|
Greening Away the Urban Blues
An interview with Marcia McNally of the Oakland organization Urban Ecology
by Sarah Bardeen of the Green City Project
Green City: What prompted the development of Blueprint and what would
you like to achieve with it?
Marcia McNally: It was intended to be the organization’s vision for a sustainable
Bay Area... but also more importantly to be a foot in the door, to really start a
dialogue about what can be done...
GC: How did issues of economic inequality figure into the Blueprint?
MM: An interesting case study we did -- and this is one of the ones I like
the best because it’s an unconventional partnership -- is in Redwood City at Cañada
College. The college started a downtown branch specifically to do entrepreneurship
training for low-income people that live close by. It’s available to people within
walking distance who don’t have a care to get to the Highway 280 campus. It turns
out Redwood City, much to most people’s surprise, has about 50% of the kids on Aid
for Families and Dependent Children (AFDC). Everyone thinks that the only low-income
communities are in Marin City, Richmond, Oakland, and Bayview/Hunter’s Point. They’re
actually everywhere in the Bay Area.
GC: How would you rate the Bay Area now in terms of sustainability?
MM: When I first started working on the project I was really surprised to
find that other cities were doing so much more than the Bay Area. It’s partly because
life is still really good here; it’s a great place to live, but the damning and damaging
adjustments people have made to their lives to deal with traffic increasing commuting
time and things like that have come slowly, so that people haven’t quite hit the
boiling point yet. Air quality to a person’s eye is good relative to Los Angeles.
We can always feel like we’re better than Los Angeles. But in fact, other places
have done a lot more.
GC: Do you put forth a vision for individual action as well as community-based
action?
MM: There are simple things like living in an existing city, living in an
existing neighborhood. If You’re going to buy your first home, buy an older home
instead of a new home or tract home way out in the Greenfield Project. Buy locally,
walk to go shopping. Those are very small things but they [help] people figure out
how to enter the movement....
GC: Are there examples of sustainability in the Bay Area right now that particularly
inspire you?
MM: The Crossing Project in Mountain View where they recycled the shopping
center and turned it into a multi-unit, mixed-use transit-oriented project and they
relocated the train station -- I love that project! I actually lived in that town
in my senior year in high school and would ride my bike to that shopping center which
was really far away from anybody.
I also think what’s happening along the Caltrain line in terms of redevelopment in
the downtown so that living, working, and shopping can all be done on foot is tremendous.
Both the city of San Rafael and Concord have neighborhood programs. The Urban Ecology
staff has decided to work with neighborhoods to do planning... I think the neighborhood
is a really important unit in which to make change. There hasn’t been neighborhood-based
planning for a long, long time and to have it institutionalized at the city level
is, I think, terrific.
As a place that’s most progressive: San Jose, hands down. they have been aggressively
pursuing downtown revitalization, the whole sustainable agenda, for more than 20
years. Having urban growth boundaries, doing infill housing, reinvesting in old low-income
housing stock to make neighborhoods stronger....
GC: Is there anything else you want to get across about Blueprint right
now?
MM: In doing the Blueprint it became clear that the Bay Area -- if
it continues at its same path of development -- is going to be in bad shape soon.
But there are a lot of things that can be done about it and the Blueprint’s about
putting forth that positive vision. It talks about projects that are already happening
that have a track record to show how sustainability is do-able.
For a long time discussions about environmental issues seemed to end up often about
recycling -- which is a really important thing. Recycling has been a great vehicle
to raise consciousness about environmental issues... We found that more people recycle
in the U.S. than vote. Which is depressing -- good for recycling, bad for democracy.
But even if everyone in the States recycled, it would only have a 1-2% impact on
the waste stream. We think that in order to make more long-term changes we need to
extend “recycling” to recycling the entire city. We hope that people will take a
new look at the city as a real resource to recycle and reuse, to shape something
that creates fantastic living for Bay Area residents.
We don’t have to just wring our hands -- we can actually do something about it. I
personally think that within the next 5 or 10 years you’re not only going to see
more of these positive projects starting up around the Bay Area. There are going
to be some major opportunities that hopefully will have along-term positive effect.
So take part!
-- From the Green City Calendar
|