Prior to completing this survey, were you already aware that:
City Council adopted renewable electricity and greenhouse gas emissions goals? - Yes
The City of Durango has a Sustainability program? - Yes
How concerned are you about the following within our Durango community? (1=not concerned at all, 5=very concerned)
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions - 5
Preparing for climate change impacts - 5
Reducing Durango's reliance on fossil fuels - 5
How concerned are you about the following within our Durango community?
(1 = not concerned at all, 5 = very concerned)
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions - 5
Preparing for climate change impacts - 5
Reducing reliance on fossil fuels - 5
How concerned are you about climate change impacts affecting the following:
(1 = not concerned at all, 5 = very concerned)
Economic vitality - 5
Public health - 5
Social equity - 5
Environmental/ecological health - 5
Other - elaborate below - 5
If you chose other, please elaborate.
Growth is going to exacerbate this. We have no growth management plan. We have new water from Nighthorse, but resources usually limit population growth, but not for humans? Water availability should be limiting our growth. Our roads cannot handle the projected growth. What are the city’s plans around these highly related topics. You must take growth into consideration in working to meet these other goals.
Based on your amount of concern for the above items, do you think the City Council’s 2019 sustainability goals are not stringent enough, about right or too stringent?
An 80% reduction in community-wide and municipal greenhouse gas emissions from 2016 levels by 2050, with an interim goal of a 30% reduction by 2030 - About right
100% renewable electricity by 2050, with an interim goal of 50% renewable electricity by 2030 - About right
Please elaborate.
You need to define where these reductions are planned - only city owned buildings? All of Durango residents? Energy reduction is easier working with LPEA because we’re all on the same utility, but GHG emissions and individual households and businesses not as easy. Transportation being the biggest factor. More people, more cars! Does the multimodal plan tie into the goals?
The Sustainability Plan Working Group holds equity as a core value of the plan process. What is your understanding of how Climate Change/Sustainability Planning and equity intersect?
These goals and plans to meet them affect people differently and should be equitable in their ask and impact.
Are there any sectors or subsectors missing from this list that you think should be included in Durango’s Sustainability Plan?
Air and water quality as they relate to the air we breathe and methane pollution, and the quality of our local waterways. We must keep the Animas River, Nighthorse and other waterways swimmable and fishable. I do not have a sense this is being monitored. The water quality in the Animas has deteriorated considerably. SJBPH is overwhelmed by COVID and I do not believe these two issues are high on their list now or ever have been.
Are there any sectors or subsectors on this list you don’t think need to be addressed in Durango’s Sustainability Plan?
No response.
Is there anything else that you would like to add?
No response.
Virtual City Hall is not a certified voting system or ballot box. As with any public comment process, participation in Virtual City Hall is voluntary. The responses in this record are not necessarily representative of the whole population, nor do they reflect the opinions of any government agency or elected officials.
Prior to completing this survey, were you already aware that:
How concerned are you about the following within our Durango community? (1=not concerned at all, 5=very concerned)
How concerned are you about the following within our Durango community? (1 = not concerned at all, 5 = very concerned)
How concerned are you about climate change impacts affecting the following: (1 = not concerned at all, 5 = very concerned)
If you chose other, please elaborate.
Growth is going to exacerbate this. We have no growth management plan. We have new water from Nighthorse, but resources usually limit population growth, but not for humans? Water availability should be limiting our growth. Our roads cannot handle the projected growth. What are the city’s plans around these highly related topics. You must take growth into consideration in working to meet these other goals.Based on your amount of concern for the above items, do you think the City Council’s 2019 sustainability goals are not stringent enough, about right or too stringent?
Please elaborate.
You need to define where these reductions are planned - only city owned buildings? All of Durango residents? Energy reduction is easier working with LPEA because we’re all on the same utility, but GHG emissions and individual households and businesses not as easy. Transportation being the biggest factor. More people, more cars! Does the multimodal plan tie into the goals?The Sustainability Plan Working Group holds equity as a core value of the plan process. What is your understanding of how Climate Change/Sustainability Planning and equity intersect?
These goals and plans to meet them affect people differently and should be equitable in their ask and impact.Are there any sectors or subsectors missing from this list that you think should be included in Durango’s Sustainability Plan?
Air and water quality as they relate to the air we breathe and methane pollution, and the quality of our local waterways. We must keep the Animas River, Nighthorse and other waterways swimmable and fishable. I do not have a sense this is being monitored. The water quality in the Animas has deteriorated considerably. SJBPH is overwhelmed by COVID and I do not believe these two issues are high on their list now or ever have been.Are there any sectors or subsectors on this list you don’t think need to be addressed in Durango’s Sustainability Plan?
No response.Is there anything else that you would like to add?
No response.