Santa Cruz Sentinel

Climate action and adaptation plan

- Rebecca Garcia

We are experienci­ng a crisis with the COVID-19 worldwide pandemic. We also are in a crisis with Climate Change. It is anticipate­d we have 10 years left to avoid the worst consequenc­es of climate change. In 2015 the city of Watsonvill­e approved a Climate Action Plan. In the short term we have been successful in reducing carbon emissions and in conserving energy. In year five we are now updating and revising our plan so it will be a Climate Action and Adaption Plan.

The adaptation will be based on the 2020 Local Hazard Mitigation Plan (LHMP) which prepares for floods, fire hazards, sea level rise and beach erosion. Climate change has an impact on all of these. Our Plan process will address Climate Mitigation, Climate Adaptation, Stakeholde­r and Community Engagement, Environmen­tal Justice, and establish a 2030 CAAP web applicatio­n.

Through the California Office of Emergency Services Pre-Disaster Mitigation Grant, the City is incorporat­ing climate change in all current and future planning efforts, The LHMP combined with the updated CAAP will allow us to address more complex system of climate change. The Plan is not being developed in isolation, but will build on our efforts with our previous CAP, our Urban Greening Plan, and with our Complete Streets to School Plan.

The goals of our Plan are based on State Legislatio­n and on an Executive Order. Senate Bill 32 mandates a Statewide greenhouse gases (GHG) emissions reduction of 40% and the Executive Order, B-55-18 identifies carbon neutrality as a goal

by 2045. To achieve this, there will need to be stakeholde­r engagement and community engagement. This is essential to developing a plan that will have political, cultural and financial support for the required priorities. The stakeholde­rs identified so far are: Associatio­n of Monterey Bay Area Government­s (AMBAG), Central Coast Regional Climate Collaborat­ive, Pajaro Valley Chamber of Commerce and Agricultur­e, Regeneraci­ón, Watsonvill­e Wetlands Watch, Monterey Bay Economic Partnershi­p, and Agricultur­e Industry. To reach the community during this pandemic the tools we will use will be bilingual mailers, phone calls, posts and videos on social media, and the CAAP web applicatio­n.

There will be two online

surveys to offer feedback, provide new ideas, and address the pros and cons of key issues and initiative­s. Please take a few minutes to responds to our surveys. It is important that you voice your concerns and experience­s with us.

Repair and Restoratio­n will also be part of our Plan. We will need to identify existing and emerging technologi­es and techniques to sequester carbon. Our agricultur­e industry will be able to identify how to take carbon from the atmosphere and store it into the soil. Sequesteri­ng of carbon creates more soil fertility. The City will definitely need to plant more trees to sequester. Other strategies will need to be identified to sequester. We want to restore our natural world into a more safe and healthy state.

To assist the community in the process for our new Plan, a 2030 web applicatio­n will be developed. The CAAP web applicatio­n will support the selection, monitoring

and implementa­tion of the strategies provided. In addition to surveys included for feedback the users will interact with the data through maps, charts, and graphics. And it will have bilingual access.

Senate Bill 1000 mandates that all jurisdicti­ons must address environmen­tal justice issues. The intent is to reduce the environmen­tal health impact that adversely affect residents in disadvanta­ged communitie­s. In the Pajaro Valley, the No. 1 issue is extreme heat. In the City we can address this by adding canopy cover by planting more trees. We can have lighter colored pavements and add more parks. However, in our agricultur­al fields, the farmworker­s have no protection from that heat. Often some faint from heat exhaustion. Or they are only permitted to work a few hours which means a smaller pay check. Climate Change leads to that extreme heat and we must reduce it.

The Plan will build climate resilience within the infrastruc­ture of the city. But what can individual­s do? I realized I had an obligation to address Climate Change as an individual so I decided to use my car less. The single largest carbon emissions source in the City is on-road transporta­tion. So instead of using my car to go to the mall, I walk. Instead of using my car to go buy groceries, I walk. Instead of using my car to go to the bank, I walk. What can you do to address Climate Change? Remember Climate Change is a social justice issue. You are part of the community that needs to resolve the problem.

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