The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

City Council creates trust nd for clean

Pool of cash boosts goal of 100% energy transition by 2035.

- By Riley Bunch riley.bunch@ajc.com

As Atlanta’s climate becomes more harsh in the coming years, low-in- come residents will be able to access city funds to help transition their homes to more sustainabl­e energy systems.

Atlanta City Council passed legislatio­n Monday that creates a new pool of money to help reduce energy bills for households in areas of the city plagued by high temperatur­es, limited tree cover and outdated cool- ing systems.

Council members approved the transfer of $500,000 from the Affordable Housing Trust Fund to the new Atlanta Community Energy Fund to both help residents through energy programs and support the city’s lofty goal of reaching 100% clean energy by 2035.

A citywide study last year found that residents in neigh- borhoods to the west and south of downtown are most vulnerable to climate change-fueled weather events like flash floods and extreme temperatur­es.

Residents in those areas face disproport­ionate finan- cial impact from weather disasters and the everyday struggle to stay cool, accord- ing to the study.

lanta was the first city in the country to conduct a block-by-block heat vulner- ability study, said Council member Liliana Bakhtiari, who championed the cli- mate fund bill.

“One of those things that was quickly identified in the process was energy burden,” she said. “There are people — low- ncome households and especial y low- ncome renters — who are having to choose between paying their utilities and essentiall­y feeding them- selves or treating illnesses by going to the doctor.”

With the start-up money, the mayor’s Office of Sus- tainabilit­y and Resilience will begin building out var- ious programs over the next year like a process to help residents pay for utilities.

Based on data from Geor- gia Power — including a new rate increase set to hit bills starting this month — the average Atlanta customer pays $165.39 a month for utilities.

“This is about not just offering BandAids to long term problems,” Bakhtiari said. “This is also about creat- ing opportunit­ies for afford- able weatheriza­tion to keep the cost of housing low.”

Future funding for the trust will come from var- ious streams like revenue from sustainabl­e energy tax credit programs, fed- eral grants and the city’s general fund, she said.

During the committee review of the legislatio­n, council members went back and forth over how much money to initially dedicate to the fund — at one point the amount dipped to $300,000.

Council member Alex Wan, who sponsored the bill alongside Bakhtiari, pushed to increase the funding up to $500,000.

“I know that the intent was to put some seed money in there,” he said. “And this is definitely a far cry from the amounts that we were originally contemplat­ing when these discussion­s began.”

“If we’re going to do this, I think we need to do it meaningful­ly,” Wan said. “And I just don’t think ($300,000) is signaling what I think the city should be signaling.

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens also has an ambitious goal of the city reaching 100% clean energy by 2035.

“Close to 50,000 households are energy burdened within our city, and we are constant y searching for ways to help,” he said in a statement. “We are following a strategic roadmap to reduce overall energy consumptio­n and emissions within the City’s buildings and the Atlanta CommunityE­nergy Trust Fund will allow for innovative solutions and swifter action as we focus on energy efficiency solutions.”

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