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Sustainability - Mayor's
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Sustainability - Mayor's
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program items to enhance the "sustainability outcomes" of broader policy initiatives. <br /> With this view, the City has concentrated its work to date in two primary areas: green building <br /> education and information and completion of a downtown housing market analysis. Green building <br /> initiatives, which are addressed later in this memo, were supported in part with sustainable economic <br /> development funding. A downtown housing market analysis was completed by EcoNorthwest and <br /> presented to the Planning Commission during the commission's deliberations on the downtown plan <br /> update. This study contributed to the commission's policy recommendations as well as the City's efforts <br /> to support residential infill, nodal development and growth management. <br /> City staff also works with local groups to support and promote green building education and practices <br /> in the community. In spring 2003, the Planning & Development Department sponsored public <br /> presentations on green building technologies and code issues by David Eisenberg, director of the <br /> Development Center for Appropriate Technology (DCAT), Tucson, Arizona; sustainable development <br /> basics by Dennis Wilde, senior project manager with Gerding/Edlen Development, Portland; and green <br /> building product information for suppliers and builders. Co- sponsors for these sessions included the <br /> Lane County Home Builders Association, University of Oregon Program in Watershed & Community <br /> Health, City of Springfield, Northwest EcoBuilding Guild and Eugene Area Chamber of Commerce. <br /> In spring 2004, the City of Eugene sponsored public presentations on sustainable community <br /> development with architects Eric Ridenour and Ronald Kellett. Ridenour is an architect, urban designer <br /> and LEED- accredited professional at Fletcher Farr Ayotte in Portland, and chairs the Portland Branch <br /> of the Cascadia Region Green Building Council. Ronald Kellett, formerly of Eugene, was an <br /> architecture professor at the University of Oregon and is a registered architect in British Columbia. In <br /> his book, "Patterns of Open Space, Patterns of Growth: Negotiating Environment in Urban <br /> Development," Kellett scans concepts and current practices related to "greening" the patterns of urban <br /> development, illustrated with examples from recent and emerging models in the United States and <br /> Canada. <br /> Planning and Development staff is preparing a request- for - proposals (RFP) for designers, builders and <br /> developers to partner with the City in a development project demonstrating aspects of environmentally <br /> sensitive site design and green building technologies. The City's money match will include dollars <br /> remaining from a City Council allocation for sustainable economic development. If the project goes <br /> forward, the City would provide no -cost technical and process consulting, as well as expedited permitting. <br /> Staff also is forming an informal advisory group of community members to help guide green building <br /> i itiatives. <br /> Wetlands Mitigation Bank - The West Eugene Wetlands Mitigation Bank provides a significant <br /> benefit for businesses and other development projects by assisting with the regulatory requirement to <br /> mitigate for impacts to wetlands. The "bank" sells credits to developers that allow them to proceed with <br /> their development without conducting their own on -site mitigation. The environment benefits from this <br /> approach since the bank carries out large -scale restoration with extremely high ecological standards. <br /> The West Eugene Wetlands mitigation bank is considered a model for other communities for its <br /> innovative and high quality management of the regulatory process. <br /> Purchasing - In a specific City activity, we will be reviewing our purchasing procedures, especially <br /> around some of the larger commodity purchases to see if we can make improvements within Oregon <br /> purchasing laws in both the ability to buy locally and for increasing the sustainability criteria used (e.g. <br /> recycled content in paper). <br />
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