This week, the EPA released its Sustainable Design and Green Building Toolkit for Local Governments. The Toolkit
The Toolkit is designed to assist local governments in identifying and removing permitting barriers to sustainable design and green building practices. It provides a resource for communities interested in conducting their own internal evaluation of how local codes/ordinances either facilitate or impede a sustainable built environment, including the design, construction, renovation, and operation and maintenance of a building and its immediate site.
The toolkit can be downloaded here.
The Toolkit was developed by EPA Region 4, and we are very excited to have Karen Bandhauer, an Environmental Scientist at EPA Region 4 for an interview about the Toolkit on August 4.
Yesterday, the Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School issued for comment a draft model municipal green building ordinance. The Model Ordinance is available for download here. According to the Center for Climate Change Law:
Unlike other model ordinances that detail technical specifications, this ordinance presents a framework for the implementation of existing technical standards and a streamlined procedure for their compliance and enforcement. The model ordinance accommodates the rapidly developing field of substantive green building standards by allowing for the adoption of new standards within the ordinance’s framework.
Notably the Model Ordinance attempts to deal with the issues related to preemption, non-delegation, and antitrust, and a separate analysis document is available on the site as well.
I look forward to working through these documents and commenting on them further, and looking forward to hearing your thoughts on these resources.
1 comment
The words “Climate change” are way overused to the point of being toxic; can’t you just call these things good environmental practices instead? There are many of us who think climate change is stupid but still support sound environmental improvements.
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