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Friday, November 6, 2020

Climate Candidates Notch Victories in Major City Council Races Across Western U.S.

Climate Candidates Notch Victories in Major City Council Races Across Western U.S. https://legal-planet.org/2020/11/05/climate-candidates-notch-victories-in-major-city-council-races-across-western-u-s/

While ballot counting continues across the country, city council races are now being called, with new climate champions set to take office in large Western U.S. cities that held elections this week. Many of the victors are taking on their first elected positions.

Candidates with inspiring and ambitious climate platforms notched victories in six large Western U.S. cities: Los Angeles, Phoenix, San Diego, San Jose, San Francisco, and Portland. Other large cities by population (Seattle, Denver, Las Vegas, and Albuquerque) did not hold city council elections in this cycle.

City leadership is important for advancing climate action, but new research finds U.S. cities falling behind. In practice, city councilmembers frequently make decisions that advance or stall climate action in areas where powerful incumbents often resist change, like buildings, land-use, transit, safe streets, and electricity generation.

Local officials shape decisions on land use, housing, transit, water, and green space. Photo credit: Daniel Melling

While not a certain predictor for candidates’ future voting record (nor fully accounting for complex local dynamics that can shape decisions), campaign platforms provide a roadmap for a governing agenda–and for constituents to hold their elected officials accountable. Successful campaigns with strong climate messages also send a signal to other officials that voters support ambitious action.

Below is a closer look at major city council elections (in order of each city’s population):

– In Los Angeles, Nithya Raman scored a major upset in District 4 over incumbent David Ryu, a first-term councilmember endorsed by establishment Democratic figures like Nancy Pelosi and Hilary Clinton. Councilmember Mike Bonin called Raman’s win a “progressive earthquake and a transformative moment.” Raman’s grassroots campaign was supplemented with detailed policy plans, including an extensive environmental policy platform (also published in Spanish) that set out specific objectives on clean electricity generation, building efficiency and building electrification, transit and street design, water conservation, and a new buffer around oil and gas operations in the city. In District 10, former county supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas won office with a platform that emphasized a transition to transit, electric vehicles, and safer walking and biking while mitigating urban heat with tree planting and cool roofs.

– In Phoenix, standout climate candidate Yassamin Ansari took first place in a five-way race for District 7, which will now go to a runoff election in March 2021. In a professional career devoted to climate issues, Ansari has worked at the UN and with former Governor Jerry Brown and former UNFCCC secretary Christiana Figueres on a range of international climate projects, while maintaining close ties to her home city. Ansari’s deep experience shows in her remarkable 20-page climate plan, which makes a number of specific policy proposals for Phoenix such as installing electric vehicle charging stations, penalizing industrial air pollution violators, expanding light rail lines, and providing rebates for water efficient appliances.

Yassamin Ansari’s climate policy platform sets an ambitious benchmark for future candidates of big U.S. cities.

– In San Diego, Sean Elo-Rivera won a council seat in District 9 with a strong climate platform, including an 11-page climate plan describing support for a San Diego Green New Deal that goes beyond the city’s existing Climate Action Plan. Elo-Rivera’s plan also proposes policies to increase access to parks and open space and invest in safe streets and transit, including support for the regional planning agency’s transformative vision for regional transportation.

– In San Jose, candidates for two open city council seats showed a commitment to climate action. In District 4, David Cohen pulled ahead of incumbent Lan Diep. Cohen’s agenda included objectives for carbon neutral city buildings, bike and pedestrian safety, and extending BART and light rail. In District 6, incumbent Dev Davis beat challenger Jake Tonkel, whose policy platform spoke specifically to environmental justice and environmental racism issues in San Jose. Davis touted her support for San Jose’s climate plan, released last year, and her vote to a community choice energy program for the city and proposed street safety improvements and integration with regional rail.

– In San Francisco, voters cast ballots in six city council races, with a range of candidates chosen by ranked choice in each district. A standout for local climate policy is Connie Chan in District 1, who worked in early stages of her career to close the fossil gas Potrero Generating Station. Chan’s campaign proposed climate resiliency projects to protect neighborhoods from stormwater and flooding, a green workforce development program with a local community college, and free or low-cost transit options for working people, and affordable clean energy options for low-income and middle-income households (Chan’s challenger Marjan Philhour also had a strong climate platform, earning extra points for mentioning vehicle-miles traveled (VMT)). Also notable is District 7 winner Joel Engardio who lacked a specific climate platform but did share policy ideas for dogs.

– In Portland, Mingus Mapps beat incumbent Chloe Eudaly to win Position 4, the only City Commission seat on voter ballots in this cycle. Mapps will be the third Black commissioner in Portland’s history. Mapps listed the environment among his top priorities, with proposals for considering environmental justice and equity in city decision-making; lowering costs or eliminating fees for transit systems; improving greenhouse gas emissions inventories; and opposing freeway expansion and other fossil fuel infrastructure proposals.

Climate champions are needed at all levels of government – and local elections are a place where individuals can make a big difference for their communities, contributing to the worldwide transition away from fossil fuels while improving quality of life for local residents.

The post Climate Candidates Notch Victories in Major City Council Races Across Western U.S. appeared first on Legal Planet.

By: Daniel Melling
Title: Climate Candidates Notch Victories in Major City Council Races Across Western U.S.
Sourced From: legal-planet.org/2020/11/05/climate-candidates-notch-victories-in-major-city-council-races-across-western-u-s/
Published Date: Thu, 05 Nov 2020 15:58:59 +0000

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