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Sustainable Peterborough: A Case Study. Ontario East Municipal Conference September 16, 2009. History/Current Practices. 1989 - Mayor holds Roundtable on Environment 1991 - Task Force on Sustainable Development, 300 community representatives and members of public participate.
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Sustainable Peterborough: A Case Study Ontario East Municipal Conference September 16, 2009
History/Current Practices • 1989 - Mayor holds Roundtable on Environment • 1991 - Task Force on Sustainable Development, 300 community representatives and membersof public participate
How did things change? • early adoption: extensive recycling programs, lawn watering regulations • low-flow toilet replacement program in mid-’90’s • energy and water efficiency retrofits in a number of City-owned buildings • conversion of RR lines to trails • attention to expanding greenspace
Peterborough Green-Up • Energy – home audits, green solar audit, CFL replacement program, low-income programs • Water – Children’s Water Festival, Well Aware, water efficiency hardware/rain barrels, special projects • Air Quality/Transportation – Active and Safe Routes to School, On-the-Bus workshops, Workplace Challenge, anti-idling education • Landscape - Ecology Park, pesticide education campaign, Green Garden Visit service, Urban Forest program • Waste Reduction – Quest for Less School program, Lug-A-Mug, vermicomposting workshops • Sustainable Business program/Faith and Common Good
Peterborough Green-Up results • 2008 - over 15 000 youth and 9 000 adults participants • over 4 500 energy audits, ~ $2.7 in economic activity & ~$600 000 in grants 2008 • over 500 Well Aware visits • 2009 - 24 000 vehicle trips & 18 Tonnes CO2 in annual Workplace Challenge • 2008 - waste audits in 18 schools with 900 students participating, ~7500 students in Quest for Less • over 170 businesses undertaking energy efficiency measures • currently 80 volunteers inventorying urban trees • over 12,000 students participated in water festival
Has it had an influence? • Region gained reputation as being green • Strong partnerships within community • High level of participation by residents, businesses and organizations • City named 5th best community in Canada for walking