Keizer Sustainablity

Keizer Sustainablity A gathering place and organization hub for sharing information about Keizer Oregon's Sustainability Plan.

07/19/2021

Sent to Councilors Reed and Herrera:

RESOLUTION ENDORSING THE DECLARATION OF A CLIMATE EMERGENCY AND EMERGENCY MOBILIZATION EFFORT TO RESTORE A SAFE CLIMATE

WHEREAS, in April 2016 world leaders recognized the urgent need to combat climate change it by signing the Paris Agreement, agreeing to keep global warming “well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels” and to “pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C;”

WHEREAS, the death and destruction already wrought by current average global warming of over 1°C demonstrate that the Earth is already too hot for safety and justice, as attested by increased and intensifying wildfires, floods, rising seas, diseases, droughts, and extreme weather;
WHEREAS, according to the United Nations’ Special Rapporteur on Extreme Poverty, 1.5°C of global warming could expose 500 million people to water poverty, 36 million people to food insecurity because of lower crop yields, and 4.5 billion people to heat waves;

WHEREAS, in October 2018, the United Nations released a special report which projected that limiting warming to even the dangerous 1.5°C target this century will require an unprecedented transformation of every sector of the global economy by 2030;
WHEREAS, the United Nations November 2019 Emissions Gap Report finds that countries have collectively failed to stop the growth in emissions, meaning that deeper and faster emissions cuts are now required. In order to stay on track to meeting the Paris Agreement goals, the UN calls for immediate and aggressive action to achieve carbon by 2030;

WHEREAS, climate change and the global industrialized economy’s overshoot of ecological limits are driving the Sixth Mass Extinction of species, could devastate much of life on Earth for many millennia, and may pose as great a risk to humanity as climate change, according to the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services;

WHEREAS, the United States of America has disproportionately contributed to the climate and ecological emergencies and thus bears an extraordinary responsibility to rapidly solve these crises;

WHEREAS, on July 2019 a concurrent Congressional resolution was introduced declaring a national climate emergency in the United States, calling for a “national, social, industrial, and economic mobilization of the resources and labor of the United States at a massive scale to halt, reverse, mitigate, and prepare for the consequences of the climate emergency and to restore the climate for future generations;”

WHEREAS, restoring a safe and stable climate requires a Climate Mobilization, an emergency mobilization on a scale not seen since World War II in order to reach zero greenhouse gas emissions across all sectors of the economy; to rapidly and safely drawdown and remove all the excess carbon from the atmosphere at emergency speed and until safe, pre-industrial climate conditions are restored; and to implement measures to protect all people and species from the consequences of abrupt climate breakdown;

WHEREAS, such necessary measures to restore a safe climate include:
1. A rapid, just, managed phase-out of fossil fuels;
2. Ending greenhouse gas emissions as quickly as possible to establish a zero-emissions economy;
3. A rapid transition to a 100% renewable energy system across all economic sectors;
4. A widespread effort to safely drawdown excess carbon from the atmosphere;
5. A full transition to a regenerative agriculture system; and
6. An end to the Sixth Mass Extinction through widespread conservation and restoration of ecosystems;
WHEREAS, marginalized populations in the City of Keizer and worldwide, including people of color, immigrants, Indigenous communities, low-income individuals, people with disabilities, outdoor laborers, and the unhoused are already disproportionately affected by the effects of climate change, and will continue to bear an excess burden as temperatures increase, and disasters worsen;
WHEREAS, the term “Just and Equitable Transition” is a framework for a fair shift to an economy that is ecologically sustainable, equitable and just for all its members; and;
WHEREAS, a Just and Equitable Transition initiatives shift the economy from dirty energy to energy democracy, from funding new highways to expanding public transit, from incinerators and landfills to zero waste products, from industrial food systems to food sovereignty, from car-dependent sprawl and destructive unbridled growth to urban development without displacement and from destructive over-development to habitat and ecosystem restoration;
WHEREAS, a Just and Equitable Transition requires that frontline and marginalized communities, which have historically borne the brunt of the extractive fossil-fuel economy, participate actively in the planning and implementation of this mobilization effort and that they benefit first from the transition to a climate-safe economy;

WHEREAS, fairness demands a guarantee of high-paying, good-quality jobs with comprehensive benefits for all, and many other tenets of a “Green New Deal” effort as the mobilization to restore a safe climate is launched;

WHEREAS, the COVID-19 global pandemic has both highlighted and exacerbated existing health inequalities that have resulted from climate change, such as neighborhoods with poorer air quality being disproportionately affected by the disease;

WHEREAS, the massive scope and scale of action necessary to stabilize the climate and biosphere will require unprecedented levels of public awareness, engagement, and deliberation to develop and implement effective, just, and equitable policies to address the climate emergency;

WHEREAS, the City of Keizer can act as a global leader through initiating an emergency Climate Mobilization to convert to an ecologically, socially, and economically regenerative local economy at emergency speed, as well as advocating for regional, national, and international efforts necessary to reverse global warming and the ecological crisis;

NOW BE IT THEREFORE RESOLVED, that the City of Keizer declares that a climate and ecological emergency threatens our city, region, state, nation, civilization, humanity and the natural world;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the City of Keizer commits to a City wide mobilization effort to reverse global warming and the ecological crisis, which, with appropriate financial and regulatory assistance from State and Federal authorities, ends City of Keizer wide greenhouse gas emissions as quickly as possible and no later than 2030 and immediately initiates an effort to safely draw down carbon from the atmosphere, ensuring a Just and Equitable Transition for residents and accelerating adaptation and resilience strategies in preparation for intensifying local climate impacts;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the Keizer City Council directs all Departments of the City to identify and pursue strategies and action to transition away from fossil fuel production, power generation, and use within City of Keizer limits, including immediate changes to building codes, local ordinances, and permitting processes to de-incentivize the construction of new local fossil fuel infrastructure;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the Keizer City Council directs all departments, proprietaries, and commissions to identify and prioritize climate adaptation and mitigation strategies that are people-centered, including but not limited to:
1. Clean and renewable energy, which involves deploying and efficiently using clean, renewable and locally sourced electricity generated on site or transmitted through the power grid; including upgrading public and private facilities to 100% renewable energy such as solar and battery storage.
2. Community-wide electrification and fossil fuel phase out, which involves upgrading and replacing carbon-intensive, fossil fuel-based infrastructure, including buildings, heating sources, appliances, and combustion power with efficient, energy-saving infrastructure powered by clean, renewably-generated electric power.

3. Carbon sequestration, which involves drawing down carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases from the atmosphere through ecological and/or technological methods and capturing and safely storing them in plants, soils, water systems, and other solid forms;

4. Transportation, mobility, and connectivity, which involves developing and enhancing land use patterns that foster safe, multimodal, accessible, equitable, intelligent, and clean motorized and non- motorized travel options, infrastructure, and community connectivity; including updating zoning codes to allow compatible residential infill and neighborhood-oriented commercial uses so that services like bakeries, grocery stores, and coffee shops are accessible to residents by foot or bike;

5. Resource conservation and the elimination of waste, which involves conserving natural and manufactured resources by means of responsible production, consumption, reuse, and recycling; including developing a community-wide Zero Waste Plan; adopting the “food recovery hierarchy” citywide through educational programs and policies to first promote the reduction of surplus food, and then ensure excess food is use to feed the hungry, animals, or composted before it ends in the landfill; expanding City of Keizer conservation programs to further reduce water and resource use;
6. Green infrastructure and restorative ecology, which involves incorporating green infrastructure (trees, capture and use of stormwater runoff) into community design, and restoring, rehabilitating, and restoring/repurposing damaged ecosystems through active intervention to maximize biodiversity and the drawdown and sequestration of carbon dioxide;
7. Climate adaptation and resilience, which involves preparing for, learning from, and adapting to the effects of climate change through proactive and holistic planning and response at the infrastructural, cultural, and institutional levels, including limiting/restricting development in areas that are vulnerable to flooding, landslides, and wildfires, increasing the number of community cooling centers for vulnerable populations during extreme heat, incorporating changing climatic conditions and climate hazards into emergency response and recovery programs and ensuring affordable housing units are available for vulnerable communities.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the Keizer City Council directs the City Manager to report back on opportunities and funding to address the climate and ecological emergency and its impacts through existing hazard mitigation programs;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the Keizer City Council directs the City Recorder to work with the staff to include greenhouse gas and co-pollutant impact statements, greenhouse gas and co-pollutant reduction and greenhouse gas drawdown statements in all relevant Council motions, much as it currently includes fiscal impact statements;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the City of Keizer shall, within 60 days of the passage of this resolution, to appoint a Climate Emergency Mobilization Manager to oversee this community-wide mobilization effort, with all necessary powers to coordinate City of Keizer climate and environmental programs including the development of a “Climate Mobilization Action Plan” detailing the actions and strategies necessary to implement climate emergency response, including climate mitigation, resilience, adaptation, engagement, education, advocacy, and research and development programs;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the Keizer City Council directs all City departments, proprietaries, and commissions to identify and pursue strategies and action to align with the Climate Mobilization Action Plan and goal of zero community-wide greenhouse gas emissions by the end of 2030, including through city department planning, budgeting, procurement and other activities;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the City of Keizer commits to keeping the concerns of frontline and marginalized communities central to all Climate Emergency Mobilization program planning processes and to inviting and encouraging such communities to actively participate in the development and implementation of this Climate Mobilization Action Plan and all climate mobilization efforts;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the City of Keizer recognizes that the full participation, inclusion, support, and leadership of community organizations, faith communities, youth, labor organizations, academic institutions, indigenous groups, and racial, gender, family, immigrant and disability justice and organizations and other allies are integral to the climate emergency response and mobilization efforts;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, City of Keizer shall establish a Climate Justice Task Force comprised of environmental, economic, and racial justice leaders from the City of Keizer to directly inform the creation of the City of Keizer, Climate Mobilization Action Plan;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the City of Keizer commits to directly engaging our residents in public deliberations, such as community assemblies, town halls, and public forums, on the climate emergency, which will directly inform the creation of the Keizer Climate Mobilization Action Plan to ensure a Just Transition with the full democratic participation of the residents of Keizer;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the City of Keizer joins a nation-wide call for a regional, national, and international climate emergency mobilization effort focused on rapidly catalyzing a mobilization at all levels of government to reverse global warming and the ecological crisis;

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, City of Keizer calls on the State of Oregon, the United States Congress, the President of the United States, and all governments and people worldwide to declare a climate emergency, initiate a Climate Mobilization to reverse global warming and the ecological crisis, and provide maximum protection for all people and species of the world; and,

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, in furtherance of this resolution, the City of Keizer shall submit a certified copy of this resolution to the United States Congress, the State of Oregon, Marion County, and other pertinent entities and request that all relevant support and assistance in effectuating this resolution be provided.

07/16/2021

CONCERNED ABOUT THE ENVIRONMENT?

City Council is being asked on Monday July 19 to approve the purchase of four fossil fuled Dodge Durango SXT AWD Vehicles for the police department.

These vehicles will add to the City's CO2 emissions!

This is insane - We are living in a Climate Emergency Insane.

Requesting help for next Council meeting.

Please show up Monday July 19 and testify / write letters on this issue. I will have a PowerPoint.

I have already ask the Police Chief the following:

Can you tell me and the public if a life cycle cost analysis was performed by a qualified expert consulting firm on acquiring the proposed Dodge vehicles versus electric vehicles, such as the Ford Mustang Mach-e (an all-wheel-drive four door vehicle with similar interior space)?

Can you tell me and the public how much tailpipe CO2 emissions can be expected from the proposed Dodge vehicles versus an electric vehicle, such as the Ford Mustang Mach-e, and if this analysis was performed by an expert in this subject area?

Can you tell me and the public what the CO2 emissions budget is for your Department and how a new vehicle acquisition impacts your CO2 budget?

Please, we need YOUR help to get the City to make smart CO2 decisions - for our future, our children, and grandchildren.

We don't have much time.

06/01/2021

At the Keizer City Council work session of May 24th 2021 the Council heard from Portland General Electric CEO talk about Climate Change and their efforts to reduce CO2 emissions.

Soon there will be a proposed Resolution presented to Council declaring a Climate Crises.

After that proposed resolution is presented we will be seeking YOUR support for a Resolution.

05/04/2021

Recently We have… Mourned the loss of a glacier here in Oregon.

Clark Glacier is officially dead, many recall the glacier and memories of other ice lost to the climate crisis.

Oregon has about 40 named glaciers remaining across Mount Hood, Mount Jefferson, each of the Three Sisters, Broken Top, Mount Thielsen and the Wallowas — and they’re not doing great.

Some three years ago we witnessed devastating wildfires, notably in the Columbia River Gorge and in Southern Oregon. I recall then the smoke that wafted through the Valley.

Now, last year, Oregon was devastated. The community of Phoenix was throughly devastated. Closer to home, Detroit was devastated.

I recall being at Mount Angel, barely able to see across the quad. Here, in my Keizer home, things got so bad I left for cost … to get fresh air.

We cannot escape the truth; we are living in a Climate Crises.

I will be submitting a draft resolution for the Council and citizens to consider declaring a Climate Crisis, and how to the community city and community can respond.

I look forward to hearing about your support, notably Counselor Reed, who by her nature of working in our school district, surly is acutely await of the importance of the Climate Crisis to our youth.

04/20/2021

Honorable mayor, Council, and citizens.

(Students of McNary High School should listen closely, and all concerned about our community’s future.)

We are living in a Climate Crisis and the City Council has much work to do to respond to this crisis.

Last year’s wildfires raged not far from us. As a community, we came together to help those impacted.

But we have to be proactive and not just reactive.

What is the City doing to reduce CO2 emissions? What is the City doing to reduce the impact of climate change? What is the City doing to build a more resilient community?

I have come before this council three times.

* I spoke about the City’s increasing CO2 emissions from its vehicle fleet.

* I spoke about quantifying CO2 emissions citywide.

* I spoke about establishing a Sustainability Committee tasked to develop a plan to reduce city-wide CO2 emissions and increase our community’s resilience to climate change

So far, the City has not taken any comprehensive plan of action to respond to the Climate Crisis and make our community more resilient.

Despite this, the City Council, singularly, has the highest responsibility to respond to this Climate Crisis.

I am heartened that the City Council‘s work plan has not been finalized for this year.

I urge the Council to include climate change and sustainability in it’s work plan.

This crisis demands from our elected leaders immediate and strong actions.

Rich Rodriguez
Kaiser

07/21/2020

like our page. We are building a community of like minded individuals to create a more efficent, livable and attractive community.

07/21/2020

Good Evening Honorable Mayor, Council Members, and Esteemed Citizens -

Tonight I am here to speak about sustainability. Sustainability for the City of Keizer

* As most of us know, the biggest challenge facing humankind is global climate change from the burning of fossil fuels.

* Two weeks ago or so I contacted the City and asked for a copy of the City’s Sustainability Plan – and learned there is no Sustainability Plan for the City

This was a little unsettling. Ponder the following five points:

* Does the City know or track how much CO2 is being produced from is fleet of vehicles? What is the Cities plan to reduce its fleet CO2 emissions? How will it be tracked?

* Does the City know how much natural gas is burned every year in the City? Does the City have a plan to reduce this? How will it be tracked?

* Does the City have a plan to increase the planting of trees to reduce urban heating effects? What are the City’s plans to reduce urban Island heating effect?

* Does the City have an idea about how much CO2 is emitted from traffic along River Road every day? Does the City have a plan to reduce CO2 from vehicle traffic in the City? How will it be tracked?

* Does the City know and track how much energy it uses in the heating and cooling of City Hall? Does the City have a plan to reduce this energy? How will this be tracked?

The list of advantages to the City and its citizens for reducing energy use and CO2 is long. This includes reduced transportation operating expenses for the City, reduced City building energy use, improved City policing, and a more livable city perhaps through an expanded tree canopy.

To fully explore how the City can take advantages of these opportunities, I will be recommending the formation of a Sustainability Committee. The Committee should be tasked with recommending how to capture data for these emissions sources and energy usage — and how to reduce them.

These actions taken together should reduce operating costs to the City while creating a more livable City.

Over the coming months I will be working with each of you; council members, city staff, community schools, and businesses to formulate a draft charter for this vital Committee. The charter will then be presented to the Council for consideration and adoption.

This is some of the most important work we can do as stewards of our community, and our children’s future. Moreover, this will improve the desirability and livability of the City of Keizer.

There is a page, Keizer Sustainability. The page, Keizer Sustainability will be a hub for activities leading to the charter presentation to the Council. I invite each of you in this room, and those watching in KeizerTV to join join in this initiative as we create a more livable, vibrant, and sustainable community. Together.

I’m pleased to take your questions.

07/20/2020

Our goal is to draft and submit to the City Council a resolution creating a Sustainability Committee.

Be looking for announcements soon for coming organizational meetings.

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