
About two years ago I was asked by my local city councilman Larry Wahl to serve on the city of Chico “sustainability task force”. I was initially enthusiastic, but the talk soon turned away from alternative energy solutions that I embrace, to getting a city wide inventory of carbon emissions. The task force, chaired by Vice Mayor Ann Schwab didn’t seem the least bit interested in solutions, but focused on tallying carbon emissions in town. That effort didn’t make a lot of sense to me then, since it gained the city nothing.
Now I know why, it was a prelude to taxation followed by wanton spending. They had to inventory to know how to tax. The “greenhouse gas” report they issued on September 2nd of this year had a number of oddball fees, taxes, giveaways, and edicts, such as a city wide gasoline tax, and even free electricity handouts to city employees for sustainable commuting. All of this while we are in an economic downturn and city financial crisis. This is why I can no longer support Ann Schwab, even though I worked with her.
There is a backstory to my involvement with this, but first things first, here is a copy of the sustainability task force “work plan” from September 2nd.
Link: cic-sustainability-090208
The local newspaper also did a story on the preliminary report, but not on the work plan from the link above.
Most important to note is that while my name is on this report, I had no hand in it whatsoever, as I was unceremoniously booted off the task force on December 20th, 2007 by vice mayor Schwab who sent me a letter advising of my termination. The reason? Attendance. But this goes to show how messed up things are with this task force, as they could not even get my termination straight and had me listed as a member 9 months afterwards.
For the record, there is little in this report I agree with and my name should not be on it. Two weeks ago I sent an email to Vice Mayor Schwab and the City Clerk Debbie Presson asking that my name be removed. No response.
When I was on the task force I had the distinction of being one of the few people that actually walked the talk, as I had put solar on my home and a local school, plus I drive an electric car (though I’ve since upgraded to a newer model electric).
No matter, I wasn’t well liked because I really didn’t want to play the carbon emissions tally game, preferring solutions instead. So I’m not surprised that Schwab booted me off when she had the chance.
The task force was made up of a few people like myself, that ran businesses in town, but the vast majority were city employees, university employees, and other publicly paid people. The meetings were on Mondays in the middle of the afternoon. People like me that run businesses found it hard to attend, because with us lost time at work means lost revenue, City and university employees don’t have those problems. Prior to my dismissal, another local businessman, Lon Glazner, voluntarily left because he had the same issues.
OK, enough about why my name is on the report, and why it tends to be public employee centric rather than more representative of our community makeup.
First there is the cost: $30,000 which went to a university employee (already on the public payroll) to produce this report. Another consultant fee in the same cozy city-university sustainability circle of friends. They did no outside bid advertisements that I’m aware of, they just picked the university “sustainability guru” to do the job.
Let’s look at some of the suggested “community reduction” actions in this report presented by Schwab and her task force:
- A suggestion to pay city employees to give up their parking spot.
- Require energy audits on residential units at the time of sale.
- Increased fees on waste disposal.
- A local gasoline tax to generate local revenue.
- Forcing a lights out policy on local businesses after hours
- Free electricity and free parking for city employees that drive electric vehicles
- Free or reduced cost electricity and parking for citizens that drive electric vehicles
You can find these items in Appendix C of the report, near the end under “Community Reduction Measures” which are designed to meet a carbon emissions target.
Here’s an interesting graph from the consultant’s report:

I don’t know about you, but spending 30 grand for information telling us that cars are the biggest source of CO2 in or city of Chico?. Shocker. No worries, we’ll attack that problem. On page 39 of the September 2 Greenhouse Gas Report there is this gem: “By implementing a local gas tax, the City could generate revenue to put toward sustainability projects”.
Yep, tax and spend. Darn those evil cars driven by irresponsible citizens.
The task force also favors doling out taxpayer money for “sustainability”, page 42: “For employees who own electric vehicles, the City could provide prime parking locations that offer free electric filling stations.” and for the public, page 39: “Electric fueling station-provide free or low-cost electric fueling stations for EVs.”
I drive an electric car. I’d gladly pay $1-3 per hour for park n’ charge. Vice mayor Schwab not only misses this dirt simple revenue opportunity, she wants to give away free electricity during a city budget crisis.
Just yesterday the state of California announced it was already 10 billion in the hole this year, and our county government announced it was 10 million in the red. Chico’s own sales tax revenue has been falling, and the city budget has been in the red for at least two years now, and there has been little substantial movement by city leaders to really solve the problem.
Image: The city General Fund and Parks deficit in red without transfers away from road and transportation improvements. Money from a gas tax we all pay has been transferred away from roads to cover the costs of other spending. If you wonder why bike routes are planned but not built, or why roads and traffic issues take so long to address, here is the culprit.
Source: Commision Impossible 10/22/08
For those reading that don’t live here, the business climate of our town is getting grim. Departments stores, restaurants, and other local businesses are closing almost daily due to the economic climate. The trickle down effect from state budget cuts will also affect the city’s largest state funded employers soon, such as Chico State University, and the Chico Unified School District.
So with the city budget headed for a certain train wreck, and the state economy in a shambles, I am absolutely gobsmacked that Schwab and her sustainability task force are suggesting gasoline taxes and free electricity giveaways at the same time. Then there’s the idea that businesses should be forced to turn out their lights at night. Saving energy is a fine idea, but at the expense of inviting crime into an unlit business?
This shows a level of disconnect that only a bureaucrat could muster. And, it’s why I strongly recommend that people reading this don’t vote for Schwab, but choose a city council candidate that has some business sense.
I’m all for efficiency and alternate energy ideas that are cost neutral or revenue generators, but the reality is those things aren’t being considered.
Public giveaways, new taxes, and visions of a sustainable future won’t solve the budget problems, sensible management combined with spending cuts and plans that will enhance the local business environment will.
Pierre (08:54:26) There is audio of Obama last January promising to bankrupt the coal industry. This will impact Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia, New Mexico, Colorado, Arizona and others. This is the October Surprise, I think.
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The first to bite the dust!
I’m continously amazed that in many areas people fight to get legislation passed for tax breaks involving alternative energy products.
Hey…I just built a car. It gets 100mpg, so if you drive it 15,000 miles a year, your gasoline costs will drop by %75 to $xxx. BUT…I can’t really SELL any, unless the government kicks in some good ol’ tax credit incentives.
Look at Prius sales when the vehicles hit the market. There was a 6mo wait at some dealers in my state…and you basically had little/no choice of colors etc., because they were in such high demand. So exactly why did we need a tax incentive for hybrid vehicles?
I’m not sayin’…I’m just sayin.
My God and my religion will have a surprise for the Greenies. Just imagine our hubris thinking we can control our climate when nature is the actual primary force. I’m rooting for a Dalton Minimum to freeze the Greenies asses.
Mark
Just a clarification please. Are you saying that both you and government employees were working on their own time and not paid status during meetings and other activities?
I know! I know!
Have T. Boone Pickens build you a Football Stadium.
Oh, . . .wait
Got a question.How’s Aero Union doing in all of this? Will they leave Chico for greener,er less green pasutres? They are one of the premier Airtanker outfits but the nature of putting out fires requires CO2 expenditure.Does that count for carbon sequestration?
“Fallen Angels” is real….
As a Chico native now living on Catalina Island, I would move back to Chico just to vote for you for mayor, Anthony.
Or maybe I can just stay on Catalina and get ACORN to register me as a Chico resident…
JimB (08:24:27) It’s gone viral. Instapundit has it. Lucianne. Wizbang.
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Mark (08:21:54) :
Are you impugning bumpkins? My wife and are building a yurt in Orange, NH (snow god, please hold off for another week or two). While it will have a propane range and refrigerator, we expect to use LED lighting from solar charged batteries. Wood stove for heat, of course.
Yesterday, one of the owners of http://nerenewables.com/ in town dropped by. Her house is off-grid, in part because it would cost $18K to stretch the grid there.
A couple weeks ago a hunter killed a 1100 lb moose on the property. We know there’s a bigger one around, and my critter cam snapped a smaller moose three days later. Sustainable and tasty.
One “unfair” advantage of small town America is that residents have a number of means for taking sustainability into their own hands and don’t have to rely on concepts like “Requir[ing] energy audits on residential units at the time of sale.”
Instead of criticizing Anthony and the bumpkins who post here, I would have received your post better had you listed the actions Chico has taken to improve sustainability and increase conservation, e.g. some of the actions taken (and abandoned?) by your WPCP. While I appreciate the value in studying a problem before acting, you concentrated on recommendations that lead to a post like this and blindly accept that CO2 is the problem. It seems Anthony is several steps ahead of your committee.
And another thing – I told the NH Governor’s Climate Change Task Force that conservation and CO2 reduction should be separate tasks. When the world finally figures out that CO2 is not the main driver behind global warming, committees like yours will be scrambling to remain relevant. May I suggest your focus change to conservation and cost reduction?
Leon Brozyna (22:12:56) :
“Where are Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Ben Franklin, James Madison et al when we need them?”
That is not a proper question, because the dead only vote in Chicago. The Founding Fathers did not ask “where are…?”, they acted and created the governmental framework under which you currently reside. As long as you passively submit, you will be guided through life by those who are more qualified to plan your life. The fourth of November may be a day you will not forget. Let us hope that it will not be a day you will always regret.
Pierre Gosselin (08:54:26) :
Here’s a simple, and perhaps laughably minor one until you look at it a bit closer. As traffic light’s lamps burn out, the bulbs are usually being replaced wity LEDs. Not only does this save electricity (something like 40W per bulb, sorry, I don’t have the number), it reduces service costs because the LEDs last longer.
The Chico inventory report .pdf (page 35) says Chico spends $50K per year on traffic lights.
The street lighting changes in America from gas to incandescent to mercury vapor to sodium all are impressive steps in increasing efficiency, but have usually come with vastly increased use that have wiped out any savings. I’d like to see a combination of motion sensor activation and halogen lighting in low traffic areas. I suspect that would make criminals so self-concious that they’d hightail it for the always on Sodium lit areas.
Kim,
Thanks for the kind words, and I wish you were right.
But I’m not looking forward to Wednesday. morning. It’s gonna be tough.
But that will be nothing compared to how millions are going to feel when their taxes and costs go up, and their jobs disappear in the coming months and years. Then we, and Prof. Mark, are going to witness what real FRUSTRATION is.
Smokey (03:10:16) :
‘I read the [long, newspeak] PDF on sustainability. Funny, I couldn’t find a definition of “sustainability” anywhere. ‘Sustainability’ sure is a feel good word though, isn’t it? Makes you think something is being done.’
In governmental terms, “sustainability” identifies the process of providing nourishment to government through taxation. It also identifies the “sustainability” of the tax-payer to hold up under the onerous taxes required by government.
You have in Chico a small example of what Gore and crew want to bring to the entire U.S. Since they know all the answers, the debate is over, the science is settled. We should just pay a lot more taxes (patriotic, you know) and have a lot less to show for it.
It may be inevitable. If Obama wins, it will happen sooner.
JimB (08:24:27) :
Link
http://www.smalldeadanimals.com/archives/009937.html#comments
Bumper Stick seen in Texas….
“I’ll keep my Bible, Guns, & Taxes…You keep your change”….
When government mandates ‘change or else’, they cause the people to rise up and overthrow them.
You think it’s bad in Chico, here in Roseville, CA, we have gone beyond the planning stage for “green” taxation. On our monthly electric/utility bill, there is a charge for “Climate Change Mitigation.” I haven’t yet found a person on the city staff that knows what that money is paying for. However, I’m going to suggest that they change the wording to “Climate Chaos Mitigation,” because they are in danger of looking passé. At least, however, they’ve progressed from “Global Warming Mitigation.” 😉
MikeEE
REPLY: When it gets its charge from solar it is. – Anthony
Does your solar farm operate in the “Midnight Sun?” When you get free electricity for your EV, it is free for you but paid for by the city through taxes in the non-discriminatory everyone pays tax schemes. Sounds a little like a spread the wealth program.
[…] http://wattsupwiththat.com/2008/11/01/sustainability-runs-amok-in-my-hometown-of-chico/ […]
Bill Illis (07:04:25) :
“We can tax cars, encourage shared commuting plans, use more public transit but it won’t make even a small dent in CO2 emissions. Passenger cars are not the problem.”
Cut to the chase Bill. Man-made CO2 emissions, are not now and never have had a negative influence on Nature. To tax carbon is to tax life.
Anything that is a green issue leads inevitably to higher taxes.
I can’t see anything good in the next few years… Not for small business people.
The first thing a community should do, probably, is look at “solid waste.” Invite a company like Bluefire to take a look at how much they can save you/make for you by converting your Solid Waste into Ethanol.
Next, I would look at my Sewage Plant. How much could I Save/Make by running my sewage through an anaerobic digester, and producing electricity from the resulting biogas. These are both “Green” programs that are being implemented by California cities, as we speak.
You might want to look at a program at the high school to produce biodiesel from yellow grease for the school system buses.
OR, you could just keep sucking at the taxpayers’ teat, and conducting “audits.”
Mark:
Given:
1. That the failed hypothesis that CO2 [“carbon”] can ever cause runaway global warming has been repeatedly falsified, and given
2. That petroleum reserves equal to all of Saudi Arabia’s reserves have recently been discovered in the Dakotas, and given
3. That the Earth’s current climate is well within normal parameters, and is in no way out of the ordinary, then…
How can you possibly justify spending public funds on a proven non-problem??
Our growing economy is completely sustainable; however, your committee’s duplicitous shenanigans place barriers in the way of true sustainability — and deliberately lower the quality of life for your city’s residents.
I look forward to whatever explanation you are able to provide regarding your city’s mendacious “sustainability” claim.
Smokey, Saudi Arabia Flows over 9 Million Barrels of Oil/Day. I’m not aware of Any expert organization (EIA, USGS, etc.) that figures the Bakken will ever flow over 2 mbpd. It’s just too many very small pockets of oil, spread out over too large an area. It’ll come in handy, but it doesn’t seem likely that it’s going to salvage BAU once global production goes into serious decline.