A funeral was held last month at the site of Iceland’s Okjökull
glacier. A century ago it covered nearly six square miles, measuring 164 ft. deep.
Today, it’s less than one square mile, 49 feet thick. The shrinking sheet of
ice can no longer be called a glacier. A tombstone plaque was placed at the
site.
A Letter to the Future
This monument is
to acknowledge that we know
what is happening
and what needs to be done.
Only you know if
we did it.
August 19, 2019
A month later, an estimated 4 million young people filled streets
in cities around the world, demanding attention to climate change. Greta
Thunberg, a 16-year-old Swedish activist, addressed the UN Climate Change Summit
with these words: “You have stolen my dreams and my childhood with your empty
words. We are in the beginning of a mass extinction and yet all you can talk
about is money. You are failing us."
What’s North San Diego County doing about it? I searched the
city websites of San Marcos and Carlsbad to find out.
San Marcos adopted its 147-page Climate Action Plan (CAP) in
2013. It tells what the city will do to comply with the Governor's 2005 Executive
Order to reduce GHG emissions to 1990 levels by 2020, by 40 percent in 2030, and
80 percent in 2050. There have been no progress reports posted on the city’s
website in the past five years.
Two years after San Marcos created its CAP, Carlsbad adopted
its own 242-page plan. City Manager Scott Chadwick’s 2017 and 2018 annual
reports are posted on the city’s website. The city put teeth into its plan for
new business developments, adding the following two ordinances to its Municipal
Code.
Electric vehicles
ORDINANCE NO.
CS-349
The electric vehicle ordinance requires of new
nonresidential projects:
- 10 percent of parking spaces, or a minimum of one space, must be electric vehicle capable.
- 50 percent of the electric vehicle capable spaces, or a minimum of one space, must be equipped with electric vehicle charging stations.
Transportation demand management
ORDINANCE NO.
CS-350
All new nonresidential development projects where
employees generate a minimum of 110 average daily trips are subject to the
ordinance, which requires development of a Transportation Demand Management
plan, outlining facility improvements, programs, incentives, education,
marketing and outreach for a development project for review and approval by the
city.
San Marcos chose not to amend its Municipal Code, but to add
to the city’s General Plan measures to bring down GHG emissions, including the
following:
Increase overall City fleet fuel efficiency by replacing
gasoline vehicles with hybrids.
Work with individual departments with vehicle fleets and
equipment to develop fuel saving policies and programs.
Implement programs and provide incentives to reduce
annual vehicle miles traveled associated with City employee commutes.
Participate in SANDAG’s free iCommute program to develop
and implement a customized commuter benefit program for City employees.
Implement improvements to smooth traffic flow, reduce
idling, eliminate bottlenecks, and encourage efficient driving techniques.
Conduct education campaigns to promote fuel-efficient
driving (“eco-driving”) practices such as reduced idling, slower driving speeds,
gentle acceleration, and proper tire inflation.
San Marcos held several community workshops in May, open to
all residents, to create a “2019 CAP Update.” A questionnaire was used to
solicit opinions on various emissions reduction measures, many of which were already
included in the 2013 plan.
Here’s a sample of the questionnaire used to solicit
attendee opinions.
From the list of proposed strategies, below, please
indicate up to five strategies that you support the most.
Here are just four on the list of 25 choices:
☐ Require EV charging stations
at new multi-family and non-residential developments.
☐ Synchronize traffic signals
along major corridors to reduce vehicle idling.
☐ Install roundabouts to improve
efficiency of vehicle travel in the City.
☐ Install new bike lanes and
upgrade existing ones in the City as stipulated in the General Plan. .
The questionnaire suggests those who don’t believe in the
urgency of climate change, like the guy in the White House, together with those
who do, had an equal say in the meetings. It seems the popularity of emissions
reduction strategies, not climate science, will guide the city’s climate plan
update.
San Marcos gets the credit for government transparency. It lists
on its website all 50 major commercial, industrial, residential and mixed use
development projects underway, together with maps and descriptions of the
projects, the names of developer applicants, and the phone numbers of city
staff for more detailed information.
Carlsbad could learn from that. The city’s website is not at
all user-friendly for finding development projects. More transparency could
have helped when a billionaire developer tried to put a shopping mall on the
banks of the city’s pristine Agua Hedionda Lagoon a few years ago.
It appears San Marcos and Carlsbad could learn from each
other. But the challenge to us all is reflected in a Washington Post survey,
cited by Pulitzer Prize winning, environmental journalist, Elizabeth Kolbert,
in her September 30, 2019 New Yorker article. Although more people are
concerned about global warming, fewer than half said they would support a
$2/month surcharge on their electricity bills, only a third would support a
ten-cent-per-gallon increase in the federal gasoline tax.
Looks like bad news for the shrinking glaciers.
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