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Post a Comment On: Bakersfield Observed

"No place for "green" here: Fresno top "green" city in Valley; Bakersfield (surprise!) down the list"

4 Comments -

1 – 4 of 4
Blogger bpandol said...

Don't ignore the important "green" aspects of all those farms which, lets face it, are vastly more "green" than a shopping mall. The pesticide misuse gets all the ink but in reality, farms are much more "eco-friendly" than ever before and even the pesticides used are much milder, more benign than ever. Not to mention all the conservation efforts, solar power, wind power and other "green" practices that are becoming more popular - IF they are cost effective. Farmers are extremely hesitant to promote themselves on these issues.
Surprised Kern's water banking/recharge programs didn't get more attention - we're a world model for groundwater banking although few here even know we do it.

July 8, 2009 at 9:52 AM

Blogger Richard Beene said...

All good points. I agree that farmers never get the proper credit for being good stewards of their land. Well said.

July 8, 2009 at 1:03 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Look also at the numbers of LEED (Green Building) registrations funded by "for profit" owners. By that measure, Bakersfield is in a four way tie for first place
along with Davis, Roseville, and Stockton.

Presently, our only "green" government building is the proposed Federal Courthouse! The other eight projects are all for private, tax-paying owners.

By the way, the Metropolitan Recycling Corp and the City/County stormwater/aquifer recharge rulesmake getting those valuable LEED points a cinch.

Ted Blockley AIA, LEED AP

July 9, 2009 at 6:23 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Logic check on recycling: When there is no demand for recyclables (cardboard has dropped in some places from $120 to $20 a ton because China doesn't need it to box up products Americans are not buying) perhaps recyling is a waste of resources and a salve to make us feel better about driving an SUV to the gym where we consume electricity on the treadmill in air-conditioned comfort. Read John Tierney's 1996 article, "Recycling is Garbage."

July 9, 2009 at 5:24 PM

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