Table of Contents |
Appendix D
Appendix C Community Profiles in the Fifty
States
Alabama-Maine |
Maryland-Wyoming
This compendium of initiatives, a few of the many outstanding
efforts around the country, is intended to address these questions. They
demonstrate the diversity and breadth of approaches that communities are using
to promote economic health, environmental quality, and social equity.
Collectively they illustrate the varying dimensions of sustainability and the
interrelatedness of community issues. They offer new perspectives that are
participatory, long-term, and often driven by a common community vision.
These 51 reviews, from each state and the District of Columbia,
provide examples of solutions at work in communities around the country. Where
the problems or issues are similar, often the approach is vastly different.
Many, however, contain common elements such as comprehensive and participatory
planning, visioning processes, integrative approaches, and collaborations among
citizens, businesses, public agencies, and nonprofit organizations. The stories
are rural and urban, local and regional. They encompass a variety of issues
from job creation to community democracy. Project sponsors vary from nonprofits
to businesses to local governments. Many of the initiatives have sustainable
development as a stated goal while others do not use the term explicitly.
Though these profiles can serve as valuable sources of
information for other communities, they are also a compilation of success
stories and therefore should serve as inspiration for all readers. From the
South Bronx in New York to the mountains of Montana these stories are a message
that citizens are exploring new ways of doing business and opening up exciting
possibilities often well in advance of political leadership. Unusual
partnerships are coalescing between businesses, governments and nonprofits to
step up pollution prevention and save money; developers are reducing costs by
designing for the environment; neighborhoods are adding value to their property
by creating green spaces; and low-income farmers are staying on their land by
connecting with organic foods consumers in the city. Together these examples
tell a story of a new wave of American ingenuity and know-how, of citizens
solving problems from a new perspective.
These profiles have been arranged alphabetically. Though there
is something to learn from each study, we realize that most readers will not
have the time to read them all. Each profile therefore begins with summary
information including the Project Type, Methods Used, Participants, Scope, and
Lessons Learned. We hope this will help to identify which examples will be of
interest to you, and we think there is something here for everyone.
This appendix has also been published as a stand alone document
by the EPA. Reproduction is encouraged. The following form may be used for
attribution: Sustainability in Action: Profiles of Community Initiatives Across
the United States, September, 1995. Urban and Economic Policy Division, US EPA;
CONCERN, Inc.; Community Sustainability Resource Institute; Jobs &
Environment Campaign. For additional copies, call 202 260 2750; fax requests to
202 260 0174 or write to the US EPA, Urban and Economic Development Policy
Division, Mail Code 2125, 401 M Street, SW, Washington, DC 20460. Although this
project was funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, it may not
reflect the views of the US EPA. No official endorsement should be
inferred.
We thank the following individuals for their contributions to
this report: Susan Boyd, Burks Lapham, and Chris Larsen (CONCERN, Inc.);
Susanna MacKenzie Euston, Ondine Wilhelm, Dr. Michael Murtha, and Marilyn
Christiano (CSRI); and Judith Shapiro, Robert Inerfeld, and Benjamin A. Goldman
(JEC).
Organizational descriptions
Concern, Inc.
CONCERN, Inc., founded in 1970, is a national non-profit
environmental education organization. Its mission is to build public
understanding of and support for programs, policies, and practices that are
environmentally, economically, and socially sound. CONCERN disseminates
examples of successful initiatives and offers resources and guidelines for
action. It employs an integrative approach to issues ranging from energy
efficiency and safe pest management to waste reduction and water resource
management. Its community action guides are being used in all 50 states and
over 60 other countries. Through its Sustainable Communities Program it seeks
to increase public understanding of and participation in community
sustainability. It has identified and profiled examples of community-wide and
issue-specific programs and projects, created a national database of
sustainability resources, published informational materials, facilitated the
exchange of information on sustainability, and is developing, in partnership
with other groups, a model community sustainability network to serve as a
single point of access to resources on sustainability on the Internet.
For more information Contact: CONCERN, Inc., 1794
Columbia Road, NW, Washington, DC 20009. Tel.: 202 328 8160 Fax: 202 387 3378
e-mail: <concern@igc.apc.org>.
Community Sustainability Resource Institute
The Community Sustainability Resource Institute (CSRI) was
founded in 1989. A national, non-profit organization, its mission is to promote
and support the advancement of sustainable development at the local, regional,
and national levels. Originally based in the Washington, D.C., area, CSRI's
inaugural program (1990 to 1995) was designed to network sustainability
practitioners and to encourage the development of sustainability theory and
action. It featured: publications (Community Sustainability Exchange,
inaugurated in 1991 as S.U.R. Exchange); three annual national conferences
(1992, 1993, 1994) which drew over 700 practitioners from around the United
States; and, two annual speakers series programs held at the National Building
Museum. At its new headquarters in the Asheville, NC area, CSRI is developing
the Suburban Sustainability Center, designed to provide information on
innovative sustainable living technologies, including agriculture, energy, and
health, to people living in suburban settings. Its publications and its
extensive database of information on initiatives around the United States will
be accessible at its new Internet Web site mid-summer 1996. It will publish a
comprehensive handbook on sustainable community development, New Life for Our
Communities, in late 1996, which will supplement its technical assistance to
communities.
For more information Contact: Community Sustainability
Resource Institute, P.O. Box 981, Arden, NC 28704, Tel: 704 681 1955, Fax: 704
687 0441, e-mail: <sustain@primeline.com> or <csri@igc.apc.org>.
Jobs & Environment Campaign
The Jobs & Environment Campaign (JEC) was founded in 1993 to
defeat the no-win rhetoric that quality jobs and a quality environment are
somehow incompatible. JEC's mission is to create jobs that are good for people
and the environment. In pursuit of its mission, JEC offers technical
assistance, leadership training, policy research, and organizational support.
Currently JEC is working with communities in Roxbury, MA, Oakland, CA, the
Merrimack Valley region of Massachusetts, Louisiana's "chemical corridor", and
others. Its services include analytical testing services for at-risk
communities, leadership workshops, a business incubator for environmental
ventures, and assistance in establishing new non-profits. Research efforts
include a report for the U.S. Department of Commerce that evaluates sustainable
policy options, as well as a report on how to create thousands of new "green"
jobs in Massachusetts that will benefit residents and the environment.
For more information: Contact: Jobs & Environment
Campaign 160 Second Street, 2nd floor Cambridge, MA 02142-1502.
Tel.: 617 547 5321 ext.: x207 Fax: 617 876 6903 e-mail:
shapiroj@world.std.com
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