Save the Date for the SGVCOG Strategic Planning Session at the RMC Headquarters - May 13th! Save the Date for the 4th Annual Jack Phillips Awards June 19th!

 


 

 

Energy, Environment, and Natural Resources Committee

Background
This committee addresses a number of issues related to the environment including open space, water and air quality.

Open Space

 Located in a valley just below the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains, the San Gabriel Valley land is 50% zoned for institutional and open space use. However, most of that open space is included as part of the Angeles National Forest. The rest of the San Gabriel Valley is already 99% built out, leaving little room for new parks. With a state standard of 5 acres of open space for every 1,000 people, a doubling of the park acreage is required to meet this standard. It is imperative that communities in the San Gabriel Valley work together to focus on accommodating open space needs in a built-out urban environment. The San Gabriel & Lower Los Angeles Rivers and Mountains Conservancy (RMC), which the SGVCOG played a key role in helping to create, has worked with our local communities for open space and habitat preservation and development. In fact, since the COG worked with then State Senator Hilda Solis to create the RMC, almost $50 million in RMC funding over the last five years have gone to SGVCOG member cities to support various open space and habitat projects.

Check out current RMC projects in the San Gabriel Valley by clicking here.

 Air Quality

As the San Gabriel Valley is located within South Coast Air Basin (one of the most polluted air basins in the nation), air quality within the region is of crucial importance to stakeholders within the Valley. In 2001, the maximum pollutant concentrations (ozone and particulate matter) exceeded federal standards by wide margins. The East San Gabriel Valley, in particular, had high ozone concentrations. The Basin’s severe air pollution problem is a consequence of the combination of emissions from the nation’s second largest urban area and meteorological conditions which are adverse to the dispersion of those emissions. The average wind speed for Los Angeles is the lowest of the nation’s ten largest urban areas. In addition, the summertime maximum mixing height (an index of how well pollutants can be dispersed vertically in the atmosphere) in Southern California averages the lowest in the U.S. The Southern California area is also an area with abundant sunshine, which drives the photochemical reactions which form pollutants such as ozone.

 

Water

The San Gabriel Valley’s main source of water supply comes from its groundwater basin; in fact, 90% or 280,000 acre-feet of the Valley’s annual water supply come from the basin. The groundwater basin is 167 square miles of surface area, has more than 8 million acre-feet of water, and is pumped from about 200 wells. About 10% of the San Gabriel Valley’s water needs are met by “imported” surface water delivered directly to customers. This imported water also helps in replenishing the groundwater supply. There are three important groundwater basins. The Main San Gabriel Basin is the largest, and is separated from the Raymond Basin to the northwest by the Raymond Fault, which serves as a partial barrier to groundwater flow. The Puente Basin is a shallow basin that underlies the Puente Valley and is tributary to the Main San Gabriel Basin. These three basins are managed separately.

Water in the San Gabriel Valley is an integral component of its history, having been critical in developing the Valley’s agricultural economy. Later, following a postwar boom in industrial development and the release of toxic industrial chemicals into the groundwater system, a number of serious water quality issues surfaced. Significant concentrations of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) were discovered in the Valley’s groundwater in the late 1970s and remain the main focus of current groundwater cleanup. Other water quality issues involve nitrates, perchlorate, and other emerging contaminants – all with serious public health consequences. Besides contamination, other water supply challenges include: groundwater storage opportunities, infrastructure to maintain water levels, use of recycled water, consumer water conservation, and storm water capture.

Organization
This committee consists of elected and appointed officials from member agencies. Staff members from the Rivers and Mountains Conservancy also serve as ex-officio members.

Chair


Mary Ann Lutz

415 S. Ivy Ave.
Monrovia, CA 91016
Phone: (626) 932-5550

Mary Ann Lutz has served as Chair of the SGVCOG Energy, Environment and Natural Resources Committee since 2007. She was first elected to the Monrovia City Council in 2003. She has also served as Monrovia’s representative on the COG Governing Board since 2003. Ms. Lutz currently serves as the Vice Chair of the Regional Water Quality Control Board on appointment by the Governor.

 

 

Vice-Chair


Denis Bertone

245 East Bonita Avenue
San Dimas, CA 91773
Phone: (909) 394-6200

Denis Bertone was first elected to serve on the San Dimas City Council in 1998. He has served as San Dimas’s Delegate on the COG’s Governing Board since 1999. As a COG Delegate, he is a member of the Rivers and Mountains Conservancy Board and the Energy and Environment Committee.

 

 

Membership
There are currently five (5) member agencies that participate on the Energy, Environment and Natural Resources Committee. The member agencies and their representative on this committee are as follows:

Member Agency Representative
San Dimas Denis Bertone
Claremont Sam Pedroza
Monrovia Mary Ann Lutz

Meeting Dates & Times

The fourth Wednesday of the month at 11:30 a.m. at the Metropolitan Water District.

Agendas

Date

Agenda

Minutes

April 2008 Agenda Packet Minutes
March 2008 Agenda    (Full Packet) Minutes
February 2008 Agenda Packet Minutes
January 2008   Minutes
November 2007   Minutes
October 2007   Minutes
September 2007   Minutes
June 2007   Minutes
April 2007   Minutes
March 2007   Minutes
February 2007   Minutes
January 2007   Minutes

Hot Topics

Model Ordinance Collection

Under the direction of the EENR Committee, staff has begun to develop a compendium of model environmental ordinances on a number of topics including: energy efficiency, solar energy, green buildings, water recycling and/or conservation, building materials, trees, recycling, solid waste, open space, and walkability/bikeability. Model ordinances, resolutions, and green city action plans are being collected from cities within the San Gabriel Valley, as well as other jurisdictions in Southern California and beyond for the purpose of facilitating cites' efforts to adopt ordinances that protect our Valley's critical natural resources.  

   Collected Documents by Topic Area 
Green City Plans
Environmentally Preferred Purchasing
Trees
Green Building Programs
Monrovia Environmental Accords 
Pasadena
Santa Monica
Greater, Greener Manhattan Beach

San Francisco EPP

Santa Rosa EPP

California State EPP

Environmental Protection Agency

 

Santa Monica

 
Energy Efficiency
Open Space
Solar Power
Air Quality
SGVCOG
Los Angeles
Water
Solid Waste & Recycling
Bikeability/Walkability
General Plans

 Water Efficient Landscape

Water Recycling

Water Conservation

Stormwater

Portland Solid Waste & Recycling Collection Ordinance

San Francisco
 
Pasadena
Baldwin Park
 
Los Angeles Industrial Waste Control Ordinance

San Francisco Better Streets Policy

Pasadena Pedestrian Plan

Monterey Park Mixed Use and Pedestrian Linkages Plan

Palo Alto Bicycle Transportation Plan

San Diego Urban Village Overlay Zones Ordinance

Other Resources

Ahwanhee Principles:

US Conference of Mayors:

 

 

Bulletin Board (for members only)


Staff Contacts for EENR Committee

 
 

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