TOP NEWS

November 18, 2008

Monterey County Plan Requires Cut in Emissions

ARTICLE TOOLS        | E-MailPrint RSS

MONTEREY COUNTY, CA – Within two years after a long-delayed general plan update is finally approved, Monterey County would be required to adopt a plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by nearly 30 percent in an attempt to offset the environmental impacts of future growth, according to The Herald.

That is according to an overview of the latest version of the county’s blueprint for growth during the next quarter century, known as General Plan Update 5, and its draft environmental impact report, which was presented to county planning commissioners Wednesday. The public hearing, which drew only a few participants, was the commission’s first on the draft report.

But some commissioners said they are worried about the potential costs of implementing such a sweeping plan in difficult economic times, as well as its impact on the local business climate, and called for a full accounting of the expense of such a plan.

According to the overview, the county would be required to adopt a greenhouse gas reduction plan that would cut emissions 28 percent by 2020. As part of the emissions reduction plan, the county would take an inventory of transportation and industrial emissions, approve a “green building” ordinance focused on large industrial and commercial projects, and aim for a 75 percent waste diversion goal through recycling and waste reduction initiatives. The county would use electric or ultra-low emission fleet vehicles and show preference to contractors who use low-emission business practices.

RATE THIS STORY

Average Rating: Not yet rated

COMMENT ON THIS STORY

Please log in to write comment.

New user? Sign up for new membership now!

E-NEWSLETTER

Authoritative & Targeted! We offer e-newsletters that deliver targeted news and information for the entire fleet industry. Subscribe to one or all of them...they're FREE. SUBSCRIBE!

View the latest eNews E-WEEKLY

NEWS ARCHIVE SEARCH

Sponsored Links

Flexible & Powerful Fleet Software
Chevin fleet management software - Where flexibility comes standard. Solutions for all types of vehicle and transport operations. Click Here.

BLOG

Questionable Opinions

Eric Bearly
What Technician Shortage???

By Eric Bearly
It brings me great joy to be the one to break the news that the technician shortage crisis facing public sector fleets around the nation has been averted. If this comes as a surprise to you, let me explain how I used my well-honed skills in deductive reasoning to come to this conclusion.

GF Market Trends

Mike Antich
Budget Constraints No. 1 Issue Facing Public Sector Fleets in 2009

By Mike Antich
Steep declines in tax revenues are resulting in budget cuts at all levels of government, which most likely will persist for the next 12 to 24 months. These budget shortfalls are particularly acute at general fund departments. Adjusting fleet budgets to cope with revenue shortfalls is emerging as the number one issue facing government fleets in 2009.

Public Sector Fleets:
Take-Home Vehicles: Ending the Culture of Entitlement

By Mike Antich

STORE

$5.00

Government Fleet - November/December 2008

In This Issue:
Hillsborough County Names NO. 1 Public Sector Fleet, ‘100 Best Fleets’ Recognition Program, Keeping Government Vehicles Clean and much more…