C3’s Recommendations for Charlottesville’s Climate Action Plan

 
 

Charlottesville’s Climate Action Planning Process is underway. Make your voice heard! Join us in asking the City of Charlottesville to adopt the recommendations below into the Climate Action Plan.

Updated 10.18.22

Dear City Council, Deputy City Managers Sam Sanders and Ashley Marshall, Interim City Manager Michael Rogers, and City staff Kristel Riddervold, Susan Elliott, and Emily Irvine – 

Thank you for your invaluable work on Charlottesville’s Climate Action Plan (CAP) draft. The draft CAP gives us a framework to shift away from fossil-fuel dependency, use climate action to promote social justice, and address the climate crisis here in Charlottesville.

 
 

While we are excited by the CAP draft that has been released, there are two motivations for us to send a letter recommending further action on the CAP before it is finalized: 

  • As we celebrate the recent release of Charlottesville’s CAP draft, there are relevant and substantial commitments established in the CAP that should be highlighted. Among them:

    Reach 100% carbon-neutral electricity in City-owned buildings & facilities by 2030;

    Reduce energy consumption by 10% across [community] all buildings by 2030;

    Aim for 10% of Charlottesville's rooftop solar potential to be installed by 2030.

    These commitments are evidence of successful negotiations between the City’s Climate team and other City departments. However, it’s also important to observe that the Charlottesville CAP draft includes recommendations that are not relevant, which suggests that more and better coordination is still needed. For example, the CAP draft includes the following natural gas and public-transit recommendations that are redundant in practice:

    “Consider a commitment to make Charlottesville Gas fully carbon neutral (...) by 2050;”

    "Initiate a Transit Pathways to Carbon Neutrality by 2050 Assessment."

    These recommendations are redundant (and lack ambition) because: both the City of Charlottesville and Albemarle County — the region served by Charlottesville Gas and Charlottesville Area Transit (CAT) — have already committed to community-wide carbon neutrality by 2050, which implies that both Charlottesville Gas and CAT’s operations will have to be carbon-neutral by then.

    Other goals that lack clear direction and accountability should be reconsidered. When it comes to implementation, we are concerned that these recommendations will be easy to deprioritize in a crowded policy space. Even though we are certain that the current City staff is committed to advancing climate-friendly policies, the CAP recommendations should be clear enough to remain equally meaningful and relevant to whoever reads them.

    To address the above-mentioned concerns, we recommend that the CAP offer clear guidance regarding by which means and at what pace sectors and/or agencies should decarbonize their operations. For example, the CAP should set a series of goals of the type “Sector A should reduce GHG emissions by X% by 20YY”. Moreover, for each goal, the CAP should also suggest quantifiable metrics for tracking progress and practical strategies for achieving them.

    Conclusion: The CAP should establish more SMARTIE (Strategic, Measurable, Ambitious, Realistic, Time-bound, Inclusive, and Equitable) goals in all areas (“key actions”) of the CAP.

  • In addition to the well-outlined equity concern section of each topic, all sections of the CAP should provide actionable recommendations with more clear guidance as to:

    How the City will create mechanisms for equitable/inclusive community engagement (both in providing feedback for program design and also as beneficiaries of program implementation);

    How it will promote a just transition to a carbon-neutral economy.

Final Recommendations to Charlottesville’s Climate Action Plan: 

After considering the existing CAP draft “key actions”, we present the below list of recommendations that we hope the City can incorporate into the final CAP document. The recommendations are divided into the following five sections:

  1. Climate Justice Through Energy Equity;

  2. Equitable Decarbonization of Charlottesville Gas (at a Pace Aligned with the Climate Crisis);

  3. “Accessible, Clean Transit - ACT on Climate!”;

  4. Boosting Climate Solutions Through Food Justice; and

  5. Climate-Smart and Equitable Zoning.

 

Climate Justice Through Energy Equity

In Charlottesville, the biggest concentration of highly energy-burdened households (families paying more than 6% of their income in energy bills) occurs in the 10th & Page and Venable neighborhoods and among lower-income households, people of color, and renters. Energy equity demands that we address the energy needs of the most burdened households first, both to reduce their energy costs and mitigate their health hazards, but also to reduce GHG emissions more effectively.

We propose the following clean energy and energy efficiency recommendations:

 
    1. Address barriers to access of retrofits, weatherization, and home repairs;

    2. Address barriers to low- to moderate-income solar installation in Charlottesville;

    3. Increase energy efficiency, onsite renewable energy, and use of passive energy reduction strategies such as tree shade and water collection;

    4. Consider tree canopy additions/incentives in lower-income neighborhoods;

    5. Encourage healthy and increased tree canopy and urban agriculture on public and subsidized housing sites and incentivize/require care for and replacement of existing and deceased trees;

    6. Review housing rules that limit gardens and growing space for public housing residents;

    7. Establish a tenant energy efficiency program offering energy assessments, upgrades, gas-to-electric conversions, and weatherization.

    1. Deploy energy efficiency improvements coupled with renewable energy solutions;

    2. Pilot a program in targeted neighborhoods to weatherize, electrify, and add renewable energy home-by-home where the energy savings are split between the household and the City to create a continually funded program.

Decarbonize

 

Equitable Decarbonization of Charlottesville Gas (at a Pace Aligned with the Climate Crisis)

In recent years, Charlottesville’s greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from buildings have decreased steadily, consistent with community-wide GHG reduction. However, natural gas GHG emissions are rising. As of 2019, GHG emissions from the community’s natural gas use accounted for 19% of the city’s GHG emissions, up from 16% in 2016. Charlottesville’s ownership of its natural-gas utility provides the City with unique tools and pathways toward meeting its climate goals.

We urge the City to consider the recommendations below to center equity in the transition away from natural gas: 

 
    1. Conduct periodic meetings, focus groups, surveys, and public presentations/updates with comment opportunities;

    2. Meet residents where they are comfortable (such as at concerts and community events);

    3. Equitably compensate community input to favor diverse and inclusive participation;

    4. Seek input and feedback from environmental and climate justice community experts;

    5. Create a community committee consisting of ratepayers, lower-income residents, and renters.

    1. Choose options that avoid placing an unjust burden on low- to moderate-income community members who cannot easily afford fuel switching;

    2. Promote climate justice in the “City as a Municipal Gas Utility,” “Buildings and Energy,” and “Financing and Funding” sections of the CAP;

    3. Identify and prioritize effective implementation methods for residential electrification;

    4. Develop educational materials and outreach strategies to better inform community members of energy education and services available to them;

    5. Consider potential pathways for workforce transition to other living wage jobs.

    6. Publish regular reports that study the distribution, duration, and intensity of natural gas leaks throughout our community. Assess if the incidence of leaks, health, and safety hazards, and risks are higher in historically-underserved communities.

    1. Pause all new hookups/installations at new service locations;

    2. Pause all non-residential new hookups/installations;

    3. Pause all non-essential infrastructure projects;

    4. Remove cost-free installation of new residential gas lines.

    1. Focus on alleviating energy costs of highly energy-burdened households;

    2. End rebates for utility consumer purchases of tankless water heaters;

    3. Extend other energy-efficiency rebates to all City residents (not limiting them to Charlottesville Gas customers).

 

“Accessible, Clean Transit - ACT on Climate!”

We urge the City to take advantage of this unique opportunity to address our transportation, climate, equity, and health goals simultaneously and with long-standing solutions that will move our City toward a cleaner and more just future. make all the difference.

 
    1. Set a verifiable target to increase bus occupancy levels considerably;

    2. Favor expansions and improvements that benefit those that most rely on transit;

    3. Have no route frequencies in excess of 30 minutes intervals;

    4. Reassess rules around eating, drinking, or carrying bags and packages on board;

    5. Complement main routes with on-demand micro-mobility services.

    1. Enhance bus stops with benches, shelters, and inclusive/user-friendly signage;

    2. Provide pedestrian and bike infrastructure along and near transit routes.

    1. Decisions should be co-created with the community, especially those who depend on transit;

    2. Engagement strategies should meet people where they are and include public hearings, surveys, focus groups, and interviews.

    1. Develop a pilot program to introduce battery-electric buses to CAT’s system;

    2. Reduce air pollution and climate emissions from CAT’s fleet by 50% by 2030;

    3. Work with JAUNT to pilot electrified vehicles for their urban routes.

    1. Address bus driver shortage with better working conditions and compensation.

 

Boosting Climate Solutions Through Food Justice

Cultivate Charlottesville partnered with C3 to highlight the intersection of Climate Justice and Food Justice along with some key strategies and recommendations. We hope that with this letter, these efforts will be prioritized and included in the City’s current Climate Action Plan.

 
    1. Leverage interconnections of pedestrian, bicycle, transit, parking, commuter networks, and food pathways;

    2. Continue planning and investment in a well-connected network of trails, shared-use paths, sidewalks, bike lanes, and community gardens;

    3. Advance transportation food pathways to make food markets more accessible to residents with a specific focus on neighborhoods with limited access to healthy food options;

    4. Expand availability and access to regional trails and shared-use paths for recreation, community, and food pathways.

    1. Provide organics material collection within the City-provided comprehensive curbside services for residents, businesses, and institutions;

    2. Provide organics material collection for Municipal Facilities (government, schools, and community or school gardens);

    3. Promote diversion to glean/donation (add emphasis on areas of focus to include municipal facilities, businesses, restaurants, etc.).

    1. Integrate shade to increase the comfort of high-priority walkable, bikeable, and transit corridors with a specific focus on heat-island areas;

    2. Create a robust Urban Agriculture Management Plan with dedicated lands;

    3. Analyze land trust potentials for preserving land and community-based urban agriculture;

    4. Promote education/engagement on tree maintenance and care, selection, and placement;

    5. Promote soil amendments (biochar).

 

Climate-Smart and Equitable Zoning

In Charlottesville, transportation and residential energy use account for about 60% of the City’s greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Zoning laws encouraging mixed-use neighborhoods, transit-oriented development, and multi-family units reduce reliance on motor vehicles and increase energy efficiency. We, therefore, urge the City of Charlottesville to follow the recommendations below:

 
    1. Set targets for the pace of infill development;

    2. Encourage infill development in all districts;

    3. Work toward a 15-minute-city model;

    4. Expand proposed incentives for affordable housing.

    1. Shift away from single-occupancy car trips to more sustainable modes like walking, biking, transit, and ridesharing;

    2. Support mixed-use development;

    3. Revise the City’s 2015 Bicycle and Pedestrian Master Plan, with new time-specific implementation goals;

    4. Require that all streets integrate bicycle, pedestrian, and transit facilities as appropriate;

    5. Prioritize safe routes to food, schools, and other essential services;

    6. Improve crosswalks and remove sidewalk barriers and non-compliant crossings;

    7. Designate car-free and go-slow zones;

    8. Improve the integration of off-street trails as transportation and their connection to transit facilities;

    9. Update drainage requirements to include green, carbon-sequestering infrastructure in response to increased flooding driven by climate change.

    1. Explore allowing by-right installation and operation of net-zero enabling technologies;

    2. Utilize any municipal-owned/managed assets to generate solar energy;

    3. Eliminate parking minimums to decrease the amount of non-permeable surfaces;

    4. Increase tree cover requirements in parking lots and allow solar canopy coverage to partially (or fully substitute) them;

    5. Require protected bike storage in multifamily buildings;

    6. Implement incentives to transition high-maintenance lawns to productive urban agriculture, food forests, prairie/native grasses, and other productive landscapes;

    7. Explore exempting net zero enabling technologies, including but not limited to solar panels, insulation, and front door vestibules, from height and setback requirements;

    8. Offer expedited permitting and reduced permitting fees for net zero emissions buildings and net zero enabling technology;

    9. Establish Electric Vehicle (EV) parking guidelines that encourage charging in off-peak hours and energy buy-back in peak hours using vehicle-to-grid charging stations.

    1. Encourage biophilic building and landscape practices on onsite green infrastructure to improve livability as density increases;

    2. Remove public incentives for parking;

    3. Prioritize low-income residents’ needs in bus route planning and transit infrastructure improvements;

    4. Manage a parking supply through demand-responsive strategies, including setting a price for on-street parking, to keep spaces in circulation and enable more access to local businesses;

    5. Assure that last-mile sidewalks are in place.

    1. Allow solar installation on new and existing buildings through actions such as zoning and building reforms, financial incentives, and community education;

    2. Leverage city funds to pilot no-cost solar projects for income-qualifying residents;

    3. Explore opportunities to install solar plus battery storage systems in single-family and multi-family housing. 

Conclusion

Mitigating climate change not only calls us to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions, but it also allows us to democratize our energy and transportation systems to address the roots of climate change. 

We appreciate the opportunity to address these important issues and believe that our City has the creativity, leadership, and community resources that will allow us to address climate change urgently and equitably. C3 and our undersigned partners are here to offer support and look forward to collaborating to create the CAP that this community needs and deserves.

Sincerely,

Charlottesville area residents and non-profits for climate justice


Charlottesville City Council will also hold a public hearing and a council vote on the CAP later this year. We want to invite you to join C3 team members in speaking at the public hearing. Please reach out to us at policy@theclimatecollaborative.org if you would like to join us in speaking at the city council meeting and/or get more involved with policy advocacy at C3.