Hizzoner's Progress

15 green-leaning mayors 17

Elaine WalkerWalker? I’d rather bike.Robert the Noid/flickr10. Elaine Walker, Bowling Green, Ky.
Pop.: 53,000
This TV producer-turned-politician has her hands full, from increasing affordable housing to contending with the crash of Big Auto, but green is on her radar screen. Transportation issues loom large in this western Kentucky city, and Walker has worked with local bike-advocacy groups (even creating a Mayor’s Bike Ride) and launched a Rethinking Transportation Choices task force. A signatory to the Mayors Climate Protection Agreement, she is a proponent of green building and downtown redevelopment. “There’s too much of a perception that going green is a little bit out there and idealistic,” she has said. “It’s not idealistic—it’s vital.”

 

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  1. steve7138 Posted 11:22 am
    05 May 2009

    For an East Coast City-Providence is Clean! Unlike Mayor Healey of Jersey City, Mr. Cicilline deserves kudos for his work and for the Ocean State. 
  2. steve7138 Posted 11:38 am
    05 May 2009

    Houston's Mayor Bill White (and Mayor Phil Hardberger of San Antonio) are NOT worthy to be deemed Green mayors--in America, or Texas, for that matter.  Dallas and Austin are the two Texas cities with the most pronounced GREEN policies, but are sadly not recognized by GRIST. Houston and San Antonio have the lowest rates for total collected trash recycled for America largest cities (a terrible TWO and FOUR percent recycled total trash for Houston and San Antonio, respectively!) Also, Houston, on Mayor White's watch, received EPA's "Worst Urban Air Pollution" designation. Houston still notoriously lacks a citywide ordinance that protects both land use and the environment. Houston, is absolutely a POOR CHOICE for a large populated US city caling itself GREEN--its at the bottom, not top, of urban environmental performances.
  3. lukasherbert Posted 10:21 am
    07 May 2009

    If you have NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg at the top of your list as an "environmental" mayor, then you've obviously had the wool pulled over your eyes  by a slick media campaign.  PlaNYC 2030 is nothing but a media PR campaign intended to distract people while Mayor Bloomberg pursues a developer-friendly agenda that has been destroying our local environment.  It is not a "comprehensive plan" in the uban planning sense. It is a decoy, it has no substance or policy behind it.If you want evidence look no futher than the new Yankee Stadium project, which Mayor Bloomberg championed. That project involved erasing over 20 acres of public parkland from one of the poorest communities in the nation, and replacing it with a stadium and parking. The neighborhood, which has sky-high asthma rates, lost over 300 mature trees, which can not realistically be replaced in the immediate area.  The neighborhood will get new replacement parks, but years later - and most of those parks will have artificial turf made from recycled tire waste, not real grass and trees like the community had before. At a community meeting I asked how Yankee Stadium would comply with PlaNYC 2030 to one of Mayor Bloomberg's staffers.  All I got was a "deer-in-the-headlights" look.  Of course it's not consistent with PlaNYC 2030.  But then again, what is PlaNYC 2030 anyway?  It's whatever Mayor Bloomberg says it is.  He can be "green" one day, and then violate those ideas the next day. That's the great thing when you are a billionaire media company owner who becomes an elected official.  You can use your strength with media manipulation to manipulate public perception.The truth is, Mayor Bloomberg has been a fanatic when it comes to replacing naturally vegetated areas with artificial turf, particularly in poor neighborhoods that are not deemed worthy of adequate parks maintenance budgets. He has championed privatization of park space in favor of wealthy residents who can pay for the space instead of keeping them open to all. He has incrased parking requirements throughout the city, necessitating more space for asphalt and less for open space. True, he supported congestion pricing, but think about it - everyone knew that idea was D.O.A. in our famously unprogressive State Legislature, including him. Maybe, just maybe, he just pushed it to beef up the illusion that he cares about the environment at a time he was thinking about a Presidential run?  Maybe, maybe not.  He's not going to fess up about it.The bottom line with Mayor Bloomberg is that if you live in a wealthy part of town, being wealthy himself, he'll really go the extra mile for you.  But if you live in those outer areas of the city, watch out - you might lose all of your green space to a developer. How is that progressive? How is that protecting the environment?  How is that environmental justice?  It's not - and you people at Grist have been duped. Check your facts next time!
  4. Simmons Buntin, Terrain.org Posted 10:41 am
    07 May 2009

    I'm surprised not to see Denver mayor John Hickenlooper on this list.  I think his work in Denver, see http://www.terrain.org/columns/17/guest.htm, is pretty great and just as extensive and "green" as the good work of these other mayors.
  5. Tonic42 Posted 11:05 am
    07 May 2009

    I wish we had a green mayor where we live. They all seem to be about personal gain and not even care about the evniroment. :( Learn how to make cheap renewable energy for your home or solar power for your remote cabin.
  6. mikeyohare Posted 1:43 pm
    13 May 2009

    Good luck to the green mayors, in my experience a mayor can make all the difference to whether a city really does put its people, the environment and the economy first.  See these stories on Curitiba + Jaime Lerner and the Western Harbour Malmo for a little inspiration.

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