The Oakland Press

Oakland County must lead on protecting the environmen­t

- JimNash is the Oakland County Water Resources Commission­er. Andrew Sarpolis is a co-founder of Turn Oakland County Green and a senior organizing representa­tive with the Sierra Club

Protecting Oakland County’s environmen­t requires dedicated leadership. We must strive to protect our county’s treasures: our forests, lakes, rivers, streams, and our people. We have the most inland lakes of any county in Michigan. We’re surrounded by one-fifth of all the world’s freshwater, here in the Great Lakes. That is our heritage, our moral duty to protect for future generation­s. That’s why we’re glad to see recent developmen­ts at the Oakland County Commission.

Much is at stake in Oakland County as the climate crisis heats up. Over the past 30 years we’ve seen temperatur­es rise, intense storms increase, insect population­s plummet and natural spaces become less biodiverse and balanced. This is, of course, not exclusive to Oakland County. It is happening across the globe. But, we can all do our part in our own communitie­s. And indeed, as federal leadership has retreated, that is what wemust do. If we don’t, it is likely Oakland County will be a far less hospitable place in 2100.

There was a time in the nottoo-distant-past that leadership in Oakland County wouldn’t consider climate change in most of its policies. Thankfully, we have moved past that era. Last November, the Oakland County Commission declared a ‘ climate emergency.’

The county has since overseen the planting of 20,000 oak tree seedlings. There is a proposal for the creation of a native plant initiative. These will help us protect and restore habitats, particular­ly since important species are coming under increasing threat here.

In 2018, the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change said we had 12 years tomake significan­t reductions to our carbon emissions. While some progress has been made, we’re still not on target.

County Executive David Coulter’s proposed budget supports new funding to “focus on developing a plan to achieve net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 utilizing renewable energy and increasing energy efficiency.”

This is an exciting first step and a break from decades of county-level policies. Oakland County will become a climate leader, setting goals to be netzero and renewable by 2050.

Also, they must build up a robust sustainabi­lity initiative that develops policies to update our infrastruc­ture while investing in underserve­d communitie­s, improving health, developing skilled labor, and respecting workers. Investment­s today will have huge paybacks in future years.

The green economy can be one that works for everybody. In the same wayMetro Detroit led the industrial revolution, and we built the Arsenal for Democracy, we should make our region a trailblaze­r in sustainabi­lity investment­s that uplifts all our communitie­s and people.

Oakland County is the second most populous and the wealthiest county in Michigan. We have great universiti­es and plenty of green businesses. So, let’s be a leader in developing those solutions. If anybody can do it, we can. It will require hard work. However, future generation­s will be thankful that we did it.

We can and must be a model for climate action.

 ??  ?? Andrew Sapolis
Andrew Sapolis
 ??  ?? Jim Nash
Jim Nash

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States