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CURRENTLY SPG IS WORKING ON
OVERALL PROGRAM DESCRIPTION
SPG programs are aimed at three levels:
1. Personal Activities
We can be more sustainable and provide an example to others through:
using less energy and supporting the development of renewable energy,
using products in our homes that are safe for the environment,
planting home gardens and supporting farmers markets and locally grown food,
composting, recycling, and reducing the amount of waste,
conserving water and capturing rainwater,
walking , biking, or using alternative transportation, and
buying local products and services
What You Can Do At Home
2. Working with Neighbors
We are committed to helping others make changes of their choosing. We will organize work parties and events in which we can share ideas, tools, and our labor to build a more sustainable future.
By working together with neighbors to build composting bins, vegetable gardens, or cisterns -- sharing skills and ideas -- we will also be building strong social networks.
3. Community Projects
Sustainable Pacific Grove is also committed to undertaking community projects. Our focus will be on completing
concrete projects and on assisting the City and the schools with projects that enable self-reliance and
sustainability. We are committed to assist the city in its efforts to implement the actions recommended
in the Urban Environmental Accords and the US Mayors Climate Protection Agreement.
We envision promoting such projects as development of community gardens, locally based manufacturing and services, a local water supply, use
of solar and other energy saving installations on public buildings.
NEW:
Transition Projects
See the lists of
transitions orientated projects
developed from the "
Action Plan for a Sustainable Monterey County"
.
SUSTAINABLE ACTIVITIES PURSUED ELSEWHERE
In addition to these activities outlined above, Sustainable Pacific Grove will continue to explore additional
programs as time and volunteer assistance become available. The following listing includes
examples of community-initiated projects that are being explored here or in other areas to increase
self-reliance.
Economic Development
Development of new local manufacturing and local retail establishments
Shop locally programs (scavenger hunts, community business maps)
Promoting food produced within 100 miles (Interdependence Day Celebrations)
Food
Community gardens to provide food for local residents, planting rows for needy
Residential gardens (converting one lawn at a time, walking tours of residential gardens, seedling distribution program, technical assistance to residential gardeners)
Food cooperatives, farmers markets, food banks distribution
Transport backup to bring food from regional/local growing areas
Food storage education drying and canning
Aquaculture programs to supplement food sources (ponds and ocean)
Congregate meal programs (Meals on Wheels programs expanded)
Water
Use of cisterns, small collection systems to capture rainwater, drip systems, low flow toilets
City-wide collection and storing storm run-off for use for irrigation purposes
Conservation, including xeroscaping for home and business landscapes
Energy
Audit of energy practices and retrofit of local government/school districts buildings
Educational programs encouraging residential and business energy saving retrofits.
Electricity production from renewable sources such as wind turbines, water turbines (tidal exchange), solar photovoltaic cells
Biofuels supplied by crops and local distribution centers
Transportation
Rail, transit expansion, bicycle and walking,
Reductions in speed limits and non-essential trips
Telecommuting, compressed work week, worker relocation closer to job sites
Carpooling, ride sharing, certified hitchhiking programs, car cooperatives
Local delivery services for food and pharmacy
City use of hybrids or electric for non-pursuit vehicles
Other
Community barn buildings and shared project construction (all project types)
Recycling programs (community garbage fashion shows), reuse - community sharing
Consumer education (12 step consumer program)
Education in self-reliance, gardening, carpentry, etc
Apprentice programs to transfer skills
Community theater, local entertainment, counseling
Sustainability reference library
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