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Posts Tagged ‘Bureaucratic Delays’
The Greenest City - Maybe Not
The city counsel of Toronto wants to make it the greenest city in North America. That goal may sound good for politicians and elections but what does it really do for the environment?
First of all there is the problem of measurement. After all, how do you determine exactly how green a city is. What factors do you measure and what weight do you apply to each of these factors. Obviously calling a city “the greenest” is a very subjective matter.
Running a city is like everything else - there is a balance. If you put too much emphasis on something, you end up causing other attributes to suffer. Forcing a city to become green immediately will end up hurting the city. As can be seen in this article there is already bureaucratic push back - however I suspect that the push back has as much to do with things getting out of balance as anything else.
Sure we can push for green and we can push hard - but if the project fails, are we really any better off? Where can we start making small changes in the way things. Changes that well help the environment and make economic sense. As we implement more and more our savings will increase. We can then apply those savings to the bigger projects. In the end we won’t destroy the economy and our community will get behind us.
But that’s just my way of approaching the problem. Here’s what’s happening in Toronto…
In its annual Smog Report, the Toronto Environmental Alliance gave Miller an A-plus and the majority of council high grades for giving the green light to climate-change projects. But it found 30 per cent of those plans languish in myriad city departments.
Of course the Toronto Environmental Alliance might not like my suggestions either.
You can read the rest of the article about them and the Toronto City Council at The Toronto Star.



