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The State Allocation Board has funded 263 school construction projects with matching funds totaling $1.3 billion so far this year. The latest round of $408 million is for 78 projects and is expected to create 7,000 new jobs. Click Here |
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An updated map and searchable database from the Environmental Defense Fund contains information on over 3,500 green businesses and organizations in California. This coincides with a new report showing that nearly half a million California workers spend at least half or part of their time on green products or services. Click Here |
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When Mayor Cheryl Cox joined with the mayors of other San Diego County cities to sign onto a green schools alliance, it was the latest move in a two-decade tradition of sustainability in the city of Chula Vista. In a conversation with Green Technology magazine she shares philosophy and strategies that have made her city an inspiration to others. Click Here |
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Leadership at a local level is vital to ensuring that students are in high-performing schools that offer energy efficient, natural and healthy learning environments. A new Mayors’ Alliance for Green Schools will explore public-private partnerships to fund these schools, legislative changes to encourage sustainable building and related issues. Click Here |
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With unemployment in California holding steady at around 12 percent, the demands on community colleges to train and retrain workers is growing, and facilities are needed to accommodate an influx of students. Click Here |
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In a conversation with Green Technology magazine, Jaime Van Mourik, higher education sector manager for the U.S. Green Building Council, discusses how community colleges are planning for the future and working to make the most of existing resources. Click Here |
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At a time when economic pressures could make it tempting for California to abandon its environmental programs and regulations, thousands of people representing government and the private sector chose instead to further their commitment to sustainability by attending the fourth annual Green California Summit in March. Click Here |
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California’s green building code becomes mandatory on January 1, 2011. Green Technology and the California Building Standards Commission will be holding a series of half-day training workshops to provide an overview of the new standards starting on May 20 in Pasadena, California. Click Here |
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Soon, homes, schools and commercial buildings throughout California will be some of the greenest in the world. In January, the California Department of Housing and Community Development, in collaboration with other state agencies, drafted new building standards that will lead the nation in environmentally friendly residential green building. Click Here
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Under the state’s Public Contract Code, state government is mandated to purchase products and services that achieve a degree of sustainability whenever possible. While there is no such mandate for municipalities or local governments, many are creating their own environmentally preferred purchasing ordinances or rules, even hiring sustainability managers to oversee the process. Click here. |
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Next 10 is a leading researcher regarding the prospects for California’s green economy. Next 10 founder F. Noel Perry discusses new studies from the group that focus on green jobs, the impact of reducing carbon emissions on the economy and job growth and how the failure to develop renewable infrastructure could threaten California’s economic security. Click here. |
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A year ago, Professor David Roland-Holst of UC Berkeley, author of four Next 10 reports, discussed workforce creation, federal stimulus money and governmental policymaking with Green Technology magazine. Here is an update of that conversation. Click here. |
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CALGreen, the first green building code in the nation, has officially been adopted. In an interview with Green Technology, Dave Walls, executive director of the California Building Standards Commission (CBSC), discusses this groundbreaking work and how it will be implemented. Click here |
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At the third annual Green California Schools Summit, thousands of administrators, educators and facilities mangers gathered to share their visions for the next generation of healthy, high performance schools and the curriculum that can help students prepare for a green future. Read the story |
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As the fourth annual Green California Summit approaches, the state’s decades-long dedication to environmental preservation is emerging as one of its most important assets. From legislating greenhouse gas reductions and providing models for federal environmental programs to attracting green venture capital, California has the policy climate and economic clout to set the pace for a green economic resurgence. Click Here |
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When a large school district embarks on a recycling program, the numbers can add up fast. Millions of gallons of trash can be diverted from landfills in a single year. But when the school district’s city provides free recycling services, the benefits can accelerate dramatically. Read the story. |
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Asthma is the primary cause of hospitalization for California children under age 15 and is the leading cause of school absences due to chronic illness. California public schools lose an estimated $40.8 million from asthma absences of 12-17 year olds. Teachers and janitors also suffer high rates of work-related asthma. Schools are taking action to ensure that their facilities are healthy by adopting green cleaning policies. Read the story. |
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As city and the state deficits continue to deepen, one school district is taking actions to eliminate costs while setting an example for an entire community. The Sweetwater Union High School District, California’s second largest high school district, located in the southern region of San Diego, California, has begun work on a $644 million modernization bond program, Prop O. Read the story. |
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California’s community colleges play a central role in a movement that is redefining our economy and our culture, with a pivotal role in training workers for the green economy. At the 2009 Green California Community College Summit leaders from the system met in Pasadena to gather information and resources that could help them address the challenges they face. Read the story. |
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On the heels of a popular project to compile a directory of sustainability programs at Caifornia community colleges, the editors at Green Technology have begun to collect information about green programs at K-12 school districts in the state. To find out more, or to submit information, click here. |
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Federal funds are flowing to California’s schools, community colleges and universities, as well as to local energy efficiency programs. California school districts, colleges and universities will get an additional $1.3 billion in expedited State Fiscal Stabilization Funds that have been fast-tracked. Under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), $49.6 million will be available for local energy efficiency programs. An estimated 20,000 clean energy workers will be trained under another ARRA funding mechanism providing $75 million for the nation’s largest state-sponsored green jobs training program. Read the story |
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The green schools movement is still in its infancy, but already school districts are realizing major cost savings through energy efficiency, water conservation and other green applications. The Irvine Unified School District in Orange County, California, has taken on the challenge of renovating and building green, as well as thoroughly integrating what they are doing into their curriculum. In a short 14 months, they have come up to speed and saved hundreds of thousands of dollars on their utility bills. Read the story |
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During his 25 years as a financial advisor in private industry, 6 years in state government and raising a family in northern California, David Crane has developed a deep affinity for the quality of life here and a keen sense of what it will take to maintain the “California dream.” As special advisor to the Governor for Jobs and Economic Growth, he is focused on ensuring that California’s economy thrives. Central to that is guaranteeing the viability of the state’s system of higher education, with a special emphasis on community colleges. Read the interview |
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With the U.S. facing economic and environmental challenges, teachers are increasingly eager to find ways to give their students the keys, not only to meaningful careers, but to lives of environmental stewardship. At the first-ever Pathways to the Future Teacher Institute, held at Cosumnes River College in Sacramento, educators and curriculum specialists joined professionals in green businesses to explore how school curricula can inspire students to embrace a sustainable future and green jobs. Read the story |
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Following an extensive research process by editorial staff that involved contacting every community college campus in the state, Green Technology has launched a Directory of Sustainability Programs at California Community Colleges, the first of its kind. Read the story. |
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Nothing beats the confidence of a high school student who can look you in the eye and tell you exactly how his or her chosen career path will make this world a greener, healthier place. LAUSD’s iSEE student intern program is a response to a lack of green building skills and diversity it encountered in implementing its $20.3 billion school construction and modernization program. Read the story |
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Bill Orr has taken the reins at the Coalition for High Performance Schools with a goal of making it a national organization. His ultimate aim is to see every child in America attending a high performance school. Read the interview |
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Jerome Ringo, president of the Apollo Alliance, worked for more than 20 years in Louisiana’s petrochemical industry and saw first-hand how the production of gasoline, rocket fuel and plastics caused pollution that impacted local communities whose residents were primarily poor minorities. In an interview with Green Technology, he details his thoughts on the importance of community colleges in the emergence of the new green economy. Read the interview |
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Thanks to support from Governor Schwarzenegger and legislative and educational visionaries, electronic versions of math and science text books will be tested in middle and high school pilot programs beginning with the new school year. California is the first in the nation to pilot such an ambitious program. With school districts allocating millions for textbooks each year, the less costly and easily upgraded digital texts are gaining attention. Read the story |
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The San Francisco Unified School District (SDUSD), like the city itself, has a history of concern for the environment. By establishing the position of Director of Sustainability last year, the SFUSD took another big step forward in greening the district. Read the story. |
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The Emerald Cities Pilot Program is an innovative, public/private partnership designed to achieve California’s aggressive resource conservation and environmental goals. Read the story. |
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Concerns about energy, greenhouse gas emissions and indoor air quality are transforming the the construction industry. This special report looks at
the opportunities for better jobs and better buildings. Read the report.
Click here to read related story, Greening the Path to Apprenticeships. |
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A partnership between the Flintridge Operating Foundation and community groups in Pasadena and Altadena offers low-income, unskilled young adults an opportunity to change their lives by becoming paid apprentices and then trained journey workers in the construction trades. Read the story |
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While many industries are suffering slowdowns, the production of research reports, surveys and studies on all things green is bustling. Here is a sampling of recent reports tracking the green growth in government, employment, green technology and conservation. Read the story |
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A solar installation at El Dorado Elementary School in the Los AngelesUnified School District will allow the school to become one of the first to achieve grid-neutrality, or producing as much energy as it consumes in a year. LAUSD plans to be producing 50 megawatts of solar power by the close of the 2012 school year. Read the story |
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The U.S. House of Representatives recently passed a $6.4 billion school modernization bill, the 21st Century Green High Performing Public School Facilities Act, (H.R. 2187), that would pay for energy efficiency in new school construction and school modernization projects. The estimated state grant for California would be more than $671 million. The bill is now in a Senate committee. Read the story |
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State funding for school construction programs was frozen in December 2008, with no bonds sold. Now, as the thawing begins, the outlook for school construction funding is complicated. In a Q & A with Green Technology magazine, Coalition for Adequate School Housing (CASH) Legislative Director Tom Duffy gives an update on school construction funding in this recessionary era. Read the story |
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There are 49 local, city and county workforce investment boards operating under the California Workforce Investment Board. They are all part of a national system for workforce development funded by the U.S. Department of Labor, and many are looking into green jobs training. This article focuses on the South Bay Workforce Investment Board and its offshoot, the Green Workforce Coalition. Read the story |
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To ensure you stay informed of the latest issues surrounding school facilities funding, you should attend the C.A.S.H. Spring Conference and Pre-Conference Workshop "Coping with the Financial Crisis", May 20-22, 2009 at the Westin Gas
Lamp Quarter, 910 Broadway Circle, San Diego, California. For information and to register,
click here. |
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The California Department of Toxic Substances Control and the U.S. EPA have announced the release of about $9 million in “brownfields” restoration funding for California. Over $3 million will come from stimulus funding. Says DTSC Acting Director Maziar Movassaghi: “About 20 different cities and communities will benefit from these funds which can be used to create or safeguard green jobs.” Projects include things like revitalizing the Lion Creek Crossing Housing Development in Oakland. DTSC has pursued an active policy of having contaminated land cleaned up and returned to beneficial use by local communities. Click here to see a list of all the California projects that received funding.
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Agnews Townhomes
Under the environmental cleanup oversight of the California Department of Toxic Substances Control, development company Rivermark took the surplus state property of the former "California Hospital for the Chronic Insane" and turned it into Santa Clara's first new community of 3,000 residential units, a pedestrian center, 14-acre park, pocket parks, trails and greenbelts, and a 14-acre shopping center. Photo by Carol Northrup, courtesy DTSC.
Barbary Coast Steel
The City of Emeryville worked under the environmental cleanup oversight of the California Department of Toxic Substances Control to turn the unsightly and barren Barbary Coast Steel site into a new commercial hub featuring the area's first IKEA store. Photo courtesy DTSC. |
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Funding for California school building, charter schools, teacher retention and skills enhancement has been unplugged. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, green building codes and mandates and bond sales have opened door to a multitude of green schools programs and initiatives. Alongside these projects, curriculum and student activities based on them is flowering. Read the story |
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The Green Ambassadors program at the Environmental Charter High School in Los Angeles is an experiential learning system that empowers youth to be agents of change in their schools, communities and in the world. Green Ambassadors Founder Sara Laimon, winner of the 2008 Green Schools Leadership Award, talks about the program and her personal motivations for starting it. Read the story |
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At the Environmental Charter High School, students invent and reinvent new ways to green their school. They “educate” city councilmen about plastic waste in Santa Monica Bay by building boats out of plastic bottles and trash and taking them for rides. They are dedicated composters, gardeners and communicators. This slide show captures some of their projects and activities. See Gallery |
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Community colleges find themselves at the nexus of change. Charged with retraining workers for 21st century jobs, community colleges cope with swelling ranks of students and massive funding cutbacks. But the bond-driven building and energy retrofit projects going on at many community colleges are a win for everyone. They not only put money into the economy and support contractors, service providers and industry; they help train a new workforce and enhance and educate their communities. These state-of-the art buildings also advance the development of green products and services because they are test beds for experimental technologies. Read the story |
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Butte College aims to be carbon neutral by 2015, and the campus is already well on its way to achieving the goal. Since last year, it has launched its second phase solar project of adding four solar arrays that will bring the school to just about 50 percent solar electricity for the main campus. Three of the arrays are complete, already making Butte the largest solar campus in the state. The fourth array will be completed by the end of April. Read the story |
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As testament to the bright spot on the horizon that the emerging green economy represents - and California’s commitment to environmental preservation despite tough economic times - over 6,000 people turned out for the third Green California Summit & Exposition. Read the story |
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The 2009 Green California Leadership Awards celebrated outstanding environmental achievements by state and local government. View a gallery of the recipients. Click here |
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Conservation and energy efficiency were major concerns for the Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) long before terms like “climate change” and “global warming” entered the energy vocabulary. SMUD serves the 900 square-mile Sacramento area and nearly 60,000 customers and, today, its focus on renewable energy is being emulated by other utilities Read the story |
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The list of state, local and federal mandates, laws and initiatives regarding the environment is long and getting longer. From AB 32, California’s Global Climate Initiative, to the federal economic stimulus package, these policies are creating new pathways to large-scale retrofit and solar programs for existing buildings. Read the story |
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A The Inland Empire, including Riverside and San Bernardino counties, has been hit hard by the financial downturn. It is also an economic powerhouse, with a $77 billion economy and a projected 2 million new residents over the next 15 years. The public and private sectors have joined together for the Green Valley Initiative (GVI), to establish the Inland Empire as a hub for clean and green technologies.
Read the story |
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Governor Schwarzenegger's Executive Order S-20-04 outlined the
nation's first green building action plan. The order extends to
leased spaces as well as state-owned buildings, and is adding
impetus to an emerging industry.
Read the story |
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Two of the nation’s leading green lease attorneys outline the pre-leasing considerations that can guide the creation of a green lease that meets expectations.
Read the story |
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Green jobs are expected to reduce global warming, facilitate a transition to renewable energy, clean up the environment, make schools and public buildings more energy efficient and, along the way, relieve the country’s current economic malaise. The chair of the newly-created California Green Collar jobs Council discusses his first priority – identifying the scope of the green workforce.
Read the story |
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The California Air Resources Board (ARB) is mission central for what is perhaps the most far-reaching legislation in California history – AB 32, the Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006. ARB Chairman Mary Nichols shares her thoughts on the ways that implementation of AB 32 will impact the lives all Californians.
Read the interview |
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Three recent reports from the non-profit group Next 10
provide vital perspective on the convergence of environmental challenges
and the economy in California. They show that investment in green
technology, energy efficiency, and far-reaching environmental protection
programs have added - and will continue to add - significant numbers of jobs
and dollars to the state's economy. The cost of inaction, on the other
hand, is astronomical.
Read the story |
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Saying that "California
has shown bold and bipartisan leadership through its effort to
forge 21st-century standards, and over a dozen states have
followed its lead," President Barack Obama directed the
Environmental Protection Agency to review the denial of
California's request to set tailpipe emission standards more
stringent than current federal standards.
Read the story |
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The Teacher Training Institute at the 2008 Green California Schools Summit included a peer-to-peer student workshop. Participants share their commitment to the environment and the thrill of encountering like-minded contemporaries with Green Technology readers.
Read the story |
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When it was created in the 1970s, the California Department of Toxics Control was a tiny unit under the Department of Health Services in charge of vector control at landfills. Today it has staff of over 1,000, mostly scientists and engineers, working to reduce toxic pollution. With the recent signing of two “green chemistry” initiatives by Governor Schwarzenegger, recommendations developed by DTSC under the leadership of its director, Maureen Gorsen,
will be implemented.
Read the story |
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Government,
which has no input into product design or packaging decisions, ultimately
bears the costs and responsibility of managing the resulting waste. A
concept called "Extended Producer Responsibility" has the potential to
change this.
Read the story. |
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A mini-revolution bent on greening the places where
California's children spend a major part of their lives is underway - and
a large part of that revolution includes school gardens.
Read the story |
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With new funding and new programs, the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) is not only
saving energy, but creating it.
Read the story |
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Admiral Len Hering is the regional commander for the six states of the southwestern United States – California, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado and Utah.
In this interview with
Green Technology he describes his efforts to advance the practice of sustainability and the importance of this work to the Navy and to American citizens.
Read
the story
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In recent weeks,
officials in Sacramento have announced a range of green policy
innovations. Green Technology editors have compiled summaries of key
developments.
Click here
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Leta Stagnaro, associate vice president of
the Newark Center for Health Sciences and Technology at Ohlone College,
talks about the road to becoming the world's first LEED Platinum-certified
college campus.
Read the story
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The
executive director of facilities planning and development for the Los
Angeles Community College District observes that demand for alternative
energy solutions and renewable technology is impacting the way that
community colleges formulate their policies, initiatives and programs.
Read the story |
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Combining rebates and a power purchase agreement, the Lagunitas School District found a way to
realize its solar power goals.
Read the story |
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Schools, government agencies and
businesses may be overlooking a critical piece in their quest to become
more energy efficient. Personal computers, laptops and the servers that
support them are energy hogs. Greening these tools along with facilities
can save hundreds of thousands of kilowatt hours.
Read the story |
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If technology innovation and public policy are the heart of the emerging green economy in California, the Apollo Alliance is its soul. Carla Din, western regional director for the Apollo Alliance, discusses the work being done to grow a sustainable and socially equitable green workforce that can keep California at the forefront of the clean technology sector.
Read
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Spanning nearly 2,000 miles, the U.S.-Mexico
border is the busiest international border in the world. This year,
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and the state of California hosted the XXVI
Border Governors Conference at Universal Studios, and for the first time a
Green Tech Expo, produced by Green Technology, was incorporated into the
event.
Read the story |
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Five and a half years ago, Napa Valley Unified School District envisioned a new green high school to meet the needs of its growing population. A team of architects and engineers working with the Collaborative for High Performance Schools and its new CHPS Verified program is making that dream a reality.
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the story |
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Only 10 percent of the $100 million allocated for green school construction under the school construction state bond 1-D has been allocated so far. Rob Cook, executive officer of the California Office of Public School Construction, discusses green school funding, the future impact of California’s new Green Building Code and the importance of attending the Green California Schools Summit.
Read the story |
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Solar installations abound at
California's community colleges. A Green Technology slideshow provides a
glimpse - although not by any means complete - of the proliferation of
this technology throughout the system.
Read the story |
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Butte Community College sits perched amidst the rolling hills and streams on a thousand-acre wildlife refuge near Oroville, Chico and, quite literally, Paradise, California. Serving some 20,000 students a year, the college’s extensive campus is maintained by a staff headed up by Mike Miller, director of Facilities and Planning.
Read
the story |
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Suzanne Klein, senior engineer at JPL, offers a strategy for transitioning
to widespread use of renewable energy technology - the establishment of
"energy micro-economies," defined areas in which a small but
self-sustainable alternative energy infrastructure is built from the top
down. Read the story.
Read the
story |
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For over
two decades Cisco Systems, Inc., has been busy wiring the world for
technology and developing Internet Protocol (IP)-based networking
technologies. Now the company finds itself at the forefront of solving
some of the world trickiest environmental challenges. Laura Ipsen, Cisco's
vice president of government affairs, talks to Green Technology about
Cisco's efforts to assist governments worldwide in achieving their green
goals.
Read the Interview
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A place at
the table for both industry and the environment are reflected in
California's new green building codes, unanimously adopted by the
California Building Standards Commission on July 17. The Golden State is
the first in the nation to adopt statewide guidelines for green building.
Read the Story |
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Roadmap to Zero Net
for California Schools
At the 2007 Green
California Schools Summit, California State Architect David Thorman
startled a packed auditorium when he announced a plan calling for all new
schools in California to be "Zero Net," or "Grid Neutral," by 2010.
Designing schools that are self-sufficient energy producers in such a
short time frame seemed an almost unimaginable leap at the time, but
Thorman and Theresa Townsend, Senior Architect for the California
Department of General Services, say that achieving the goal is not only
possible, it's probable. In an interview with Green Technology magazine,
they explain how it will happen.
Read the story |
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Green Schools
Groundswell
LEED for Schools was one
year old in April, and according to U.S. Green Building Council Schools
Sector Manager Rachel Gutter, nearly two new schools are now registering
for LEED certification every day. This groundswell is a combination of
enormous stakeholder advocacy for the program, a growing concern about
rising energy bills at the school district level, and development of the
tools and information that allow for economical and standardized green
school construction.
Read the story |
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A View from the Summit
The 2008 Green
California Summit brought together 5,000 attendees and nearly 250
companies offering green products and services. Over three days of
keynotes, training and interaction on the exhibit floor, they found new
ways to work together to green the Golden State.
Read the story
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Green Technology
Interview:
Janet W. Lamkin
In February 2007, Bank of America became a pillar of the new green economy
in California when it announced a 10-year, $20 billion environmental
initiative to help address climate change. Janet W. Lamkin, president of
Bank of America California, talks with Green Technology about the
background and goals of the program.
Read the story |
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Taking a Chance
In sustainability efforts at all levels, the pursuit of equity goes hand
in hand with the push to preserve natural resources. The Mothers' Club of
Pasadena - a community center providing services to impoverished parents
with young children - is accomplishing both on a routine basis, with
remarkable simplicity and power.
Read the story |
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Green Business Zone
Pasadena's Green City Action
plan is nearly two years in, and the City Council reports progress on
every front. In addition to support from sustainability advocates, the
plan has been embraced in a big way by some of Pasadena's largest
businesses.
Read the story |
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Pasadena Seminary Goes Green
In
addition to educating 5,000 students a year in theology and intercultural
studies at its seven regional campuses, Fuller Theological Seminary
contributes in both philosophy and action toward making Pasadena a green
city.
Read the story |
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Local Revolution
Since the 2006 passage of the Global
Warming Solutions Act, a growing number of cities and counties have
designed and implemented innovative policies to cut emissions and address
climate change. A new report from Green Technology summarizes these
efforts.
Read the report |
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By Popular
Demand
Slides From Hunter Lovins Keynote at GCS 08
The Slide Show presentations from Hunter's keynote as well as some of the
classes, workshops and seminars from the 2008 Green California Summit are
now available.
Click here
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Green Technology
Interview:
Bill Lockyer
Bill Lockyer has a long public service legacy; from
1999-2006, he was California Attorney General. Prior to his election to
that office, he served for 25 years in the California Legislature,
culminating his Capitol career with a stint as Senate President pro
Tempore. In his current position as the state's Treasurer, Lockyer
works on the cutting edge of the state's efforts to align economic growth
and environmental stewardship.
Read the story. |
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Green Technology
Interview:
Bharat Patel
Architect and sustainability specialist
Bharat Patel was at the forefront of a green building initiative that, in
one swoop, quadrupled the number of LEED buildings in the US. The project
took place in California, and in a far-ranging interview he outlines the
factors that are likely to establish California as the world leader in
sustainability.
Read the story. |
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Green Technology
Interview:
Hunter Lovins
Lawyer, author, non-profit manager, international economic development
leader, local community activist, volunteer firefighter, teacher and rodeo
rider, Hunter Lovins has long been one of America's leading voices for
sustainability. One of the keynotes for the upcoming Green California
Summit and Exposition, Lovins offers insight into the unique
responsibilities and capabilities of government.
Read the story. |
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LACCD's Cutting-Edge Building Program: An Update
This story is an update on the
Los Angeles Community College District's $6 billion
Sustainable Building Program, one of the nation's largest
environmentally friendly construction programs. The district
is modernizing its nine colleges and using alternative energy
sources. Its building techniques and practices strive to save
water, limit air pollution, emphasize the use of recycled
materials and train tomorrow's green workforce.
Read the story. |
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Green
Urbanism
Cecilia
Estolano, a lawyer who has long fought for environmental justice, has a
new role as CEO of the Community Redevelopment Agency of Los Angeles (CRA/LA)
- overseeing what may be the nation's largest experiment in "green
urbanism."
Read the story. |
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Monetizing Green Building
The Green Building
Finance Consortium is a group of leading
corporations, real estate companies, and trade groups. Their goal:
creating a common platform for evaluating green building investment.
Read the story. |
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Green Perspectives:
Richard Register
For more than three decades, author, designer, builder and visionary
Richard Register has argued that sustainability depends on re-thinking the
way that cities are created. Register and colleague Kirstin Miller of
Ecocity Builders evoke the basics of a "restorative" city.
Read the story. |
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Power to the People!
Berkeley's Energy Financing District
The City
of Berkeley has long tread the cutting edge on the issues of climate
protection and sustainability. As part of implementing a bold action plan,
the city has created a "sustainable energy financing district" to cover
upfront costs for energy efficiency upgrades and solar power systems.
Read the story. |
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Raising a Solar Roof
One of
the strategies of Berkeley's
climate action plan is to empower citizens and business owners to
participate in climate protection initiatives. KyotoUSA, an all-volunteer organization which encourages cities to
work with their governments to reduce greenhouse emissions, has taken up
the mantle in a big way.
Read the story. |
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Envisioning a Green Future:
Thousands Attend Schools Summit
The largest green schools conference ever, the Green California Schools
Summit & Exposition brought together thousands of attendees from all
sectors of the education community, capturing the essence and spirit of
California's rapidly growing green schools movement.
Read the story. |
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Green California
Summit
Once a
year, leaders from state and local government come together to share their
accomplishments, and to discover the latest green products and
services. The 2008 Green California Summit will take place in Sacramento
from April 7-9.
Get the details! |
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Energy Efficiency
in
Public Schools:
San Diego Walks the Talk
In 1997,
the board of the San Diego Unified School District made a commitment to
cutting energy use, a decision that is still bringing rewards a decade
later.
Read the story |
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Green Gold Rush
On January 14, investors, educators, industry experts and labor
leaders met in San Francisco for a one-day summit that will plot the
course for a new energy economy for the state.
As
Education Partner for this groundbreaking event, Green Technology prepared
a special edition focused on building the diverse workforce that will be
needed to power the growth of green energy in California.
Click here to
discover
how leaders in the state are preparing for this challenge! |
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Reinventing
Air
Conditioning
Engineers
at DMJM Harris are working with the San Diego Unified School District on a
daunting challenge: cooling classrooms that have not previously been air
conditioned without raising utility bills.
Read the story |
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Leveling the Playing
Field
for Prop 1D
In November 2006, voters
authorized $10.4 billion for school facility construction and
modernization through Proposition 1D - the Kindergarten-University
Facilities Bond Act of 2006. Grants through this program are on hold, as
the Office of Public School Construction works to establish criteria for
fair and effective use of these funds.
Read the story |
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Greening Schools in the Golden State
From December 4th to the 6th, the Pasadena Convention Center and historic Pasadena
Civic Auditorium will offer principals, school board members, architects,
product suppliers and educators an unprecedented view of the range of
tools and strategies available to make California's schools the healthiest
and most sustainable in the nation.
Read the story |
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High Performance
Schools:
The New Jewels of Los Angeles
The second largest school district in the United States, the Los Angeles
Unified School District has been called a behemoth, top heavy and
inefficient, controversial and downright impossible to manage. None of
this has prevented the district from launching a green schools initiative
of unprecedented scale.
Read the story |
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Under Construction
A look at two
of the high performance schools included in LAUSD's $20 billion school
construction and renovation program.
View a slideshow |
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Standing in Line,
Sustainably
A new DMV
facility in San Ysidro marks the beginning of a new, green era for the
agency.
Read the story |
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Big and Bold
These words not only describe new initiatives from the
California Public Utilities Commission (PUC), they also convey the
enthusiasm held by PUC Commissioner Dian Grueneich.
"The PUC funds and
oversees the world's largest energy efficiency program and the nation's
most aggressive renewable program," she says. "My goal is for every
person in California to know that and be proud of it."
Read the story |
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Green Perspectives:
A Greener and Healthier Future for California
Schools
Born
out of California's energy crisis, the Collaborative for High Performance
Schools (CHPS) has expanded beyond energy efficiency to address an array
of issues that make up healthy and environmentally conscious school
environments.
Read the story |
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Green Star
in the Inner City
The phrase "inner city school" doesn't usually conjure up images of green
space, open windows and high attendance rates. But in September 2006,
students at Maywood Academy High School in downtown Los Angeles walked
into a new kind
of school.
Read the story |
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Growing Green Schools
At a time when schools throughout the country have been re-engineering
their curriculum to meet the demands of "no child left behind," a quiet
revolution in school design has been unfolding in the State of California.
A new school bond has set the stage for a new generation of green schools
Read the story |
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E-waste: Exporting
Risk
Only
four U.S. states (including California) have enacted some form of
end-of-life legislation in an effort to reduce these hazards. A new United
Nations partnership,
StEP
(Solve the E-waste Problem), has been formed to create a global
electronics recycling standard.
View a slideshow |
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Thinking Green
Thanks to a commitment that is shared by
citizens, elected officials, city management, and staff in the city
government, Pasadena is ensuring that sustainability is a core value for
both public and private sectors.
Read the story. |
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Green California
Gallery
Throughout
California, governments are implementing innovative projects that both
preserve and utilize local resources. This gallery, an ongoing feature of
Green Technology Magazine, offers a brief survey of their efforts.
View the gallery |
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Destination Stations
Vibrant California communities are
being developed around transit stations, revitalizing inner city
neighborhoods and connecting far flung suburbs to each other and to the
cities.
Read the story |
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The Last Mile
An
innovative program in Pleasant Hill is making public transportation even
more user-friendly, and adding adventure to the last leg of the daily
commute.
Read the story |
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Greening Schools in
the Golden State
This groundbreaking event will focus
on the strategies, technologies and services that will ensure that new and
existing public schools in California are models of sustainability and provide healthy
learning environments for students.
Get the details |
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View from the Summit
Thousands of state and local
government officials attended the first Green California Summit and
Exposition, for three days of training classes and the chance to interact
with hundreds of companies providing green products and services.
Get details |
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Green Government
File Sharing
A new online service is
enabling government officials working at the city, county, and state
levels can share best practices.
Read the story |
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Sacramento's
Clean Energy Corridor
With the support of a unique
public-private partnership, the six-county Sacramento region is evolving
into a clean energy corridor - and along the way, a business climate is
developing that benefits both green technology innovators and the
environment.
Read the story |
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Pioneering on the
Hydrogen Highway
Motor vehicles are the single largest
contributor to global warming in California. A public-private partnership
aims to change this.
Read the story. |
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Setting a Global Clean Air Challenge
In this special
contribution to Green Technology, the Director of Health and Environment
for the World Health Organization
calls for governments to tighten standards for the most
dangerous air pollutants.
Read the story. |
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From Curb to Serve:
Trash on the Rebound
By
recycling trash on the job and at home, the more than 200,000 state
employees in California can make a major contribution to the state's
policy goals. The Chair of the California Integrated Waste Management
Board reviews the growth − and the environmental benefits − of
California's "recycling culture."
Read the story. |
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Hello, Old Paint
Recycling paint can
prevent toxic pollution, save taxpayers money and, eventually, bring new
revenue to government. Yet at present, recycled paint accounts for less
than 10 percent of purchases by California government.
Read the story. |
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Greening the Golden
State
Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger has committed government to leading by example, showing
California's private sector - and the nation - the path to a sustainable
future.
Read the story. |
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Environmentally
Preferable Purchasing
An authoritative, and
continuously growing, new online manual offers a comprehensive view of
"best practices" in green buying.
Read the story. |
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Savings Fund:
Public Utilities Invest in California
In an innovative collaboration with State government, four of California's
largest investor owned utilities (IOUs) will contribute almost $17 million
to help the state implement energy savings programs in its buildings.
Read the
story
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Retro-commissioning:
Back to the Future for California's State Buildings
By
the year 2011, all buildings over 50,000 square feet owned by the
Executive Branch of the State of California will have been
retro-commissioned to meet the requirements of the Governor's Green
Building Initiative.
Read the story. |
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California
Gold
Each year, California government agencies purchase enough carpet to cover
47 miles of four-lane freeway. This purchasing power, combined with the
state's commitment to environmental protection, has led to a tough new
standard for sustainable carpet.
For the complete story,
click here.
Photo courtesy of Interface |
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Restoring the Planet, One Carpet Tile at a Time
A Green Technology Interview with Ray Anderson
Founder and CEO, Interface Corporation
Ray Anderson founded
Interface, Inc. in 1973 to adapt European carpet tiling technology to the
American market. He had no idea that two decades later he would be a prime
force in reinventing the worldwide floor covering industry.
Read the interview.
Photo courtesy of
Rufimage |
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Green Milestone
The Department of
Education Building in Sacramento is the first state-owned building to
receive Platinum Certification for energy efficiency and sustainability
from the U.S. Green Building Council.
To learn about the features of this groundbreaking facility and the
road to certification,
click here.
Photo courtesy of
Fentress Bradburn Architects |
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Green Technology
Publisher
Keith Miller
Editor in Chief
Carl Smith
Managing Editor
Racquel Palmese
Associate Editor
Bob Graves
Contributors
Barbara Crane
Brandon Keefe |
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Green Technology is an initiative of the non-profit Foundation for
Advancements in Science and Education (FASE). Established in 1981 as a
coalition of educators, researchers, physicians, scientists,
environmentalists and other professionals, FASE produces a broad range of
public interest communications and research. The foundation's
environmental health programs have encompassed research, reporting,
conferences and policy. FASE has also produced more than 70 educational
programs for public broadcasting, many of them addressing environmental
issues. These productions have received more than 150 awards, including
three Peabody Awards and the Environmental Media Award. Drawing upon this
rich and unique organizational experience, Green Technology provides a
forum that advances government and private sector efforts to create clean
and sustainable communities.
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Copyright
© 2006, Green Technology. All rights reserved. |