The TCCPI Newsletter
Issue #63: March-April 2021
TCCPI is a multisector collaboration seeking to leverage the climate action commitments made by Cornell University, Ithaca College, Tompkins Cortland Community College, Tompkins County, the City of Ithaca, and the Town of Ithaca to mobilize a countywide energy efficiency effort and accelerate the transition to a clean energy economy. Launched in June 2008 and generously supported by the Park Foundation, TCCPI is a project of the Sustainable Markets Foundation.

We are committed to helping Tompkins County achieve a dynamic economy, healthy environment, and resilient community through a focus on energy efficiency and renewable energy. 
City Appoints Luis Aguirre-Torres to lead Ithaca Green New Deal
by Matt Butler, Ithaca Voice
The City of Ithaca announced last month the hiring of Luis Aguirre-Torres to lead the city's Green New Deal efforts as the Director of Sustainability.

Aguirre-Torres has more than 15 years of domestic and international experience working with "government, non-profit and business sectors in green technology, policy development and implementation, emissions reduction, green entrepreneurship and related issues," according to a press release announcing his arrival. He's done extensive work in Latin America, receiving a commendation from President Barack Obama for his work there.

“Since the Green New Deal initiative was unanimously approved by Common Council in June 2019, we have sought the right person to lead the City in achieving our ambitious climate and equity goals," said Mayor Svante Myrick.
Luis Aguirre-Torres, the new Director of Sustainability for the City of Ithaca.
“We were all disappointed when the pandemic caused a delay in the search process. The silver lining is that we had the opportunity to hire Luis, who brings impressive experience and knowledge to the position,” noted the Mayor.

Aguirre-Torres, who stepped into his new position in late March, will lead the City’s Green New Deal initiative to address climate change, economic inequality and racial injustice through five main goals:
  • Targeting community-wide carbon-neutrality by 2030
  • Meeting the electricity needs of City government operations with 100% renewable electricity by 2025
  • Reducing emissions from the City vehicle fleet by 50% by 2025
  • Ensuring benefits are shared among all local communities to reduce historical social and economic inequities
  • Facilitating a comprehensive public engagement process

Myrick credited Sustainability Coordinator Nick Goldsmith, who also works with the Town of Ithaca, and other staff and community members with the progress that has been made on the Green New Deal initiative so far. Next steps will include conducting a Greenhouse Gas Inventory, updating the City’s Climate Action Plan, and kicking off a public engagement process.

Editor's Note: Aguirre-Torres will be meeting with TCCPI members at the April 30th meeting. If you're interested in attending and have not yet received the Zoom link, please contact me at pbardaglio@gmail.com.
Next TCCPI Meeting
Friday, April 30, 2021
9 to 11 am
Due to the current pandemic, the monthly TCCPI meetings have moved online. Contact Peter Bardaglio, the TCCPI coordinator, for further details at pbardaglio@gmail.com.
Dryden Launches New Community Campaign for Clean Energy
by Jessica Wickham, Tompkins Weekly
Marie McCrae, coordinator of Energy Wi$e Dryden with her cat Photo provided.
Town officials announced in early April that Dryden will be launching a new community campaign — called Energy Wi$e Dryden — designed to inform Dryden residents about opportunities for financial help in making their homes warmer.

This campaign, which has already started reaching out to Dryden residents, was created in collaboration with HeatSmart Tompkins. The main coordinator for the campaign is longtime Dryden resident Marie McRae, who has worked in climate activism and education for many years.

McRae’s environmental work started back in 2009, when she worked as an activist with the group Dryden Resource Awareness Coalition, which focuses on reducing energy use affordably.
In 2013, when Dryden was in the midst of an anti-fracking battle, McRae joined in the fight along with other Dryden residents. Once that effort was over and fracking was banned in Dryden, she and others wanted to work on something else.

“Dryden was one of the first towns to ban fracking, and we wanted to stop being anti-whatever and work for something,” McRae said. “So, we wanted people to know about solar energy and solar panels on their houses. That’s what we did.”

McRae and others then formed Solarize Tompkins (now Solar Tompkins), a volunteer initiative that seeks to increase the number of solar panels in the county by making the process of getting panels as streamlined and affordable as possible.

The groundwork for Energy Wi$e Dryden was laid around 2017, when Dryden created a Climate Smart Community Task Force, chaired by Alice Green, which worked with the state’s Climate Smart Communities (CSC) Certification program. In early 2021, NYSERDA put out the next iteration of the CSC, the Clean Energy Communities (CEC) program.

One of the actions NYSERDA calls for under the CEC program is a community campaign for education about using clean energy, reducing heating bills and other related efficiency efforts, McRae explained. The campaign aims to connect Dryden residents to some of the grants, subsidies or low-rate financing that’s available for insulation, air sealing and heat pumps.

“We really want to help people connect to ways to make their homes more comfortable and still pay less for their utility bills because once you seal up the spots in your house that are letting the cold air in in the winter, and you put more insulation in your attic or walls, you’re going to have a warmer, cozier house,” McRae said. “And there’s money available to help low- [to] moderate-income people do that.”

Energy Wi$e Dryden mainly helps connect residents to two NYSERDA programs — the Empower Program and the Assisted Home Performance Program, both of which provide grants to low- and moderate-income families to have energy efficiency work done on their homes.

Energy Wi$e Dryden has started to reach out to residents and has set up an online form that residents can fill out if they’re interested in these sorts of services. Although the campaign is currently waiting on the final stamp of approval from NYSERDA to officially launch, residents can still fill out the form.

As McRae explained, Energy Wi$e Dryden and HeatSmart Tompkins share a common goal, and the partnership between them is invaluable to the success of the campaign. McRae encourages Dryden residents to reach out if they’re interested in learning more about the campaign or any of the other related services.
Emily Belle Coordinates Energy Navigators & PowerHouse Program
by Thomas Hirasuna, Energy Navigators
Emily Belle has served since October 2020 as the Community Energy Outreach & Advising Program Leader at Get Your GreenBack Tompkins. Emily is not unfamiliar with Ithaca, having grown up here; she graduated from the Lehman Alternative Community School (LACS) before going to Oberlin College in Ohio, majoring in Environmental Studies.

Her interest in sustainability, especially with respect to farming and agriculture, started early with learning an appreciation for the environment and climate issues from local teachers and mentors and her parents, who are both educators.
Emily Belle. Photo by Annie Gordon.
While at LACS Emily worked with The Youth Farm Project, another formative experience. In addition to her role at Get Your GreenBack, Emily maintains a position at the Sciencenter as Animal Keeper, which includes assisting with care of the museum’s live collections.

Among her duties are energy advising for Tompkins County residents. She also coordinates the Energy Navigators and PowerHouse (“Tiny Home on Wheels”) programs. The PowerHouse is currently parked at the Sciencenter, where Emily leads tours to small groups (Covid-19 precautions). Since the end of December, Emily estimates that about 100 people of all ages have seen the PowerHouse. Once the Covid-19 situation ends, she will probably take the PowerHouse on school visits. One current task for Emily involves acquiring a truck capable of moving the 12,000 lb./24 ft. long exhibit.

Outside of her work at Cornell Cooperative Extension - Tompkins County, Emily is a dedicated dog owner, making frequent trips to the Dog Park. She enjoys swimming, and has swum across three of the Finger Lakes (Cayuga, Seneca and Keuka). She also helped establish the Ithaca Sciencenter Workers’ Union.

Emily looks forward to working with people through the Energy Navigators program where she can channel her skills and passion toward helping families in the community improve their energy efficiency and reduce costs.

This article appeared originally in the Get Your GreenBack Blog.
Take a step to save money and energy!
One Last Thing: A Tale of Competing Tipping Points
We occupy a peculiar moment in history. On the one hand, the climate teeters on the edge of catastrophic destabilization. It's become clear that we're not on track to stay under 1.5 degrees Celsius, the point at which scientists consider runaway climate change to become highly likely, and even 2 degrees might be slipping out of our reach.

Other worrisome trends abound. There is increasing evidence that the West Antarctic ice sheets are heading towards irreversible melting. The Gulf Stream is slowing down noticeably, in part due to the melting of the Greenland ice sheet, a development that will have a profound impact on the weather systems and sea levels on both sides of the Atlantic. As a result of hotter and drier weather and deforestation in the Amazon, one of the planet's most important carbon sinks is disappearing as the rain forest transitions into a savannah.
President Biden kicks off the Virtual Leaders Summit on Climate on April 22, 2021. White House photo by Adam Schultz/Public Domain.
These are only three of the seven climate tipping points that scientists have identified as posing the greatest threats. They constitute key elements of an earth system in which reinforcing loops, known as positive feedbacks, could send the world into an entirely different state. Seemingly small planetary changes, we're beginning to grasp, can rapidly snowball into very big ones.

These climate tipping points have occurred before. There is compelling evidence of such abrupt shifts in the paleoclimate record. For example, sudden warming episodes during the last glacial period caused temperature changes of several degrees Celsius over short time spans in large parts of the North Atlantic Ocean.
Faced with the gravity of the current climate situation, it's difficult not to be overcome by a growing sense of despair and even resignation. All around us signs of a dangerous, unfamiliar world are emerging: megadroughts, wildfires, rising sea levels, extreme weather events unprecedented in their scale and frequency. As Alex Steffens observes, "To look at this moment clearly is to see that the planetary crisis isn’t an issue, it’s an era." It's no longer a question, in other words, of saving the earth for our grandchildren; the alarming, alien world set in motion by global warming has already showed up on our doorstep.

The question is, what are we going to do about it? Both climate denialism and climate doomism are morally unacceptable options. There is another pathway. Juxtaposed against the array of runaway climate tipping points is what Gabbi Mocatta and Rebecca Harris call "a tipping point for climate action." It's the extraordinary tension between the tipping points for climate destabilization and collective action that makes the present moment so fraught. The probability of catastrophe versus the possibility of hope: which will win out in the end? Will the tipping point for broad-based climate action take place before the climate tipping points? The stakes have never been higher.

The case for hope rests, oddly enough, on the fact that we know more about the science of climate change than ever before. As Mocatta and Harris put it, "Although much of [this science] is devastating, it’s also resoundingly clear." The incontrovertible nature of the climate data means that policy makers have a stronger obligation than ever before to act on its findings. The reentry of the U.S. into the Paris Agreement and the announcement at the recent White House virtual summit that the nation is committed to reducing its greenhouse gas emissions by 50%-52% below its 2005 emissions levels by 2030 are just two indications that policy makers understand the need to respond to the latest research.

At the same time, public support for action has grown dramatically. The largest global opinion survey on climate change ever conducted, The People's Climate Vote, found that even in the midst of the 2020 pandemic 64% of people considered climate change to be "a global emergency." Of the people who viewed climate change in this light, 59% said that "the world should do everything necessary and urgently in response."

The sense of peril reflected in this survey is perhaps the best news of all. It suggests that we may be ready to abandon the "business as usual" approach and move beyond the gradualism that has characterized much of climate policy action up to now. It raises the possibility that we can finally engage in the debate that truly matters: how do we transform our way of life for the benefit of all to meet the existential challenge before us? "Urgency and agency," as Michael Mann reminds us, "make a winning combination in our fight against climate change."

Peter Bardaglio
TCCPI Coordinator
Be sure to visit the website for TCCPI's latest project, the Ithaca 2030 District, an interdisciplinary public-private collaboration working to create a groundbreaking high-performance building district in Downtown Ithaca.
309 N. Aurora St.,
Ithaca, NY 14850
207-229-6183