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Alameda County, CA | November 2, 2004 Election |
LOOKING TO THE FUTURE: Environmental & Land Use Issues For PeraltaBy Nicky González YuenCandidate for Trustee; Peralta Community College District; Trustee Area 4 | |
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I am still developing my understanding of environmental and land use issues in the Peralta District and view this as an ongoing process. At the present, though, my attention has been drawn to 3 key environmental concerns at Peralta: 1)Environmental education issues; 2)Intra-District Environmental and Energy Policy; and 3) Land Use. Please read on for my thoughts in these areas.LOOKING TO THE FUTURE: Environmental & Land Use Issues For Peralta by Nicky González Yuen, Candidate for Peralta's Area 4 Board Seat Over the 18 months I have spoken with a range of people who have studied the environmental and land use issues in the Peralta District and have been grateful for their insights and record of hard work. I am still developing my understanding of these issues and view this as an ongoing process. At the present, though, my attention has been drawn to 3 key environmental concerns in the Peralta Community College District:
1. Environmental education issues; 1) Environmental Education Issues: The Peralta Community College District has a long history in the field of environmental education. Starting at Vista College in the 1960s the District initiated educational programs dealing with the environment and alternative energy technology. In the early 1980s, this work expanded at Merritt College with the development of the Environmental Center Self Reliant House demonstration classroom and laboratory. The environmental studies curriculum within the District continues to this day with the David R. Brower/Ronald V. Dellums Institute for Sustainable Policy Studies on the Merritt College campus. In fact, just several weeks ago, Merritt's Environmental Studies Department under the directorship of Robin Freeman played host to ECOWAVE 2004, the third Global Interdisciplinary Conference on green architecture. There is huge potential for this program as a center for both environmental awareness among the general population and more importantly the development of an entire generation of environmental engineers, designers, and activists working in the fields of environmental cleanup, green building, alternative energy development, and environmental justice. A strategic partnership among the Peralta District, local businesses, and environmental activists could create a potent win-win center for job creation and job training for East Bay workers and businesses that could also act as the economic foundation for an entire wave of environmental organizing and activism. Unfortunately, the current Peralta Board has not paid sufficient attention to the potential here for jobs training, economic development, environmental education, and environmental organizing. I hope to work with faculty, staff, students and community activists to put a new focus on this area of Peralta's potential. 2) Intra-District Environmental and Energy Policy The Peralta Community College District has an annual budget in the neighborhood of $90 million. It employs hundreds of workers, and educates tens of thousands of students on 4 campuses covering many acres of land in the East Bay. With numbers like these, it is obvious that the Peralta Community College District has a fairly large environmental footprint in the East Bay. But, as a District, there is no systematic planning or thinking about the impact of this footprint. For example, currently, the Peralta District has no system-wide plan for energy conservation, recycling, green building and maintenance, or green transportation. Another example: activists at Merritt College have for some time been asking the District's central maintenance office to authorize PG & E to carry out a "stop waste energy audit" of the college. But, they simply cannot seem to get through the static to follow through. Consequently, the District is spending far more than it needs on energy while simultaneously wasting precious non-renewable resources. There are enormous possibilities here for energy conservation as well as financial savings to the District, if there is the will and focus within the District to make environmental concerns a priority. For example:
3) Land use One of Peralta's significant assets is its land. We own four campuses and dozens of acres of undeveloped land in the Oakland Hills near the Merritt College Campus. There are also many other acres of land on the other three campuses. These properties are intended to meet the college district's educational and financial needs for both today and tomorrow. But, there have been few issues that have excited as much animosity and suspicion as have land use concerns within the Peralta Community College District. This has most famously been illustrated over the controversy regarding the possible development of the athletic fields at Laney College. I personally believe that fights and suspicions over the proposed development of the athletic fields at Laney College by private developers has been so controversial that the District should place a 3 year moratorium on even considering this question. We have other important issues that are critical to the core of our educational mission on which to focus and fights such as this have chiefly been a distraction from paying attention to our mission. In the interim, though, I believe that Peralta should institute a longer range land-use discussion and plan. As the District does continue to consider ways to best utilize its real property, there are a few goals that I would keep in mind. New construction, additions, or expansions, should work towards respecting the following:
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