Planning Healthy and Child-Friendly Communities Conference Report available online
The Conference Report from the 48th IMCL Conference on Planning Healthy and Child-Friendly Communities in Charleston, SC is now available free online to review or download. The conference was outstanding, an unprecedented gathering of leaders and experts renowned for their breadth of vision, depth of experience, insightful strategies, tools, and wisdom.
For the first time, we are making audio and transcripts of keynote speeches, slides, and papers available online as an eConference. Now, you may register for the conference and listen to, and review or download all the presentations. Access is available until May 1st by creating an account at http://www.livablecities.org/user/register. Keynote speeches and papers have also been published in the form of eight new Documentation Sets on specific themes. Your city, firm, or university will find these invaluable resources.
The IMCL work of making our cities healthy and child-friendly continues. In the near future, we shall announce a Call for Papers and Invitation to Exhibit for the 49th IMCL Conference to take place in Portland, OR, May 2012. If you have subscribed to the IMCL Newsletter (see below), you will receive the first announcement.
The fight over development and sustainability continued last night and it serves as a wake up call to sustainability advocates across the globe. The City of Berkeley, California (USA) decided not to study an option to build bus rapid transit that would run from Oakland through the city and connect to BART in it’s downtown. The City Council voted to reject a BRT project with 4 yeas, 2 against, 2 abstentions, and 1 absent member. [Video of the meeting is available at: http://berkeley.granicus.com/MediaPlayer.php?publish_id=664]
The project was one of the Obama Administration’s top priorities yet in the Berkeley political process it fell flat. While testimony on the topic was split evenly among supporters and the opposition, it was clearly one divided along generational lines with younger citizens in favor and older opposed. It was also and heavily influenced by local neighbors fearful of the transit project.
One main opponent of the plan was Councilman Kriss Worthington who fed fears about loss of local bus service and loss of local business. Many street vendors attested that their business would be threatened despite the fact that the pedestrian space available to them would increase significantly under the project. Paradoxically a UC Berkeley sustainable design professor and neighborhood resident (Matt Kondolf; a hydrologist by expertise), spoke out against the project because he did not believe data in studies indicating that the project was sustainable and would produce greenhouse gas reductions. This was in direct position to support from environmental advocacy groups such as Sierra Club, TransForm, Livable Berkeley, Bicycle Friendly Berkeley, and Friends of BRT.
This combination of unfortunate events leads us here at Livagreen.com, not only to question the primacy of Berkeley as one of the leading environmental communities in the US, but to think about the condition of the environmental movement in general. In a time were ‘paradigm shift’ is a key buzz word to address climate change, how do we balance the perspective of old environmentalism (small, quaint and green) against new environmentalism (livable, dense and urban)? Can we support no-growth and smart growth at the same time? How can we as a community invest in transit when environmentally conscious Prius drivers won’t support local projects? Environmental planning has become fractured along these lines – something that compromises the entire movement.
A July 2009 article in the East Bay Express began,
Berkeley (CA) has been a national leader in the fight against global warming. Last fall, the city launched its innovative, municipally financed solar-power program. And in early June, the city council adopted an aggressive Climate Action Plan that seeks to greatly lower Berkeley’s greenhouse gas emissions. And yet the current fight over a proposal that would help curtail suburban sprawl by allowing dense development in downtown has been fierce…
Dense development in Berkeley did fail, and this alludes to the problem in Berkeley and elsewhere around the country. The problem is that many of us practice hypocritical sustainability. We will vote one way and act another. We ask our leaders for change and then complain about it when it occurs. We are content with change as long as it doesn’t impact us. We practice NIMBYism under the guise of idealism.
For Berkeley, a city that has had such a shining track record of environmental achievement and positive activism in the past, it is unfortunate that they have become the example of what not to do; a circus of bad environmental policy. For the rest of us — it is a wake up call. We cannot afford to be complacent in our personal lives. Change, and ultimately pain, must be dealt with if we are to seriously address climate change. We cannot continue to live lives of environmental hypocrisy.
Here at Livagreen we’re perplexed what to do about electric bikes. Some recent articles are talking about them as the climate answer, but what do they really mean to reducing GHGs; enhancing communities; public safety. Jonathan Weinert from UC Davis ofifers a good summary of them n the YouTube below; the perspective of transport mobility and influence on China’s sustainable development.
While there is no disagreement with the intent there seems to be something lost in the pureness of the ethos — the value added as a community asset. What is there place in hierarchy of vehicular routes? How do they contribute to the urban experience? Are they any different that scooters or motorcycles? How should policy deal with them, especially places where traditionally bikes and pedestrians have to share common paths and routes? We invite your comment and input on this topic, and hope that we can publish some of your best brightest ideas.

