy in 2000, the concept of sustainability has taken off in the eyes

of the public as concerns about global warming and climate change mount. The idea of climate

change has become common knowledge making it harder to deny and sustainability and

sustainable development has the potential to be one way to combat and mitigate the predicted

changes and devastation associated with climate change. Because land use and planning affects

many aspects of people's lives, such as where they live, how they build, how they travel from

place to place, and where their resources come from, (WCED, 1987) the need for a connection

between planning and sustainability has become even more apparent and urgent. The previous

studies indicated a disconnect between the idea of sustainability and the actual application of

sustainability. Researchers Saha and Paterson published a study in which they too developed an

index to analyze local government's efforts in promoting sustainable development in their

planning practices. They were particularly interested in how well local governments were

balancing the “Three Es”. The completed study aimed to answer the following four

questions:"(1) Are cities adopting sustainable development as an overarching development

framework or are they merely choosing sustainability policies in an ad hoc manner; (2) What

kind of sustainability initiatives are being adopted more frequently by local governments as

opposed to others; (3) are local governments making an equal effort to promote the environment,

economy, and equity dimensions (also referred to as the "Three Es") of sustainable development

or are some sustainability initiatives being pursued more vigorously than others; and (4) what

are the major obstacles to adopting and implementing sustainability initiatives?" (Saha and

23

Paterson, 21)

In order to improve upon the previous research done in the area of promoting sustainable

development through government policies and initiatives they completed a literature search and

complied a panel of fifty experts to select the most important sustainability initiatives. From their

research, Saha and Paterson identified sixty-six sustainability measures spread across the ideas of

environmental protection, economic development, and social justice/equity. They attempted

provide a balanced number of possible initiatives within each section by asking each expert

identify the five most important measures in each of the three categories. Out of the original

sixty-six initiatives, thirty-six were singled out by the experts and included as a sustainability

index for the study (Table 2). (Saha and Paterson, 2008, p.23)

With this information, Saha and Paterson developed and administered a survey to 353

cities, with 2000 populations over 75,000, in which they asked the cities about their current

efforts for promoting sustainability and as well as to indicate which of the thirty-six, expert

identified, initiatives they have adopted. The initiatives the cities adopted did not have to be

specifically within a sustainability plan and, instead, could be taking place in a variety of

departments within the city. (Saha and Paterson, 2008, p.26-27) 216 cities returned the surveys

and they found that "a sustainability plan, presence of a sustainability indicators project, and a

separate office of sustainability with a clear delineation of responsibilities and accountability"

(Saha and Paterson, 2008, p.28) are key indicators in determining the strength of a city‟s

commitment to sustainability. Saha and Paterson analyzed what sustainability measures the

cities had indicated as taking and found most of the measures were environmentally based, trailed

by economics and then social justice/equity. (Saha and Paterson, 2008, p.31) An important part of

Saha and Paterson's research was the opportunity for respondents to relay the barriers they have

24

come up against while trying to promote the “Three Es” and this was done through an open ended

portion of the surveys. (Saha and Paterson, 2008, p.30) This information may provide important

insight as research continues into why there seems to be a disconnect between integrating

sustainability as an ideal and the actual practice of sustainability.

Through a very thorough search of the literature and input from a panel of experts in

sustainability, Saha and Paterson developed a balanced set of thirty-six sustainability initiatives.

The analysis required direct participation of survey respondents through a simple survey in which

they could select one of three responses; Currently Adopted, Not Adopted, or N/A. (Saha and

Paterson, 2008, p.33) The multiple choice section consisting of the sustainability measures was

simple, specific, and straightforward, leaving little room for personal interpretation from the

respondents. An open ended section of the survey allowed for participants to provide answers to

questions based specifically on their experiences. The surveys were sent to city managers, the

planning director/community development director, or the office/coordinator of sustainability if

available however, the actual respondent is unknown. (Saha and Paterson, 2008, p.27) Saha and

Paterson acknowledge a self-selection bias with this type of survey and this should be taken into

consideration when reviewing the findings. (Saha and Paterson, 2008, p.27)

Sustainability is becoming an important concept within governments (Wheeler, 2000;

Conroy and Beatley, 2007; Saha and Paterson, 2008; Saha, 2009) and because sustainability deals

with the interconnection of many aspects of our communities and resources, understanding what

governments are doing in terms of promoting sustainability initiatives is essential. Our

governments have such an influential role in every aspect of our society that understanding the

connection between them and sustainability measures is important. This is particularly true today

as the United States is in the midst of a major economic recession. Resources are tight all around

25

and by encouraging sustainable measures it allows us to use those resources more efficiently and

serve more people then under an unsustainable system.

Measurement of a city‟s sustainability efforts proves to be a key issue that has garnered

the attention of many individuals and for good reason. Being able to statistically compare cities

and their policies proves to the general public, as well as the citizens living within the cities, that

the sustainability efforts are genuine. The cataloging of sustainability initiatives and efforts goes

a long way toward reassuring and proving to the people that sustainability is a serious issue and is

something of great importance. It also provides those who are interested in increasing

sustainability efforts within their city a place to start, ideas for initiatives that work, and proof to

present to gain support from community members, political officials, and other stakeholders. It

also provides them with validation that they are not alone in their cause. Measuring what cities

are doing will also help with a broader understanding as to why some cities are interested in

sustainability and other are still lagging behind. The actual documentation of sustainable

programs will not provide insight on its own but it may provide some data or a spring board to

further research on the subject.

26

Choosing a Measurement Framework

The measures of sustainability in the following table were taken from the above researcher's

literature. Due to the length of the sustainability indices and the number of researched included in

the analysis, Table 2 has been broken into three sections and can be found on this page as well as

the two following pages:

Table 2: Sustainability Index by Researcher

Campbell (1996) Berke and Conroy (2000)

Balance Between Principles (1) Social Harmony with Nature

Environmental Livable Built Environments

Economic Place-Based Economies

Equity

Polluters Pay

Responsible Regionalism

Development Management

Technique (2) Land Use Regulation

Property Acquisition

Capital Facilities

Financial Incentives

Building Codes and Standards

Public Education and Awareness

Third Suggested

Required

Sources: Campbell (1996), Berke and Conroy (2000), Portney (2003), Jepson (2004), Conroy (2006), Chifos (2007),

Saha and Paterson (2008)

27

Table 2: Sustainability Index by Researcher (continued)

Portney (2003) Jepson (2004)

Sustainability Indicators Projects Sustainable Development Policy Areas Indicators projects active in last five years Agricultural district provisions

Indicators progress report in last five years Agricultural protection zoning

Does indicators projects include "action plan" of

policies/programs?

Bicycle access plan

Smart Growth Activities Brownfield reclamation

Eco-industrial park development Community indicators program

Cluster or targeted economic development Community gardening

Ecovilliage project or program Cooperative housing

Brownfield redevelopment (project or pilot project) Eco-industrial park

Land use planning programs, policies, and zoning Ecological footprint analysis

Zoning use to delineate environmentally sensitive growth areas Environmental site design regulations

Comprehensive land use plan that includes environmental issues Green-building requirements

Tax incentives for environmentally friendly development Green procurement

Transportation planning programs and policies Green maps

Operations of inner-city public transit (buses and/or trains) Green print plans

Limits on downtown parking spaces Heat island analysis

Car pool lanes (diamond lanes) Import substitution

Alternatively fueled city vehicle program Incentive/inclusionary zoning

Bicycle ridership program Infill development

Pollution Prevention and reduction efforts Life-cycle public construction

Household solid waste recycling Living wage ordinance

Industrial recycling Low-emission vehicles

Hazardous waste recycling Neo-traditional development (also known as traditional

neighborhood development and smart development)

Air Pollution reduction program (i.e., VOC reduction) Open space zoning

Recycled product purchasing by city government Pedestrian access plan

Superfund site remediation Purchase of development rights

Asbestos abatement programs Rehabilitation building codes

Lead paint abatement program Right-to-farm legislation

Energy and resource conservation/efficiency initiatives Solar access protection regulations

Green building program Solid waste life-cycle management

Renewable energy use by city government Tax base/revenue sharing

Energy conservation efforts (other than Green building program) Transfer of development rights

Alternative energy offered to consumers (solar, wind, biogas, etc.) Transit-oriented-development

Water conservation program Transportation demand management

Organization/administration/management/coordination/

governance

Urban growth boundary

Single governmental/nonprofit agency responsible for

implementing sustainability

Urban forestry program

Part of a city-wide comprehensive plan Urban ecosystem analysis

Involvement of city/country/metropolitan council Wildlife habitat/green corridor planning

Involvement of mayor or chief executive officer Wind energy development

Involvement of the business community (e.g., Chamber of

Commerce)

General public involvement in sustainable cities initiative (public

hearings, "visioning" process, neighborhood groups or

associations, etc.)

Sources: Campbell (1996), Berke and Conroy (2000), Portney (2003), Jepson (2004), Conroy (2006), Chifos (2007),

Saha and Paterson (2008)

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Table 2: Sustainability Index by Researcher (continued)

Conroy(2006) Chifos (2007) Saha and Paterson (2008)

Sustainability Activities Scale of Program Expert Identified Sustainability

Measures Recycling/waste minimization Years Environmental Protection Activities Public participation #Projects Water quality protection

Local employment Total Funding Curbside recycling

Regional Coordination Range of Awards Open space preservation

Conserving natural resources Definition Environmentally sensitive area protection

Environmental constraints 1. Balance social, environmental, and

economic concerns

Operation of inner-city public transit

Affordable housing, social equity 2. Participation in planning and

decision making

Environmental education programs

Mixed use/compact development 3. Improved quality of life over time Environmental site design regulations

Pedestrian-oriented development 4. Improved quality of life for more

people

Energy conservation efforts (other than green

building program)

Brownfield reuse, infill Policy Theme Transportation demand management

Green-building efforts 1. Enhance learning Ecological footprint analysis

Recruiting green industries 2. leverage markets and financial

sources

Alternative energy offered to customers

Energy conservation 3. Build local capacity Green procurement

Dispute resolution 4. Build partnerships Green building

Polluters pay Strategic Opportunity Area Renewable energy use by city government

Promote public transportation,

park&ride lots, carpooling

1. Green Infrastructure Economic Development Activities

2. Appropriate land use Infill development

3. Revitalization Business retention program

4. Strengthen rural economies Cluster/targeted economic development

5. Conserve resources Brownfield reclamation

Rank above as: Empowerment/enterprise zones

Strong Component Local business incubator program

Existing Component Tax incentives for environmentally friendly

development

Negligible or nonexistent component Eco-industrial park development

Purchase of development rights/Transfer of

development rights

Agricultural protection zoning

Urban growth boundary/urban service boundary

Equity Activities Neighborhood planning

Youth opportunities and antigang program

Affordable housing provisions

Homeless prevention and intervention

Sustainable food systems or food security

program

Living wage ordinance

Day care service for service sector and low-

income employees

Job-housing balance

Mass transit access with local income subsidies

Women and minority owned business and

investment programs

Incentive/Inclusionary zoning

Sources: Campbell (1996), Berke and Conroy (2000), Portney (2003), Jepson (2004), Conroy (2006), Chifos (2007),

Saha and Paterson (2008)

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In Table 2 I have compiled all of the initiatives, policies, actions and criteria the

researchers have used to determine what they define as representing sustainability. The indices

range from simple evaluations such as Campbell's balance of environmental, social, and economic

sustainability to more complex models provided by Berke and Conroy, and Saha and Patterson.

The specific questions asked by each researcher were taken into consideration because the cities

studied in each case study will not be contacted for comment. The index developed by Saha and

Paterson will be used to analyze Wilmington(DE), Philadelphia(PA), and New York(NY).

Through the analysis, the second research question, What sustainability practices are being taken

in three cities in the US and, based on the index, are they successful and are they balancing the

“Three Es” of sustainability?, can be answered.

Saha and Paterson have gone to great length to ensure their thirty-six expert identified

sustainability measures represent a balanced view of environmental, social, and economic

activities. While there are many sustainability measures left off of this list, thirty were eliminated

by the panel of experts, and new sustainability activities are being implemented frequently as

creative and passionate people try to make a difference, the list provides a solid and balanced

overview of important measures. Saha and Paterson felt if a city is hitting all thirty-six initiatives

it is a strong indication the city is well on its way to promoting sustainable activities. (Saha and

Paterson, 2008, p.26) One of the dangers with using an analytical index with specific examples, as

Saha and Paterson have, is any programs or activities left off the index but being implemented by

towns will fall under the scope of the index, resulting in a lower score. However, being specific

and limiting options is important when asking people to respond to the survey; it prevents

confusion, room for personal interpretation, and it keeps questions manageable for the respondent

and the responses manageable when analyzing.

30

Saha and Paterson‟s sustainability index is the most recently developed of the indices

within this paper. In the process of developing their index, Portney, Jepson, and Conroy‟s

measurement indices were all examined and compared side by side. (Saha and Paterson, 2008, p.

24-25) From these other studies as well as a literature search, Saha and Paterson compiled an

exhaustive list of sustainability measures which was reduced in size by a panel of sustainability

experts. (Saha and Paterson, 2008, p. 23) While the index lists some very specific programs it is

the most relevant index examined in this paper and will be used in the following three case studies

to help determine the success of the cities in establishing sustainability practices.

Methodology

Primarily, the resources and research for this paper came from secondary sources.

Research articles and books were studied through a literature search in the area of measuring

sustainable development efforts of municipalities. Several professional journals, the American

Planning Association, the Journal of Planning Education and Research, the Journal of Planning

Literature, provided the bulk of the relevant articles. The author's findings were then compiled to

provide an overview of research relating to municipal sustainability efforts and the measurement

techniques used by the authors. Each researcher's sustainability index was placed in chart format

and compared side by side. After weighing the benefits and downfalls of the measurement

techniques, Saha and Paterson‟s index was selected and used as the framework of comparison for

3 case studies; Wilmington (DE), Philadelphia (PA), and New York (NY).

The three case studies were completed to examine the second research question proposed

by this paper; What sustainability practices are being taken in three cities in the US and, based on

the index, are they successful and are they balancing the “Three Es” of sustainability? Each case

study includes a brief history of the cities in their quest to become more sustainable. The cities

31

websites, comprehensive plans, and sustainability plans were examined to help answer the above

questions. Wilmington (DE), Philadelphia (PA), and New York (NY) were chosen for the case

studies because they are geographically located near one another yet they represent three

distinctly different population sizes. All three have also indicated, verbally and in writing, an

interest in increasing sustainability within their jurisdiction. The case studies will only analyze

information gathered from key city documents such as a comprehensive plan, a sustainability

plan, and websites. While this information will be stable, rely on previously existing information,

and contain exact information, policies, and plans, relying solely on documents can lead to an

unintended bias on the researchers end and it can also lead to a partial analysis because only

information the researcher can access will be analyzed. Interviews and surveys will not be

completed.

As determined in the previous section, the analytical criteria applied to each city is as

follows:

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Table 3: Measurement of Sustainability for Case Studies

Measurement of Sustainability for Case Studies

Saha and Paterson (2008)

Expert Identified Sustainability Measures

Environmental Protection Activities Economic Development Activities

Water quality protection Infill development

Curbside recycling Business retention program

Open space preservation Cluster/targeted economic development

Environmentally sensitive area protection Brownfield reclamation

Operation of inner-city public transit Empowerment/enterprise zones

Environmental education programs Local business incubator program

Environmental site design regulations Tax incentives for environmentally friendly development

Energy conservation efforts (other than green building program) Eco-industrial park development

Transportation demand management Purchase of development rights/Transfer of development rights

Ecological footprint analysis Agricultural protection zoning

Alternative energy offered to customers Urban growth boundary/urban service boundary

Green procurement Equity Activities

Green building Neighborhood planning

Renewable energy use by city government Youth opportunities and antigang program

Affordable housing provisions

Homeless prevention and intervention

Sustainable food systems or food security program

Living wage ordinance

Day care service for service sector and low-income employees

Job-housing balance

Mass transit access with local income subsidies

Women and minority owned business and investment programs

Incentive/Inclusionary zoning

Source: Saha and Paterson (2008)

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Case Studies

Case Study 1: Wilmington, DE

Wilmington, Delaware has stated it is particularly interested in mitigating climate change

due to its location adjacent to the Delaware River and proximity to the Atlantic Ocean. Fears

include a rise in sea level, increase in the frequency and severity of weather related natural

disasters such as hurricanes, and an increase in the number of days where the temperature reaches

over 100 degrees. (Climate Sustainability Plan) In 2006, Mayor James M. Baker signed the

United States Conference of Mayor's Climate Protection Agreement. By signing this agreement,

Mayors from all over the country agree to the Kyoto Protocol targets of reducing carbon

emissions to below 1990 levels. The Kyoto Protocol calls for a reduction of carbon emissions 12

percent below 1990 levels by 2012 (Mayors Climate Protection Center). The Mayor has indicated,

on the city's webpage, "the City will address opportunities for energy footprint reductions:

1. by the business & development community;

2. by the City‟s residents; and

3. by the City in its own operations." (Climate Sustainability Plan)

Through this statement there is a recognition that if change is going to be made it needs to

be done with the collaborative efforts of the businesses, the residents, and the government.

In 2008, Mayor Baker, signed into effect, by executive order, Wilmington's Climate

Sustainability Plan. This plan outlined twelve specific actions and five other programs or policies

the city should take in its efforts to address climate change and creates a new goal of a 20 percent

reduction of 2008 emissions levels by 2020 (Table 4).

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Table 4: Sustainability Actions Outlined in Mayor Baker's Executive Order

City of Wilmington's Actions to Respond to Climate Change

1 The City will create a Wilmington Energy Leaders Roundtable - a business group which will design and lead the corporate

response in Wilmington to the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and the municipal carbon footprint.

2 The City will actively engage with the State of Delaware on its newly created Sustainable Energy Utility to identify and

effectively bring Wilmington business and residential energy efficiency projects to the utility for financial incentives and

funding.

3 The City will create a program of outreach to Wilmington citizens to educate them about climate change. The City will

prepare materials to assist residents in understanding and defining long-held behavior patterns of energy and resource

waste which must be changed for the good of all the citizens of Wilmington today and for future generations. The City will

also prepare accompanying materials which will set forth ideas, paths, projects and goals for the average citizen to

implement in order to reduce individual or household carbon footprints.

4 The City will continue to implement actions such as those listed below to reduce its energy footprint:

1. PhillyCarShare Wilmington – a program to reduce unnecessary vehicle miles traveled in the City.

2. City/County Building Energy Efficiency – the City partnered with New Castle County to make the

City/County Building more energy efficient. Changes to date have included upgrades to the HVAC system

and lighting efficiency.

3. Citywide Curbside Recyclables Collection Program – recycling reduces the overall energy use in

manufacturing the products used by residents and businesses.

4. Creation of a Storm Water Utility, including credits for on-site management of stormwater/reduction of

impervious footprint – reducing stormwater going to the sewer system will reduce the energy use at the

wastewater treatment plant

5 The City will train all of its employees to be community leaders in the move toward reduction of carbon footprints. An

awards program will be developed for the employees who create the most rapid positive energy-saving changes in their

jobs and in their communities.

6 The City will update and revise all of its building codes to incorporate state of the art code language which mandates but

also rewards owners/ builders/architects who move rapidly toward reduction of carbon footprints by use of green

techniques in their building/rehabilitation efforts.

7 The City will establish an Energy Champion Award for residents and community groups that significantly reduce

greenhouse gas emissions. This category will be added to the annual Wilmington Awards Program which recognizes

Wilmington leaders.

8 The City will have a standing committee with a cross-section of members from various departments which will

continuously review and act on projects and ideas involving Climate Change and make recommendations to the

administration on a regular basis regarding necessary policy actions.

9 The City will implement a Sustainable Future Purchasing Policy that places priority on purchasing Energy Star equipment

for City buildings and operations. The City will also introduce educational campaigns such as “Lights Out at Night” and

“Lights Out When Not In Use” in a further effort to reduce governmental energy use. All City employees will be educated

about climate change, greenhouse gas emissions and energy use as it relates to their work and the City‟s Climate Change

Strategy.

10 The City will hire an energy services company, referred to as an ESCO, to identify and implement energy efficiency

projects in the City‟s water and wastewater operations and City buildings, including the police headquarters, emergency

operations center, fire stations and the Municipal Complex. In addition, the City will evaluate, and implement where

appropriate, energy generation projects using non-fossil fuel technologies (such as solar and digester gas).

11 The City will implement a fleet policy to purchase clean fuels, implement diesel retrofits, and purchase vehicles that are

the most fuel-efficient, low-emission vehicles available that will meet the business needs of the City. (The City fleet

consists of public safety, police, fire, emergency management, public works, parks, special purpose vehicles, and general

purpose sedans. The sedans are generally E-85 compatible, and the City has an E-85 fueling station.)

12 The City will build on the work begun by the Wilmington Beautification Commission‟s “Trees for Wilmington” working

group to expand the City‟s tree-planting efforts to increase the tree canopy and reduce “heat island” conditions. Efforts will

include partnerships with, among others, the Department of Agriculture, Department of Natural Resources and

Environmental Control and the Delaware Horticultural Center.

13 Use of teleconferencing rather than traveling to meetings when possible

14 Installation of bike racks at all City buildings and public areas

15 Work with WILMAPCO to identify additional ways to improve the City‟s bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure

16 Installation of either green roofs or photovoltaic on all City buildings

17 Instituting an environmentally preferable purchasing policy

Source: Mayor James M. Baker‟s Executive Order 2008-4: Wilmington‟s Climate Sustainability Plan

35

Part of the Sustainability Plan indicated the City's Climate Change Strategy should be

included in the next update of the City's comprehensive plan. This occurred in 2009 when the

Comprehensive Development Plan was amended to include the Climate Change Initiatives. (CPC

Memorandum: Resolution 10-09) The Mayor also voluntarily joined the Climate Registry which

is a non-profit organization that provides a "consistent and transparent standards to calculate,

verify and publicly report greenhouse gas emissions into a single registry."(The Climate Registry;

Department of Planning Memorandum: RE: Resolution 10-09)

Through the 2008 executive order, the City had publicly indicated approximately

seventeen actions it was pursuing in an effort to achieve greater environmental sustainability. The

amendment to the Land Use Plan summarized the implementation of the Executive Order and

stated the Wilmington Energy Leaders Roundtable was created consisting of business entities in

Wilmington and representatives from various government departments. They are currently

working on creating a Climate Pledge Program. The City also had a technical energy audit of the

city buildings and operations and amended the Capital Budget and the Capital Improvements

Program to encourage energy efficiency in City buildings and infrastructure in line with the

recommendations from the audit. Voluntary workshops and department trainings are being

offered to further the education of employees in the reduction of energy consumption and carbon

footprint. Educational outreach programs and an Energy Champion Award were created to raise

awareness among residents. Further initiatives include the "Think Green for Change" campaign,

improvements to the City's building infrastructure, the addition of E-85 bio-fuels and hybrid

vehicles to the city fleet, a single stream curbside recycling program, and the addition of green

design guidelines to the South Walnut Street Urban Renewal Plan. (A City-wide Plan of Land

Use, 38-45) A full list of completed or projects currently underway can be found below:

36

Table 5: Wilmington Delaware's Completed or Currently Active Initiatives

Completed or Currently Active Initiatives Transportation

1 PhillyCarShare Wilmington: a program to reduce unnecessary vehicle miles traveled in the City.

City Operations 2 City/County Building Energy Efficiency: the City has been working with New Castle County to make the City/County

Building energy efficient. Changes to date have included upgrades to the HVAC system and lighting efficiency.

3 Fleet use of biofuels (E-85)

4 Intelligent management of stormwater in the sewer network to minimize impacts of discharges into area streams

5 Creation of a Storm Water Utility, including credits for on-site management of stormwater/reduction of impervious

footprint – reducing stormwater going to the sewer system will reduce the energy use at the wastewater treatment plant

6 LEED Silver design on a new City facility

7 Greater protections for public health through enhancements in water treatment technology

8 Plans for desalination systems to assure water supply capabilities for the future

9 Enhancement of water storage for drought management

10 Participation in international conferences on technology and sustainability

Residents and Communities

11 South Wilmington Urban Renewal Plan design guidelines, similar to LEED standards

12 City-wide Recyclables Collection: recycling reduces the overall energy use in manufacturing the products used by

residents and businesses.

13 Community Garden Program (Delaware Center for Horticulture)

14 Healthy Wilmington 2010 (Health Planning Council) health promotion and disease prevention through individual,

organizational and community involvement

City Environment

15 Beautification Commission‟s "Think Green for a Change" promotion

16 Urban Forest Canopy study by Delaware Center for Horticulture

17 Tree City USA designation for the last 16 years

18 Wilmington Beautification Commission

19 Lush Color Project

20 Streetscape enhancements and the management of plantings

21 Tree plantings and monitoring Program (Delaware Center for Horticulture)

22 Conversion of an open water storage reservoir into an open green space

23 Plans for reforestation activities around Hoopes reservoir for source water quality protection

24 Investments in Rock Manor Golf course to assure open space preservation

Economic Development

25 Green Industry promotion

Source: http://www.wilmingtonde.gov/greencity/strategy.htm

A list of future strategies and opportunities are included in the Land Use Plan in an effort to

further the goal reducing greenhouse gas emissions. These recommendations are listed in the table

below:

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Table 6: Future Climate Change Opportunities / Climate Change Strategies

Wilmington's Future Strategies and Opportunities

City Operations a.

Create a standing committee with a cross section of members from various departments to continually review and act on

projects and ideas involving climate change. The committee should make recommendations to the administration on a

regular basis regarding necessary policy actions.

b. Update residential building codes to incorporate the 2009 International Energy Conservation Code. In addition,

commercial building codes should be updated to be consistent with the most recent ASHRAE model code for commercial

buildings. New state of the art codes should mandate, but also reward, owner/builder/architects who move rapidly

towards reductions of carbon footprints through the use of green techniques in new construction and rehabilitation. To

supplement this, the City should work with the Building Codes Assistance Project (BCAP) to obtain assistance with

administration of the new codes.

c. Review existing codes, plans and subdivision regulations to remove obstacles impeding green design. The City should

develop design guidelines to respond to specific conditions and greening opportunities. Design guidelines should address

streets, streetscapes, water efficient landscaping, trails, parks and open space, buildings, and parking.

d. Lead by example and implement one or more of the following actions to create more sustainable City buildings:

(1) Require that all buildings constructed through municipal contracts be LEED certified; and

(2) Require that all construction related to municipal contracts be EPA Energy Star Certified.

e. Require at least one City employee to obtain LEED professional accreditation

f. Continue to support the work of the Wilmington Beautification Commission, Trees for Wilmington working group, and

the Delaware Center for Horticulture to expand the City's tree planting efforts to increase the City's total tree canopy and

reduce the heat island conditions. Partnerships should be expanded to include the Delaware Department of Agriculture

and the Delaware Department of Natural Resource and Environment Control.

g. Increase involvement with Local Governments for Sustainability (ICLEI). ICLEI can be used as an avenue to share

information with other cities and act as an advocate for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

h. Implement a Sustainable Future Purchasing Policy that places priority on purchasing Energy Star equipment for City

building and operations. The City should continue to promote educational campaigns such as "Lights Out at Night" and

"Lights Out When Not In Use," in an effort to further reduce municipal energy use.

i. Move forward with capital projects that will implement energy efficient projects, such as the projects identified from the

energy audit completed by Honeywell Building Solutions for the Department of Public Works. The City should continue

to evaluate and implement energy generation projects using non-fossil fuel technologies such as digester gas, potential

green roofs, and photovoltaic when appropriate.

j. Continue to purchase clean fuels, implement diesel retrofits, and purchase vehicles that are the most fuel efficient, low

emission vehicles available that will meet the business needs of the City. The City fleet serves public safety, police, fire,

emergency management, public works and parks and includes special purpose vehicles and general purpose sedans. The

sedans are generally E-85 compatible, and the City has an E-85 fueling station.

k. Continue to expand on transportation opportunities through the Wilmington Initiatives partnership with DelDOT and

WILMAPCO. The City may take into consideration participation in programs like the "Walkable Communities

Initiative" and "Complete Streets" that provide multi-modal transportation that identifies ways to increase bike and

pedestrian traffic.

l. Reintroduce a car share program to the City. Car share programs provide members with access to a fleet of vehicles on

an hourly basis, eliminating the need to won a private vehicle. Employee use of car share vehicles reduces the size of the

city fleet otherwise need to meet operational demands.

Wilmington's Future Strategies and Opportunities (cont.)

Business and Development Community a. Continue to sponsor and support the Energy Leaders Roundtable, including the Wilmington Climate Change Pledge

Program. These business energy leaders should be recognized for making energy savings choices.

b. Work with the Sustainable Energy Utility to identify public-private partnerships and programs that will benefit the City.

The City should use the SEU to identify and provide financial incentives for energy efficiency and renewable energy

practices in the City.

38

c. Finalize and implement the Wilmington Green Buildings Program, modeled after LEED, which is designed to minimize

environmental impact for new commercial construction and operation. Developers that adhere to the Wilmington Green

Buildings Program rating system should be eligible for added incentives, such as public recognition through signage

and/or an expedited plan review process.

d. Educate the development community when updating building codes.

Residential Community a. Continue to expand the outreach program to educate Wilmington citizens about climate change and increase awareness

about the issue. The City website should be continually updated to provide educational opportunities to the public.

b. Facilitate linking residents with the Sustainable Energy Utility to provide financial incentives for property owners to

implement energy efficiency projects.

Source: Wilmington's City-Wide Plan of Land Use (pg.42-45)

The City has set up a website as a resource for residents who are interested in helping the

City and themselves reduce carbon emissions. There is a portal to the Climate Sustainability

Plan's section of the website located on the homepage of the City's website as well as a link on the

Mayor's Page. However, further links to the Plan could not be located. On the Climate

Sustainability Plan's web page are links to actions the City has taken, the City's government

documents regarding the Climate Sustainability Plan, and tips for residents to follow to reduce

their carbon footprint and be more 'green'.

The City of Wilmington does not currently have a progress report publicly available on

their website to help gauge the effectiveness of the completed initiatives or those that are

underway. They are members of the Climate Registry and are in the process of establishing a

baseline for the City's greenhouse gas emissions and have indicated an annual report will be

issued to allow residents and city officials gauge the success and progress of the efforts being

made. (Mayor Baker Sets Forth Proactive Stance, 2008, p.3)

When analyzed using the sustainability criteria set forth by Saha and Paterson, the city of

Wilmington, Delaware scored 22 points out of a possible 36 points (see Appendix A, below)

39

participating in 66.1% of the total sustainability initiatives . When broken down into

environmental protection, economic development, and equity initiatives, to better analyze the

balance between the three areas of sustainability, the scores were 11 out of 14(78.6%), 6 out of

11(54.5%), and 5 out of 11(45.4%) respectively. When looking at the entire city, all of the

programs, policies, and initiatives being taken within the span of the city‟s departments, there are

programs to address and further “Three Es” of sustainability. Even so, there is still a strong pull

towards environmental sustainability programs with almost more than twice as many programs

being enacted by the city despite the number of initiatives in the index for each “E” from being

close to equal. If the analysis of sustainability initiatives is done based solely on Wilmington’s

Sustainability Climate Plan, a balance between the “Three Es” of sustainability is much weaker.

Under this analysis the city of Wilmington scored 12 out of 36 points (33.3%) with a further

breakdown of environmental protection initiatives scoring 10 out of 14 (71.4%), economic

development initiatives scoring 2 out of 11 (18.2%), and equity initiatives scoring a 0 out of 11

(0%). The preference for environmental sustainability is clearly dominant under this plan.

The city of Wilmington has made an active effort to focus on environmental sustainability

above social or economic sustainability in their sustainability plan. On the surface this is evident

through the inclusion of word climate in the title of the plan and a strong focus and commitment

in the reduction of greenhouse gasses. Delving deeper into the purpose of the initiatives either

completed, currently underway, or being suggested as future actions for the City to take, the plan

shows a numerical bias towards environmental sustainability when analyzed against the

sustainability index provided by Saha and Paterson. The sustainability plan does not provide a

successful balance between the “Three Es” of sustainability.

In order to determine if the city of Wilmington is taking actions, as a whole, to be more

40

sustainable, the analysis was expanded to study all the city departments and their policies,

programs, and initiatives. When compared against the Saha and Paterson index, the results

showed that while the City is still showing a preference towards environmentally sustainable

programs, there is stronger presence of economic development and equity activities than the

previous analysis showed.

41

Case Study 2: Philadelphia, PA

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania began its quest to increase its sustainability efforts in 1999

when it joined ICLEI - Local Governments for Sustainability. Former Mayor John F. Street

created a Sustainability Task Force which produced a report titled 2007 Local Action Plan for

Climate Change. The plan established a goal for the City to cut greenhouse emissions by 10% by

2010 and detailed several actions the city would be taking (Philadelphia Releases Local Climate

Action Plan, Mayor John F. Street Announces City‟s Local Action Plan for Climate Change).

While Mayor Street could not run for office again due to term limits in the November 2007

elections, that publication provided the springboard for what would become the City's

sustainability plan, Greenworks Philadelphia.

Mayor Michael A. Nutter followed in his predecessor's footsteps and established an Office

of Sustainability soon after he became Mayor in a effort to help Philadelphia become "the

greenest city in America" (Greenworks Philadelphia). The Sustainability Working Group

published Greenworks Philadelphia and broadened the goal of the 2007 Local Action Plan for

Sustainability to include goals in the areas of energy, environment, equity, economy, and

engagement. Under each of the five goals are defined targets the city is reaching for. (Table 7).

Each target has an established baseline, a projection for where the city feels the number to be in

2015 without intervention, the new target under Greenworks Philadelphia, and the savings if the

new target is reached.

42

Table 7: Goals and Targets from Greenworks Philadelphia

Greenworks Philadelphia Goals and Targets

Goals

Philadelphia

reduces its

vulnerability to

rising energy

prices

Philadelphia

reduces its

environmental

footprint

Philadelphia

delivers more

equitable access

to healthy

neighborhoods

Philadelphia

creates a

competitive

advantage from

sustainability

Philadelphians

unite to build a

sustainable future

Targets

Lower City

Government

Energy

Consumption by

30 Percent

Reduce

Greenhouse Gas

Emissions by 20

Percent

Manage

Stormwater to

Meet Federal

Standards

Reduce Vehicle

Miles Traveled

by 10 Percent

Philadelphia is

the Greenest City

in America

Reduce

Citywide

Building Energy

consumption by

10 Percent

Improve Air

Quality toward

Attainment of

Federal Standards

Provide Park and

Recreation

Resources within

10 Minutes of 75

Percent of

Residents

Increase the State

of Good Repair

in Resilient

Infrastructure

Retrofit 15

Percent of

Housing Stock

with Insulation,

Air Sealing and

Cool Roofs

Divert 70 Percent

of Solid Waste

from Landfill

Bring Local Food

within 10 Minutes

of 75 Percent

of Residents

Double the

Number of Low-

and High-Skill

Green Jobs

Purchase and

Generate 20

Percent of

Electricity Used

in Philadelphia

from

Alternative

Energy Sources

Increase Tree

Coverage toward

30 Percent in

All

Neighborhoods

by 2025 Source: Greenworks Philadelphia

Having targets to goals is an important step towards sustainability, especially if an effort is

made to focus on the “Three Es” but, without suggestions or initiatives guiding city and resident's

actions the targets are unlikely to be met. In the ninety-three page document, Greenworks

Philadelphia breaks down each target into specific initiatives and details the steps needed to reach

the set targets. There are over 150 initiatives in total with each target containing between 9 and

98. A chart detailing the goals, targets, and initiatives can be found in Appendix B.

43

The City of Philadelphia has a clean, easy to understand website that is intuitive. The

entire Greenworks Philadelphia plan is available for download and very easy to locate within the

web page. Each of the five goal areas established within the plan are represented by buttons at the

top of the page and when clicked the viewer is presented with information about the goal, the

targets associated with it, and some of the initiatives. To keep residents updated on sustainability

related news, the City maintains a Greenworks blog. The blog contains information about

different programs and events such as farmers markets and energy efficiency incentives. In

addition to the Greenworks Philadelphia website, the City maintains a website for the Office of

Sustainability. That website focuses primarily on environmental sustainability with energy

conservation initiatives, promotion of the Solar City Partnership, and information on green

buildings. One of the Office of Sustainability's major tasks is to increase energy efficiency within

the government which is in line with several of the targets under the Energy goal in the

Greenworks Plan. (Philadelphia Going Green)

The plan was made public in April of 2009, just eight months prior to the writing of this

report. (Mayor Nutter Unveils Plan) While base numbers have been calculated for the report,

follow-up numbers have yet to be determined so no progress reports is available at the moment.

The City‟s Energy and Sustainability subcommittee and the Energy and Sustainability Advisory

Board have been tasked with gathering data, analyzing the cities actions, and reporting on how the

City can become more efficient over the long term through the creation of goals and best practices

guidelines. (Plan of Action)

44

After analyzing the efforts of the entire city of Philadelphia, regardless of if the programs

have stated sustainability related goals; the city has scored a 31 out of 36 points with 86.1% of the

initiatives on the sustainability index being fulfilled. 13 out of 14 (92.9%) of the environmental

activities, 9 out of 11 (81.8%) economic activities, and 9 out of 11(81.8%) equity activities were

completed. The city of Philadelphia shows strong success in implementing sustainability

initiatives based on Saha and Paterson‟s index.

Philadelphia seems to have made a concerted effort to extend beyond environmental

sustainability in their sustainability plan. Greenworks Philadelphia is broken in to five sections

including sections specifically focusing on equity and economic issues. On its own, the plan

received a score of 19 out of 36, meaning it completed 52.7% of the stated sustainability actions.

The breakdown of the “Three Es” is as follows; environmental activities scored 12 out of 14,

economic development activities scored 5 out of 11, and equity activities scored 2 out of 11.

Despite effort and specific mention of environmental, economic, and equitable sustainability, the

strength of the plan lies in its environmental sustainability measures. That is not to say the plan

only had 5 economic sustainability and 2 equitable sustainability initiatives outlines, but rather

only those seven filled the criteria set forth by Saha and Paterson's index as the most important for

sustainability.

45

Case Study 3: New York, NY

In 2006, Mayor Bloomberg announced the creation of the Office of Long-Term Planning

and Sustainability to help identify issues, coordinate actions, and implement initiatives in an effort

to create a more sustainable city and address environmental issues facing the city. Mayor

Bloomberg created the Sustainability Advisory Board and over the next several months board

members and city officials met with a variety of people from the five City Boroughs, including

organizations, community leaders, and residents to identify the most important concerns, issues,

and ideas.(Mayor Bloomberg Announces Creation) The culmination of these community and

town hall meetings was PLANYC 2030, a 155page document detailing the city's concerns, goals,

and initiatives for becoming a more environmentally sensitive place to live, work, and play.

During this time, the mayor had a city wide carbon inventory conducted to establish a baseline

from which all future actions and initiatives can be measured for success. (Mayor Bloomberg

Announces Creation) Prior to publishing the plan, NYC became a member of ICLEI in 2001 and

signed the U.S. Conference of Mayors Climate Protection Agreement. By formally associating

with these groups the City had committed to a 7% reduction in greenhouse gasses from 1992

levels by 2012. (The Agreement - Mayors Climate Protection Center) However, with the

publication of PLANYC 2030, the city increased its commitment to reduce greenhouse gasses to

30% and expanded its scope to address issues and concerns related to “growth, an aging

infrastructure, and an increasingly precarious environment.” ( PLANYC 2030, 4) From the

public outreach sessions, ten goals were synthesized in the three previous mentioned areas of

concern (Table 8).

46

Table 8: PLANYC 2030: Goals

PLANYC 2030: Goals

Growth

1 Create homes for almost a million more New Yorkers, while making housing more

affordable and sustainable

2 Improve travel times by adding transit capacity for millions more residents, visitors,

and workers.

3 Ensure that all New Yorkers live within a 10–minute walk of a park

Aging Infrastructure

4 Develop critical back-up systems for our aging water network to ensure long-term

reliability

5 Reach a full "state of good repair" on New York City's roads, subways, and rails for

the first time in history

6 Provide cleaner, more reliable power for every New Yorker by upgrading our energy

infrastructure

Environment

7 Reduce global warming emissions by more than 30%

8 Achieve the cleanest air of any big city in America

9 Clean up all contaminated land in New York City

10

Open 90% of our waterways for recreation by reducing water pollution and

preserving our natural areas

Source: PLANYC 2030 Website; http://www.nyc.gov/html/planyc2030/html/challenge/challenge.shtml

PLANYC 2030 is divided into six different sections titled Land, Water, Transportation,

Energy, Air, and Climate Change. The ten goals established through community participation are

divided up among the six sections and each section provides a detailed plan, along with

initiatives, for how the city intends to resolve each problem and achieve each goal. Table 9

provides a summary of the City‟s plan and a more complete version of the table, including both

the plans and the specific initiatives, can be found in Appendix C: PLANYC 2030: Goals and

Initiatives.

47

Table 9: PLANYC 2030: Plan of Action

PLANYC 2030: Plan of Action

Housing

Continue publicly-initiated rezoning

Create new housing on public land

Explore additional areas of opportunity

Expand targeted affordability programs

Open Space

Make existing sites available to more New Yorkers

Expand usable hours at existing sites

Re-imagine the public realm

Brownfields

Make existing brownfield programs faster and more efficient

Expand enrollment into streamlined programs

Encourage greater community involvement in brownfield redevelopment

Identify remaining sites for cleanups

Water Quality

Continue implementing infrastructure upgrades

Pursue proven solutions to prevent stormwater from entering the system

Expand, track, and analyze new Best Management Practices (BMPs)on a broad scale

Water Networks

Ensure the quality of our drinking water

Create redundancy for aqueducts to New York City

Modernize in-city distribution

Transportation

Build and expand transit infrastructure

Improve transit service on existing infrastructure

Promote other sustainable modes

Improve traffic flow by reducing congestion

Achieve a state of good repair on our roads and transit system

Develop new funding sources

Energy

Improve energy planning

Reduce New York City‟s energy consumption

Expand the city‟s clean power supply

Modernize electricity delivery infrastructure

Air

Reduce road vehicle emissions

Reduce other transportation emissions

Reduce emissions from buildings

Pursue natural solutions to improve air quality

Understand the scope of the challenge

Climate Change

Avoided sprawl

Clean power

Efficient Buildings

Sustainable transportation

Source: PLANYC 2030

48

Through these initiatives, Mayor Bloomberg and NYC are not only addressing climate

change issues, but they are simultaneously and in coordination with the effort reduce greenhouse

gases, addressing social and economic issues. Initiatives such as develop new financing

strategies, preserve the existing stock of affordable housing throughout New York City, create or

enhance a public plaza in every community, and the initiatives to increase public transportation all

address some of the social needs of the city. However, despite the social sustainability aspect,

many of these initiatives have their roots in environmental sustainability.

Out of the three case studies, New York City is the only one with a published progress

report. The City has published a progress report for 2008 and 2009. The 2008 report details the

City‟s accomplishments for every month, a brief description of what has been done under each

goal, and which of the initiatives are underway along with a short progress report for each

initiative and what it has accomplished since 2007. The report also indicates, for each initiative, a

milestone for the next year (PLANYC Progress Report 2008). In 2009, the same format was used

to track initiative progress. A short progress report since 2008 was included along with future

milestones and an indication for whether the initiative is “on time”, “completed”, or “delayed” in

reaching its milestone. The 2009 progress report includes an important addition, not included in

the 2008 report; a report on the city‟s greenhouse gas reduction measures. The idea for PLANYC

2030 was primarily based on the goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions within the city.

Mayor Bloomberg recognized in order to achieve a greenhouse gas reduction he and the city must

come at the challenge from multiple angles. Ultimately the success of this plan and all of its

initiatives will be measured by the overall reduction of greenhouse gasses. In 2009, the city had

achieved an actual reduction of 3.52 million metric tons CO2e or approximately 9.8% of their

reduction target (PLANYC Progress Report 2009; p 41). This number is based on the original

49

greenhouse gas inventory conducted in 2007.

In addition to a yearly progress report the City has published a yearly Greenhouse Gas

Emissions Inventory, New York City Wetlands: Regulatory Gaps and Other Threats, Climate

Risk Inventory, Think Locally, Act Globally: How Curbing Global Warming Emissions Can

Improve Local Public Health, a Sustainable Stormwater Management Plan, Long Term Plan to

Reduce Energy Consumption and Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Municipal Buildings and

Operations, The New York City Greener, Greater, Buildings Plan, and New York City’s

Transformation to a Green Economy. The City has taken a substantial amount of time and

resources to explore and publish on many issues relating to sustainability. The creation of plans

indicates the City‟s seriousness in reaching its goals and solving the problems it will be facing in

the upcoming years related to growth, aging infrastructure, and the environment.

The analysis of New York City‟s sustainability efforts yielded strong sustainability score

of 30 out of 36 points meaning the City is taking part in over 83% of the sustainability initiatives

included in the Saha and Paterson index. Environmental activities received a score of 12 out of

14 (85.7%), economic activities scored 9 out of 11 (81.8%), and equity activities had a score of 9

out of 11 (81.8%). In addition to discovering the overall sustainability efforts of the City are

strong, the analysis for a balance among those actions showed New York City is successfully

balancing environmental, economic, and equitable sustainability through their programs and

initiatives.

However, a strong preference towards environmental sustainability is evident when

examining PLANYC 2030, on its own, under the Saha and Paterson index. The total sustainability

score drops to 15 out of 36 points with only 41.6% of the actions being taken through the

sustainability plan. The environmental actions stayed dominant with a score of 11 out of 14

50

(78.5%) but the economic development and equity initiatives dropped dramatically to scores of 3

out of 11 (27.2%) and 1 out of 11 (9%), respectively.

From this analysis, PLANYC 2030, as a sustainability plan, is not balancing

environmental, economic, and equitable sustainability though its initiatives. Again we see a

strong focus on environmental sustainability despite the plan‟s stated goals of addressing growth

and an aging infrastructure in addition to environmental issues facing the City. While the plan

does include actions to address housing issues such as preserving the affordable housing stock,

which is in line with the growth goals and the idea of equitable sustainability, many of the

initiatives are aimed at increasing the development opportunities in order to increase housing

opportunities in the city. The other goals and initiatives within the plan that can be considered

supporting equitable sustainability include increasing the public plazas in communities, ensuring

all citizens have access to public parks and green space, and increasing transportation options.

Beyond those actions, equitable sustainability is a limited concept within PLANYC 2030.

Economic development actions within the plan include an entire section dedicated to Brownfield

redevelopment but when it comes to fostering green businesses or growing and retaining local

businesses, the plan does not suggest any actions. This may be due to a separate publication,

called New York City’s Transformation to a Green Economy, which addresses growing the City‟s

green economy. (New York City‟s Transformation to a Green Economy) The separate report

contains thirty initiatives to prime the City to become a center for Green Businesses.

51

Concluding Remarks

After analyzing the cities based on the sustainability index developed by Saha and

Paterson it became evident how well the cities fared was strongly related to whether the entire city

was examined or whether only the published sustainability plans were evaluated. Just evaluating

the plans lead to a much lower score then when examining the entire city. The difference in the

scope and success in balancing sustainability efforts when looking at the city's sustainability plan

verses the entire city's actions may be the result of several factors. First is the unclear definition

of sustainability and a lack of understanding about sustainability. Because the definition and

ideas surrounding sustainability are still up for debate, deciding on which one to use can be a

challenge. (Wheeler, 2000; Portney, 2003; Conroy, 2006; Saha, 2009) For some people, the

emphasis may be on environmental sustainability because of its public popularity and the

familiarity people have with the idea.

In examining the case studies, many of the economic and equitable sustainability

initiatives were often found under the control of already existing departments. For example,

economic sustainability programs might be found under the Office of Economic Development

and equitable sustainability programs might be under the Housing Authority or the Health

Department. Because sustainability is still a new concept, at least in the realm of government

action, the existing programs and initiatives are remaining in their old homes while Offices of

Sustainability or Sustainability Workgroups are creating their own sustainability programs but

leaving out the issues of economics and equity. The sustainability plans presented by

Wilmington, Philadelphia, and New York City are a great start towards increasing sustainability

in our urban centers however, in future iterations and as the plans evolve, the plans, as well as the

52

Offices of Sustainability or the Sustainability Working Groups, should work to increase the

interconnections and communications between departments. If done correctly, programs focusing

on all three aspects of sustainability can be created using a stronger set of resources in order to

create longer lasting positive impacts and avoid redundant or even competing initiatives.

Table 10: Sustainable Index Summary Whole City Analysis v. Sustainability Plan Analysis

Sustainability Index Summary

Wilmington,

DE

Philadelphia,

PA

New York,

NY

Whole City Analysis 22 31 30

Environment 11 13 12

Economic 6 9 9

Equitable 5 9 9

Sustainability Plan

Analysis 12 19 15

Environment 10 12 11

Economic 2 5 3

Equitable 0 2 1

Out of the three sustainability plans created, Greenworks Philadelphia has the greatest

number of sustainability actions matching up with what Saha and Paterson concluded were the

thirty-six most important sustainability indicators. (Table 10) Under closer examination, the

Greenworks Philadelphia plan was also the most balanced plans in terms of environmental,

economic, and equitable sustainability despite the low number of applicable economic and equity

focused programs. The City of Philadelphia also took the top spot in overall sustainability and a

balance of the “Three Es” when all city programs, actions, and initiatives were examined. New

York City came in a close second with only one less initiative meeting Saha and Paterson‟s index

when analyzing all of the city initiatives. PLANYC2030 was not as close to Greenworks

Philadelphia when only the sustainability plans were examined.

53

One important aspect of a city's sustainability efforts left out of the Saha and Paterson

index is some measure of accountability or progress reporting done by the city. If there are no

results from the sustainability actions, continuing those specific programs is a waste of time,

resources, money and is, by definition, unsustainable. In addition to ensuring programs are

making the promised improvements, progress reports allow for the early identification of

problematic or ineffective programs so adjustments can be made. The reports provide a gauge for

the effectiveness and impact of the initiatives and by having actual measurement data to present to

stakeholders, along with a free flow of information about the reports, the door is opened for a

greater acceptance of future sustainability efforts. The only city from the case studies to currently

have a progress report is New York City. Being the longest running sustainability plan, they have

produced progress reports for 2008 and 2009. Philadelphia has indicated a sustainability progress

report will be issued sometime soon by the City‟s Energy and Sustainability subcommittee and

the Energy and Sustainability Advisory Board. While Philadelphia has the strongest

sustainability plan and also scored the highest when examining the entire city, New York City‟s

citywide analysis was only one point shy of Philadelphia and their sustainability plan has

produced actual progress reports. Because the two cities are so close in numbers and actual

results are being calculated and tracked by New York City, I would rank both cities high on

achieving success in promoting sustainable initiatives.

54

Recommendations

Creating a sustainability plan is an important step for increasing sustainability within a

city because it outlines goals, initiatives and actions however the plans need to increase their

scope to include more than just environmental sustainability initiatives. The three sustainability

plans examined in the case studies all showed a strong bias towards environmental sustainability.

While this is an important issue, particularly in the face of climate change, economic and

equitable sustainability play just as vital of a role in the health of our cities, our world, and can

also have an effect on climate change. The sustainability plans need to increase the number of

economic and equitable sustainability initiatives to provide a better balance of the “Three Es”.

One way to accomplish this is by including all the actions and initiatives taking place across

different city departments and agencies within the sustainability plan. This will help the city

identify all the efforts being made towards creating a more sustainable city and it will help to

encourage communication between departments and offices within the city. These open

communication lines will allow the city to provide programs and services more efficiently and

reduce the number duplicated efforts and competing programs. The final recommendation is to

have cities identify which programs in their sustainability plan fall under each of the “Three Es”.

Because the concept of the “Three Es” is fairly well know and a balance between the three is the

ultimate goal in sustainability, by specifying where the initiatives fall under will allow cities to

better understand how successfully they are achieving a balance and it provide residents a way to

quickly gauge the city‟s efforts in all three areas.

Based on the case studies, all three cities have made good efforts, city wide, in meeting

what Saha and Paterson have concluded to be, a city's key sustainability actions with each city

55

completing over 65% of the possible actions. However, since the percentages drops to as low as

33.3% when the index is only applied to the city's sustainability plan, an effort should be made in

the three cities to include all of the citywide actions and initiatives, in the sustainability plans.

Wilmington, Delaware lacks the most economic and equitable sustainability initiatives regardless

of if the entire city is analyzed or just the sustainability plan. In order to create a better balance of

the sustainability triangle, more programs focusing on those two areas should be

promoted. Because Philadelphia and New York have such strong sustainability efforts when

examining the entire city, both should expand their sustainability plan to include the economic

and equity initiatives.

All cities interested in increasing their sustainability efforts should publish progress

reports. These reports should be made public and easy to access. A progress report lets

stakeholders know how successful the city is in fulfilling its targets, goals, and initiatives. If the

sustainability activities are administered correctly and a progress report indicates positive changes

for the city, support for future sustainability efforts will be easier to garner. A progress report will

also allow the city to identify problematic or ineffective programs quickly and either make

adjustments or eliminate the action.

Future Research

There are so many unanswered questions based around the subject of sustainability. Future

research should explore the balance of sustainability to a greater extent. Because a complete

balance is impractical researchers should focus on what is an appropriate balance between the

“Three E‟s” of sustainability. Campbell suggested in his paper that a sustainable plan should be

able to find connections and actions that provide benefits to more than one of the three "E"s of

56

sustainability at once. (Campbell, 1996) The sustainability plans of New York and Philadelphia

both indicated if the initiatives and actions of one section also fulfilled those in another section.

Are other cities completing this step when creating sustainability plans and to what extent are

cities beginning to look at connections between programs and integrating multiple departments

into program implementation? Once this is established, the effectiveness of interdepartmental

communication can be studied in regards to implementing sustainable initiatives.

With the completion of thorough sustainability plans, progress reports are beginning to

surface. Once they do, an analysis should be completed to better gauge the success of the stated

sustainability initiatives. These reports will also allow researchers to have a better understanding

of the question asked by Portney; how serious are city's sustainability efforts? The characteristics

of cities with successful sustainability plans should be analyzed as well. Opposite to successful

cities are the cities that have been unable to implement sustainable initiatives. The barriers these

cities face should be examined and hopefully suggestions or solutions may be derived from the

findings. In addition to studying the successes and the barriers to sustainability within cities, the

process a city goes through, from the initial spark of an idea to the successful implementation of

sustainability plans, should be studied.

Another issue that might be of interest to study in the future would be to examine cities

with a more balanced sustainability plan for evidence of the negative aspects of gentrification

primarily, are the poor or disadvantaged being pushed out of the cities or their neighborhoods due

to the consequences of a city‟s sustainability initiatives?

Some cities, such as Wilmington (DE), Philadelphia (PA), and New York (NY) are tackling

the issues of sustainability head on. They have created sustainability plans and even Offices of

57

Sustainability but their sustainability efforts could become even more effective if they work to

break down the barriers between the different departments within their governments to build

coordination and communication. By doing this, they would be taking into account all aspects of

sustainability, not just environmental sustainability, and begin to tackle environmental, economic,

and social/equitable problems from multiple dimensions and with a holistic point of view.

58

Appendix A: Case Study Analysis

Table 11: Case Study Analysis of City Wide Policies, Programs, and Actions

Saha and Paterson (2008) Cities

Environmental Protection Activities Wilmington (DE) Philadelphia (PA) New York (NY)

Water quality protection Y Y Y

Curbside recycling Y Y Y

Open space preservation Y Y Y

Environmentally sensitive area protection Y Y Y

Operation of inner-city public transit N Y Y

Environmental education programs Y Y Y

Environmental site design regulations Y N N

Energy conservation efforts (other than green building program) Y Y Y

Transportation demand management Y Y Y

Ecological footprint analysis Y Y Y

Alternative energy offered to customers N Y Y

Green procurement Y Y Y

Green building Y Y Y

Renewable energy use by city government N Y N

Economic Development Activities

Infill development Y Y Y

Business retention program Y Y Y

Cluster/targeted economic development Y Y Y

Brownfield reclamation Y Y Y

Empowerment/enterprise zones N Y Y

Local business incubator program Y Y Y

Tax incentives for environmentally friendly development N Y Y

Eco-industrial park development Y N Y

Purchase of development rights/Transfer of development rights N Y Y

Agricultural protection zoning N Y N

Urban growth boundary/urban service boundary N N N

Equity Activities

Neighborhood planning Y Y Y

Youth opportunities and antigang program Y Y Y

Affordable housing provisions Y Y Y

Homeless prevention and intervention Y Y Y

Sustainable food systems or food security program N Y N

Living wage ordinance N Y Y

Day care service for service sector and low-income employees N N Y

Job-housing balance N N N

Mass transit access with local income subsidies N Y Y

Women and minority owned business and investment programs Y Y Y

Incentive/Inclusionary zoning N Y Y

Total 'Y' 22 31 30

59

Table 12: Case Study Analysis of Sustainability Plan Policies, Programs, and Actions

Saha and Paterson (2008) Cities

Environmental Protection Activities Wilmington (DE) Philadelphia (PA) New York (NY)

Water quality protection Y Y Y

Curbside recycling Y Y Y

Open space preservation Y Y Y

Environmentally sensitive area protection Y Y Y

Operation of inner-city public transit N Y Y

Environmental education programs Y Y Y

Environmental site design regulations Y N N

Energy conservation efforts (other than green building program) Y Y Y

Transportation demand management N Y Y

Ecological footprint analysis Y Y Y

Alternative energy offered to customers N Y Y

Green procurement Y Y N

Green building Y Y Y

Renewable energy use by city government N Y N

Economic Development Activities

Infill development N N Y

Business retention program N Y N

Cluster/targeted economic development Y Y N

Brownfield reclamation N N Y

Empowerment/enterprise zones N N N

Local business incubator program N Y N

Tax incentives for environmentally friendly development N Y Y

Eco-industrial park development Y N N

Purchase of development rights/Transfer of development rights N N N

Agricultural protection zoning N Y N

Urban growth boundary/urban service boundary N N N

Equity Activities

Neighborhood planning N N N

Youth opportunities and antigang program N N N

Affordable housing provisions N Y N

Homeless prevention and intervention N N N

Sustainable food systems or food security program N Y N

Living wage ordinance N N N

Day care service for service sector and low-income employees N N N

Job-housing balance N N N

Mass transit access with local income subsidies N N N

Women and minority owned business and investment programs N N N

Incentive/Inclusionary zoning N N Y

Total 'Y' 12 20 15

60

Appendix B: Greenworks Philadelphia: Goals and Initiatives

Table 13: Greenworks Philadelphia Goals, Targets, Initiatives, and Actions

ENERGY

TARGET 1: LOWER CITY GOVERNMENT ENERGY USE BY 30 PERCENT

Energy Efficient Capital Investments

Triplex + City Hall ESCO project

Target smaller, satellite buildings for ESCO investment (50 buildings)

Implement Target Energy Budgets

Encourage Conservation Among Employees

Install New Lighting

Install motion sensing switches and timed lighting in City buildings

Replace Yellow/Green Traffic Signal lights with LED

Upgrade Recreation Center Outdoor Lighting

Include Energy Conservation In Future Building Maintenance Contracts

Identify Less-Expensive and Alternative Electrical Sources

Develop Energy Load/Demand Management Practices

Create Capital Budget Energy Guidelines

Use Future Energy Costs to Inform Building Acquisition/Expansion Decisions

City Employee Car Management Plan

Reduce City Fleet by 500 additional cars

Increase average MPG in city fleet

Continue Car Sharing Program

Develop gasoline usage budgets for departments

Investigate Conversion of City Buildings from Steam Loop to Natural Gas

Five Year Strategic Energy Plan (Water Department)

TARGET 2: REDUCE CITYWIDE BUILDING ENERGY CONSUMPTION BY 10 PERCENT

Develop Energy-Efficiency Building Guidelines

Tie the Energy-Efficiency Code to Tax Abatements

Grant Floor Area Ratio Bonuses

Fast Track LEED-Certified and Energy Efficient Buildings

Electronic Plan Development Review

Disclose Building Energy Use During Real Estate Transactions

Create a Sustainable Energy Authority

Reposition the Philadelphia Home Improvement Loan Program

Create Revolving Loan Fund for Tenant Improvement Work

Develop Power Purchase Pools for Small Businesses

Install Smart Meters

Include Feedback on Utility Bills

Create Neighborhood Competitions

Develop a Citywide Energy-Efficiency Marketing Campaign

Work with School District to develop curriculum around sustainability (focusing on energy savings, recycling, trees)

TARGET 3: RETROFIT 15 PERCENT OF HOUSING STOCK WITH INSULATION, AIR SEALING AND COOL

ROOFS

Expand Current Low-Income Housing Weatherization Efforts

Use the Sustainable Energy Authority to Create a Scalable Weatherization Program

Expand Scope of PGW’s Weatherization Program and Increase Size

Build Energy-Efficiency into Public and Low-Income Housing

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TARGET 4: PRODUCE AND GENERATE 20 PERCENT OF ELECTRICITY USED IN PHILADELPHIA FROM

ALTERNATIVE ENERGY SOURCES

Promote Renewable Power Purchase Agreements for Public Buildings

Reduce Regulatory Barriers to Solar Installation

Write a Guide for Solar Development

Report Solar Financing Options

Explore Vertical Axis Wind Turbines for Public Roofs

Create Biogas Cogeneration Facility at Northeast Wastewater Treatment Plant

Recycling Deicing Fluid

Install Geothermal System at Sewer Maintenance Facility

Explore ways to capture water power at Fairmount and Flat Rock dams (without compromising aesthetics)

ENERGY

TARGET 5: REDUCE GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS BY 20 PERCENT

Explore Opportunities for Philadelphia in Proposed Federal Cap and Trade Legislation

TARGET 6: IMPROVE AIR QUALITY TOWARD ATTAINMENT OF FEDERAL STANDARDS

Retrofit Diesel Vehicles

Replace filters and add diesel oxidation catalyst equipment on all City’s diesel vehicles

Require equipment used by private contractors on public works projects to adhere to AMS standards

Increase the Use of Biodiesel Fuel in City Fleet

Purchase 420,000 gallons of biodiesel and increase by 5% every year 5

Increase the Fleet’s Gas Mileage

Develop a Compressed Natural Gas Facility

Develop CNG fueling station

Purchase 15 CNG Trash Trucks

Purchase Hybrid Diesel Buses

SEPTA purchases 440 Hybrid Diesel buses 5 SEPTA – 2010

Facilitate Use of Electric Cars

Permit electric cars on city streets

Plugs in parking lots, city streets

Increase the Number of Hybrid or CNG Taxis

Initiate Queuing Preference at Airport for Hybrid and CNG taxis

Congestion Reduction

Better enforce Anti-idling and double-parking regulations

Expand Center City loading areas

Parking Policies

Consider the creation of demand pricing schemes

Parking for Bicycles and Motor Scooters

Set aside at least 200 feet for on-street bicycle parking and 430 for motor scooters

Develop Green Ports Plan

Implement Airport Green Plan

Increase purchase of renewable energy to 10% of total demand (from 8%)

Decrease emissions from rental car fleet

Prohibit use of airplane idling for power at gates

Use tugs to back-up aircraft at gates

TARGET 7: DIVERT 70 PERCENT OF SOLID WASTE FROM LANDFILLS

RECYCLING

Incentives for Recycling

Expand Plastics Recycling

Increase Recycling at City Facilities

Increase Oversight of Recycling in Commercial Buildings

Introduce Public Space Recycling

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Continue Event Recycling

Expand Recycling at Transit Stations

Construction and Demolition (C&D) Waste Management Program

Electronic Recycling

Composting

Encourage household composting

Continue leaf composting in Fairmount Park

REDUCING SOLID WASTE

Saving Money and Reducing Trash (SMART) 5 Streets MOS 2010

Other Waste-Minimization Efforts

Impose a small fee on/Ban plastic bags

Ban Styrofoam containers

Anti-Littering Campaign

Use internet to harness private sector to assist in regular city cleaning efforts

Paperless Office

Process municipal payroll electronically

Place more public records, plan and documents on-line

Sustainable Procurement Policy

ENERGY-FROM-WASTE

Study Energy-from-Waste Alternatives

Include Sustainability Criteria in Solid Waste Contracts

EQUITY

TARGET 8: MANAGE STORMWATER TO MEET FEDERAL STANDARDS

GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE

Maintain Recent Stormwater Regulatory Changes

Implement New Stormwater Fees

Increase the Number of Green Roofs

Require Roofs that Receive Tax Credit to be Able to Capture First Inch of Rainfall

Extend Green Roof Tax Credit to Residential Buildings

Create Building Code Guidance for Green Roofs

Install green roofs on public buildings where possible

Create Green Streets

Use Green Infrastructure Methods on City Streets

Carry out Market Street, Lancaster Avenue, Passyunk Avenue demonstration projects

Transform Vacant Land

Increase amount of green, open space (see Target 9)

Create Wetlands

Create new tidal/non-tidal wetlands along Delaware and Schuylkill Rivers

Create Urban Wetlands Registry

Restore Waterways

Restore at least one mile of creeks and streams per year

Upgrade sections of Cobbs, Mill and Tacony Creeks for recreational usage

Green Surface Parking Lots

Allow the use of pervious pavement

Change Zoning Code to require more tree screening

Expand the Rain Barrel Program

Control Pollution and Trash on the Rivers

TARGET 9: PROVIDE PARK AND RECREATION RESOURCES WITHIN 10 MINUTES OF 75 PERCENT OF

RESIDENTS

CREATE OPEN SPACE AS PART OF NEIGHBORHOOD DEVELOPMENT

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Explore the Use of Innovative Financing for Open Space Development

Prioritize New Green Space Creation Within Low-Served Neighborhoods

DEVELOP PARKLAND AND OPEN SPACE CONNECTIONS ALONG THE CITY’S CREEKS AND RIVERS

Schuykill River

Delaware River

TARGET 10: BRING LOCAL FOOD WITHIN 10 MINUTES OF 75 PERCENT OF RESIDENTS

INCREASE ACCESS TO FRESH FOOD

Expand the Number of Neighborhood Farmers’ Markets

Publicize Local Food-Source Efforts

Provide Technical Assistance

Leverage Vacant Land

Foster School-Based Efforts

CREATE DEMAND FOR LOCALLY GROWN FOOD

Foster Commercial Farming

Encourage Distribution of Healthy Food in Neighborhood Stores

Support Food Cooperative Expansion

ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT

Create an Urban Agriculture Workforce Strategy

Support Green Kitchen Development

COMBATING HUNGER

Integrate Anti-Hunger Efforts Into Food and Urban Agriculture Goals

TARGET 11: INCREASE TREE COVERAGE TOWARD 30 PERCENT IN ALL NEIGHBORHOODS IN 2025

STREET TREES

Change Street Tree Rules involving Property Owner Permission

Prioritize Tree Planting in Low-Canopy, High-Crime Districts

Target Empty Tree Pits

Strengthen and Increase Public-Private Maintenance Partnerships

Fully Stock Street Trees Adjacent to All City Facilities

Revise the Zoning Code Regarding Trees for Surface Parking Lots

Decrease the Cost of Tree Planting

ACCELERATE CITY-WIDE TREE PLANTING EFFORTS

Public Tree Planting Campaign

Create Urban Tree Forest Management Program

Initiate City-Based Growing

Green the Schools

Explore Tree Planting Money in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009

Launch Local Carbon Offset Market

ECONOMY

TARGET 12: REDUCE VEHICLE MILES TRAVELED BY 10 PERCENT

PUBLIC TRANSIT

Develop New Fare Card Technologies

Further Improve Service and Safety

Invest in Current Transit Infrastructure

Ensure Sustained Transit Funding

Plan for an Expanded Transit System

Make Transit-Oriented Development Investments

PEDESTRIAN & BIKE FRIENDLY STREETS

Upgrade Commercial Corridors

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Develop a Pedestrian and Bicycle Master Plan

Build an East-West Bicycle Corridor

Develop More Off-Road Bike Trails

Explore the Creation of a Bicycle-Sharing Program

Expand the Number of Bike Racks

Create Bike Parking Stations

Design and Implement Complete Streets

Increase Traffic-Calming Measures

EXPAND CAR SHARING

Change Tax Classification for Car Share Programs

Provide On-Street Bicycle Parking Spots

Reduce Parking Ratios for Buildings with Designated Bike and Car Share Spots

TARGET 13: INCREASE THE STATE OF GOOD REPAIR IN RESILIENT INFRASTRUCTURE

Investment in Public Property Management Systems

Improve Road Maintenance and Upgrade Bridges

Acknowledge Climate Change in Infrastructure Planning

TARGET 14: DOUBLE THE NUMBER OF LOW- AND HIGH-SKILL GREEN JOBS

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

Conduct a Green Jobs Market Analysis

Create a Green Economy Stakeholder Task Force

Raise Awareness about Green Jobs

Re-brand Philadelphia for Business Development Efforts

Support and Connect Energy Research and Academia

WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT

Fill the Need for Green Jobs

Diversify the Green Workforce

Create a Regional Green Jobs Training Center

Create a Green Jobs Corps

ENGAGEMENT

TARGET 15: PHILADELPHIA IS THE GREENEST CITY IN AMERICA

ENGAGE

Reach Out to Stakeholders

Develop Social Marketing and Public Education Campaigns

EVALUATE

Use Data to Measure Results

Publish Annual Review

Create Regularly Updated Website

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Appendix C: PLANYC 2030: Goals and Initiatives

Table 16: PLANYC 2030: Goals, Initiatives, and Implementation Actions

LAND

Housing

Continue publicly-initiated rezoning

1 Pursue transit-oriented development

Use upcoming rezonings to direct growth toward areas with strong transit access

2 Reclaim underutilized waterfronts

Continue restoring underused or vacant waterfront land across the city

3 Increase transit options to spur development

Use transit extensions to spark growth as the subways did more than a century ago

Create new housing on public land

4 Expand co-locations with government agencies

Pursue partnerships with City and State agencies throughout the city

5 Adapt outdated buildings to new uses

Seek to adapt unused schools, hospitals, and other outdated municipal sites for productive use as new

housing

Explore additional areas of opportunity

6 Develop underused areas to knit neighborhoods together

Continue to identify underutilized areas across the city that are well-served by transit and other

infrastructure

7 Capture the potential of transportation infrastructure investments

Examine the potential of major infrastructure expansions to spur growth in new neighborhoods

8 Deck over railyards, rail lines, and highways

Explore opportunities to create new land by constructing decks over transportation infrastructure

Expand targeted affordability programs

9 Develop new financing strategies

Continue to pursue creative financing strategies to reach new income brackets

10 Expand inclusionary zoning

Seek opportunities to expand the use of inclusionary zoning, harnessing the private market to create

economically-integrated communities

11 Encourage homeownership

Continue to develop programs to encourage homeownership, emphasizing affordable apartments over

single-family homes

12 Preserve the existing stock of affordable housing throughout New York City

Continue to develop programs to preserve the existing affordable housing that so many New Yorkers

depend upon today

Open Space

Make existing sites available to more New Yorkers

1 Open schoolyards across the city as public playgrounds

Open schoolyards as playgrounds in every neighborhood

2 Increase options for competitive athletics

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Make high-quality competition fields available to teams across the city

3 Complete underdeveloped destination parks

Fulfill the potential of at least one major undeveloped park site in every borough

Expand usable hours at existing sites

4 Provide more multi-purpose fields

Convert asphalt sites into multi-use turf fields

5 Install new lighting

Maximize time on our existing turf fields by installing additional lights for nighttime use

Re-imagine the public realm

6 Create or enhance a public plaza in every community

Create or enhance at least one public plaza in every community

7 Green the cityscape

Fill every available street tree opportunity in New York City

Expand Greenstreets program

Brownfields

Make existing Brownfield programs faster and more efficient

1 Adopt on-site testing to streamline the cleanup process

Pilot the “Triad” program on two sites

2 Create remediation guidelines for New York City cleanups

Analyze New York City‟s soil and develop a set of standard cleanup remedies appropriate for the city

3 Establish a City office to promote Brownfield planning and redevelopment

Create a new City office to increase resources dedicated to brownfield planning, testing, and cleanups

Expand enrollment into streamlined programs

4 Expand participation in the current State Brownfield Cleanup Program (BCP)

Ask State to redistribute BCP tax credits to relieve budgetary pressures, and begin covering New York

City-specific contamination

5 Create a City program to oversee all additional cleanups

Create a City-sponsored program to provide oversight of cleanups for any sites not enrolled in other

programs

6 Provide incentives to lower costs of remediation

Dedicate $15 million to capitalize a fund to support brownfield redevelopment

Encourage greater community involvement in Brownfield redevelopment

7 Encourage the State to release community-based redevelopment grants

Advocate for the State to reform the Brownfield Opportunity Area (BOA) program and release planning

grant funds to community groups

8 Provide incentives to participate in Brownfield Opportunity Area (BOA) planning

Advocate for financial incentives for developments constructed in coordination with a BOA

9 Launch outreach effort to educate communities about Brownfield redevelopment

Educate and provide technical assistance to communities, private developers, and City agencies to promote brownfield redevelopment

Identify remaining sites for cleanups

10 Create a database of historic uses across New York City to identify potential Brownfields

Conduct a historic use assessment for all sites in order to measure long-term progress towards goals

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11 Limit liability of property owners who seek to redevelop Brownfields

Create an insurance program and legal protections to limit the liability of developers willing to clean up land they did not pollute

WATER

Water Quality

Continue implementing infrastructure upgrades

1 Develop and implement Long-Term Control Plans

Complete Long-Term Control Plans for all 14 New York City Watersheds, as required y law

2 Expand wet weather capacity at treatment plants

Reduce Combined Sewage Overflow (CSO) discharges by more than 185 mgd during rainstorms

Pursue proven solutions to prevent stormwater from entering the system

3 Increase use of High Level Storm Sewers (HLSS)

Convert combined sewers into HLSS and integrate HLSS into major new developments as appropriate

4 Capture the benefits of our open space plan

5 Expand the Bluebelt program

Expand Bluebelt in Staten Island and other boroughs, where possible

Expand, track, and analyze new Best Management Practices (BMPs)on a broad scale

6 Form an interagency BMP Task Force

Make the reduction of CSO volumes and other environmental issues a priority for all relevant City agencies

7 Pilot promising BMPs

Introduce 20 cubic meters of ribbed mussel beds

Plant trees with improved pit designs

Create vegetated ditches (swales) along parkways

8 Require greening of parking lots

Modify the zoning resolution to include design guidelines for off-street parking lots for commercial and

community facilities

9 Provide incentives for green roofs

Encourage the installation of green roofs through a new incentive program

10 Protect wetlands

Assess the vulnerability of existing wetlands and identify additional policies to protect and manage them

Water Networks

Ensure the quality of our drinking water

1 Continue the Watershed Protection Program

Aggressively protect our watersheds as we seek to maintain a Filtration Avoidance Determination for the Catskill and Delaware Water Supplies

2 Construct an ultraviolet disinfection plant for the Catskill and Delaware systems

Construct an ultraviolet disinfection facility to destroy disease-causing organisms in our upstate watershed

3 Build the Croton Filtration Plant

Construct a water filtration plant to protect the Croton supply

Create redundancy for aqueducts to New York City

4 Launch a major new water conservation effort

Implement a water conservation program to reduce citywide consumption by 60 mgd

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5 Maximize existing facilities

Expand our supply potential through increased efficiency

6 Evaluate new water sources

Evaluate 39 projects to meet the shortfall needs of the city if a prolonged shutdown of the Delaware Aqueduct is required

Modernize in-city distribution

7 Complete Water Tunnel No. 3

Complete construction of Stage 2 and begin repairing Water Tunnel No. 1

Complete Stages 3 and 4 of Water Tunnel No. 3

8 Complete a backup tunnel to Staten Island

Replace pipelines connecting Staten Island to Water Tunnel No. 2

9 Accelerate upgrades to water main infrastructure

Increase replacement rate to over 80 miles annually

TRANSPORTATION

Transportation

Build and expand transit infrastructure

1 Increase capacity on key congested routes

Seek to fund five projects that eliminate major capacity constraints

2 Provide new commuter rail access to Manhattan

Seek to expand options for rail commuters

3 Expand transit access to underserved areas

Seek to provide transit to new and emerging neighborhoods

Improve transit service on existing infrastructure

4 Improve and expand bus service

Initiate and expand Bus Rapid Transit

Dedicate Bus/High Occupancy Vehicle (HOV) lanes on the East River bridges

Explore other improvements to bus service

5 Improve local commuter rail service

Seek to expand local use of Metro-North and Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) stations

6 Improve access to existing transit

Facilitate access to subways and bus stops citywide

7 Address congested areas around the city

Develop congestion management plans for outer-borough growth corridors

Promote other sustainable modes

8 Expand ferry service

Seek to expand service and improve integration with the city‟s existing mass transit system

9 Promote cycling

Complete the 1,800-mile bike master plan

Facilitate cycling

Improve traffic flow by reducing congestion

10 Pilot congestion pricing

Seek to use pricing to manage traffic in the Central Business District (CBD)

11 Manage roads more efficiently

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Expand the use of Muni meters

Develop an integrated traffic management system for our regional transportation network

12 Strengthen enforcement of traffic violations

Expand the number of Traffic Enforcement Agents (TEAs)

Enable all TEAs to issue blocking-the-box tickets

Expand the use of traffic enforcement cameras

13 Facilitate freight movements

Improve access to JFK

Explore High Occupancy Truck Toll (HOTT) Lanes

Achieve a state of good repair on our roads and transit system

14 Close the Metropolitan Transportation Authority‟s state of good repair gap

Seek a grant from the SMART Authority to cover the MTA‟s funding gap

15 Reach a state of good repair on the city‟s roads and bridges

Seek a grant from the SMART Authority to fund accelerated capital repairs and upgrades

Invest in bridge and tunnel upgrades

Develop new funding sources

16 Establish a new regional transit financing authority

Seek to create a SMART Financing Authority to advance new projects and achieve a state of good repair

ENERGY

Energy

Improve energy planning

1 Establish a New York City Energy Planning Board

Work with the State and utilities to centralize planning for the city‟s supply and demand initiatives

Reduce New York City‟s energy consumption

2 Reduce energy consumption by City government

Commit 10% of the City‟s annual energy bill to fund energy-saving investments in City operations

3 Strengthen energy and building codes for New York City

Strengthen energy and building codes to support our energy efficiency strategies and other environmental

goals

4 Create an energy efficiency authority for New York City

Create the New York City Energy Efficiency Authority responsible for reaching the city‟s demand

reduction targets

5 Prioritize five key areas for targeted incentives

Use a series of mandates, challenges, and incentives to reduce demand among the city‟s largest energy consumers

6 Expand peak load management

Expand participation in Peak Load Management Programs through smart meters

Support expansion of real-time pricing across the city

7 Launch an energy awareness and training campaign

Increase the impact of our energy efficiency efforts through a coordinated energy education, awareness, and

training campaign

Expand the city‟s clean power supply

8 Facilitate repowering and construct power plants and dedicated transmission lines

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Facilitate the construction of 2,000 to 3,000 MW of supply capacity by repowering old plants, constructing

new ones, and building dedicated transmission lines

9 Expand Clean Distributed Generation (“Clean DG”)

Increase the amount of Clean DG by 800 MW

Promote opportunities to develop district energy at appropriate sites in New York City

10 Support expansion of natural gas infrastructure

Support critical expansions to the city‟s natural gas infrastructure

11 Foster the market for renewable energy

Create a property tax abatement for solar panel installations

Study the cost-effectiveness of solar electricity when evaluated on a Real Time Pricing scenario

Support the construction of the city‟s first carbon-neutral building, primarily powered by solar electricity

Increase use of solar energy in City buildings through creative financing

Work with the State to eliminate barriers to increasing the use of solar energy in the city

Pilot one or more technologies for producing energy from solid waste

End methane emissions from sewage treatment plants and expand the use of digester gas

Study the expansion of gas capture and energy production from existing landfills

Modernize electricity delivery infrastructure

12 Accelerate reliability improvements to the city‟s grid

Advocate for Con Edison to implement recommendations from the City‟s report on the western Queens power outages

13 Facilitate grid repairs through improved coordination and joint bidding

Pursue the passage of joint bidding legislation

Ensure adequate pier facilities are available to Con Edison to offload transformers and other equipment

14 Support Con Edison‟s efforts to modernize the grid

Support Con Edison‟s 3G System of the Future initiative

AIR QUALITY

Air

Reduce road vehicle emissions

1 Capture the air quality benefits of our transportation plan

2 Improve fuel efficiency of private cars

Waive New York City‟s sales tax on the cleanest, most efficient vehicles

Work with the MTA, the Port Authority, and the State Department of Transportation to promote hybrid and

other clean vehicles

Pilot new technologies and fuels, including hydrogen and plug-in hybrid vehicles

3 Reduce emissions from taxis, black cars, and for-hire vehicles

Reduce taxi and limousine idling

Work with the Taxi and Limousine Commission (TLC) and the taxicab industry to double the taxi fleet‟s

efficiency

Work with stakeholders to double the fuel efficiency of black cars and for-hire vehicles

4 Replace, retrofit, and refuel diesel trucks

Introduce biodiesel into the City‟s truck fleet, go beyond compliance with local laws, and further reduce

emissions

Accelerate emissions reductions of private fleets through existing CMAQ programs

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Work with stakeholders and the State to create incentives for the adoption of vehicle emission control and

efficiency strategies

Improve compliance of existing anti-idling laws through a targeted educational campaign

5 Decrease school bus emissions

Retrofit both large and small school buses and reduce their required retirement age

Reduce other transportation emissions

6 Retrofit ferries and promote use of cleaner fuels

Retrofit the Staten Island Ferry fleet to reduce emissions

Work with private ferries to reduce their emissions

7 Seek to partner with the Port Authority to reduce emissions from Port facilities

Seek to work with the Port Authority to reduce emissions from the Port‟s marine vehicles, port facilities,

and airports

8 Reduce emissions from construction vehicles

Accelerate adoption of technologies to reduce construction-related emissions

Reduce emissions from buildings

9 Capture the air quality benefits of our energy plan

10 Promote the use of cleaner burning heating fuels

Lower the maximum sulfur content in heating fuel from 2000 ppm to 500 ppm

Reduce emissions from boilers in 100 city public schools

Pursue natural solutions to improve air quality

11 Capture the benefits of our open space plan

12 Reforest targeted areas of our parkland

Reforest 2,000 acres of parkland

13 Increase tree plantings on lots

Partner with stakeholders to help plant one million trees by 2017

Understand the scope of the challenge

14 Launch collaborative local air quality study

Monitor and model neighborhood-level air quality across New York City

CLIMATE CHANGE

Climate Change

Protect our vital infrastructure

1 Create an intergovernmental Task Force to protect our vital infrastructure

Expand our adaptation strategies beyond the protection of our water supply, sewer, and wastewater

treatment systems to include all essential city infrastructure

Develop site-specific strategies

2 Work with vulnerable neighborhoods to develop site-specific strategies

Create a community planning process to engage all stakeholders in community-specific climate adaptation strategies

Incorporate climate change concerns into planning process

3 Launch a citywide strategic planning process for climate change adaptation

Create a strategic planning process to adapt to climate change impacts

Ensure that New York‟s 100-year floodplain maps are updated

Document the City‟s floodplain management strategies to secure discounted flood insurance for New Yorkers

Amend the building code to address the impacts of climate change

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