Archive for March 18th, 2008

Forum tonight on affordable housing in Seattle

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

The Seattle Great City Initiative hosts its third “What it Takes” forum tonight on affordable housing. I’ve attended two of these so far, and they are always lively and informative events.

Called “Housing - Challenge, Crisis or Opportunity” the forum will be a panel discussion moderated by Darryl Smith, chair of the Great City Initiative.

High profile speakers will grace the panel, including City Council Member Sally Clark, chair of the Planning, Land Use and Neighborhoods Committee; Maria Barrientos, property developer of The Leona, The Ruby, The Pearl and The Packard Building; Charlie Royer, former Seattle Mayor and chair of the Middle Income Housing Alliance; and Tony To, nonprofit developer and chair of the Seattle Planning Commission.

Panelists will discuss and debate competing ideas on how to keep Seattle’s housing diverse and affordable like incentive zonig, upzones and direct subsidies.

After the event, attendees are welcome to go to the Fado pub to keep the conversation going!

It runs from 5:30 to 7 p.m. and is at Seattle Public Library downtown. For more information, visit www.greatcity.org.

And the greenest U.S. city is…. Corvallis??!!?? (Seattle-Bellevue-Everett ranks 13)

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

CorvallisThat’s right, you heard me correctly. According to CountryHome Magazine’s April issue, and Sperling’s BestPlaces, Corvallis is the greenest city in the country.

Not Seattle. Not Chicago. Corvallis. Then again, Bellingham makes number 3 on the list, with Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton tied (I’m assuming, unless there’s a new city by that name) for second place. In that vein, Seattle-Bellevue-Everett is tied for 13th place, with Eugene-Springfield, OR. and San Francisco-San Mateo-Redwood City, Calif., beating us.

Am I the only one that’s confused here? First, it seems to me that the top 100 cities should be cities… and there should only be 100 of them, rather than a series of cities strung together by hypens. Second, living in Seattle, I’m interested in how it is 100 percent tied with Everett and Bellevue.

Corvallis

If we consider only one measuring stick of the study - the number of green buildings in an area, there are stark differences between Seattle, Bellevue and Everett. According to the U.S. Green Building Council’s Web site, Seattle has 38 LEED certified buildings, Bellevue has 2 and Everett has none. And if we look at LEED registered buildings (or buildings that plan to be LEED certified) the difference is even greater. Bellevue has 7, Everett has 2 and Seattle has 138. Not that LEED is the only indicator of how green a city is, but it is one thing the study considered. To see how many LEED buildings are planned in a city you’re interested in, visit the USGBC’s national registry by pressing here .

Other Washington winners are Wenatchee at 26 (was number 5 last year! Ah Wentachee, how you’ve failed us!), Olympia at 28, Spokane at 37, Mount Vernon-Anacortes at 48 and  Tacoma at 61.  Umm… what’s missing? Yakima, Tri-Cities…. but wait! There was a second page that listed the greenest cities from 101 to 200.

And in THAT list… we’ve got Kennewick-Richland-Pasco at 108 and Yakima at 112. And in the 300’s, there’s Longview at 244. And that’s it for Washington. The list ends at 379 with Houma-Bayou Cane-Thibodaux, La. as the end in greenest cities. Somehow no city on the east side other than Bellevue made the cut, even though cities like Kirkland have a self professed commitment to green policies. Neither did Federal Way or Kent, the only two of Washington’s ten largest cities not included in the list.

Then again, this is only one group’s interpretation. In December, The EarthLab Foundation in Kirkland rated Seattle number 8 and Chicago number 1. In February, Popular Science rated Portland number 1 and Seattle number 8. In 2006, National Geographic’s Green Guide said Eugene was number 1 and Seattle was number 24.

Is it all a guessing game? Are these lists arbitrary? And what exactly makes a city “the greenest in the country” if cities are so different?

According to a press release from the city of Corvallis, the CountryHome study looked at 24 data metrics in five major categories including mass transit use, green power policies, number of green-certified buildings, and organic markets among other things. It used information from the U.S. Census Bureau, the Environmental Priotection Agency, and the USGBC among others.

In the race to be the greenest city, do cities forget about what’s best for the people that live in them, work in them and do business in them? Or do these ratings really matter? Have they changed the way you do business? 

From your experience working with green building, is it the same old shtick in Seattle, Everett and Bellevue or are there subtle differences? Tell me what you think! You can even post anonymously…..