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Brown
to launch anti-warming effort
Local
officials considered likely to resist workshops
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By Steve
Geissinger
San Jose Mercury News
February 19, 2008
SACRAMENTO - Attorney General Jerry Brown is taking the
global warming enlightenment skills he honed in the Bay Area
across the rest of California today - a move that even
supporters such as San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed said will meet
resistance.
Monday, Brown's aides told MediaNews he will announce he is
convening voluntary regional schools for California's more
than 500 county supervisors and mayors to advocate tough
actions such new transportation impact fees and costly
energy-efficiency.
"These workshops launch the first statewide movement to
reduce the negative impact of local planning decisions on
global climate," Brown said in a letter.
Although attendance is not required, Brown has, however,
legally leaned on 23 individual local entities in search of
reduced greenhouse gases. In the East Bay, he negotiated an
agreement with ConocoPhillips on specific greenhouse gas
reduction strategies.
"California must adopt the necessary changes that will
encourage economic growth while reducing greenhouse
gases," he said. "This difficult transition from our
current escalating dependence on fossil fuel demands that
cities and counties encourage maximum building efficiency and
innovative land-use."
Brown is sending more than 500 letters to leaders in 58
counties and nearly 200 cities with populations of 50,000 or
more.
As charter members of the fledgling national "cool"
cities and counties campaign, San Jose and its Bay Area
neighbors are on the vanguard of making land-use decisions with
greenhouse emissions in mind, Reed said in an interview.
"We're ahead of the power curve," Reed said.
"We're hoping the rest of the state will catch up with
us.
"But I'm sure there's a lot of people, who haven't
given it much thought, that are going to have to focus on the
issues," he said. "There will be plenty of
resistance."
Brown's classes will center on complying with the state
Environmental Quality Act - a highly controversial law that
requires cities and developers to study various effects of
proposed projects. Factors studied include traffic and
pollution.
The state's Global Warming Solutions Act, AB 32, requires
California to cut greenhouse gas emission to 1990 levels by
2020. As part of that rule, local agencies are required to
analyze and reduce greenhouse gas emissions from projects with
significant impacts, including regional transportation and
development plans.
Meanwhile, local government will make hundreds, even
thousands, of planning decisions that will have decades-long
implications.
Reed said cities are looking for low-cost means of meeting
goals and banding together regionally to find answers.
Among all Bay Area counties, Brown's home county of Alameda
was the first county to join the official national
"cool" cities registry.
"We see the Cool Counties partnership as a key step
toward local government leading the nation on reducing
greenhouse gas emissions and preparing for climate
change," Alameda County Board of Supervisors Chairman
Scott Haggerty said in a release.
"We're working with our cities through the Alameda
County Climate Protection project to address climate change
within our own county."
Contact Steve Geissinger at sgeissinger@bayareanewsgroup.com
or (916) 447-9302
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Copyright 1999-2008, California Coastal Coalition
Phone: (760) 944-3564
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