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Managing Marcellus: A three-part training series
May 21, June 13, June 21, 2012
The Managing Marcellus training series is specifically designed for the interest and needs of municipal officials. The programs are open to the public; however, a working knowledge of the powers, duties, roles and responsibilities of local government elected and appointed officials is required to attend these programs.
LEARN MORE


 



A collaborative group of over 30 community planners, innovators, nonprofits, community leaders, cyclists, city officials, educators, investors, neighborhood developers, business leaders, and civic partnerships, exploring Bus Rapid Transit for Pittsburgh.
LEARN MORE


New Tools in the Fight Against Blight
A southwestern PA Training Series

LEARN MORE.


11th annual SWPA Smart Growth Conference
conference banner
"Smart Growth is Smart Business"
Tuesday, December 13, 2011


Sustainable Pittsburgh is pleased to be part of the Breathe Project.
logo for the Breathe campaign to improve air quality in southwestern PA


Listen to the Walls Street Journal Radio "Green and Alternative Energy Series" - Sustainable Pittsburgh sponsored these short, 60 second radio spots, which explored energy issues including investments, light bulbs, and solar. Listen now.


Greening Southwest PA - A video blog concerning SWPA's municipalities and what they are doing to become more sustainable. Read more.


How sustainable is your community?Rapid Assessment logo


Missed the latest 3E Comic?
View it here.


GET INVOLVED:logo for Power of 32


Receive a Sustainability Assessment!
Led by a team of experts, our assessments help businesses and municipalities save money in operations, conserve resources, and enhance civic stewardship. More information click here.

Reduce your carbon footprint with NativeEnergy

Get the latest information from Sustainable Pittsburgh's weekly 3E Links e-newsletters.

Managing Marcellus: A Three-Part Training Series

A partnership of Local Government Academy, Sustainable Pittsburgh, and the Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission, the "Managing Marcellus" training series is specifically designed for the interest and needs of municipal officials. Following is a listing of the upcoming events.

Program #1:
Managing Roads During Marcellus Development
Monday, May 21
6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Cranberry Township Municipal Building
Limited to 40 registrants

Program #2:
Public Safety Roundtable
June 13
6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Murrysville Community Center
Limited to 50 registrants

Program #3:
Pipelines, Easements & Rights of Way
June 21
6:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Canonsburg Borough Municipal Building
Limited to 40 registrants

Attendees may register for one class at a time, or for all three at once. Offered with funding support from the Richard King Mellon Foundation, the programs are open to the public; however, a working knowledge of the powers, duties, roles and responsibilities of local government elected and appointed officials is required to attend these programs. Cost is $20 per session or $45 for all 3 sessions. Discounts and scholarships available.


Are you ready for the ten-day weekend?
Great Outdoors Week begins next week!

Whether you're new to the outdoors scene or a seasoned veteran, you'll have plenty of activities to choose from during this ten day celebration! Great Outdoors Week showcases our region as a hub for outdoor recreation activities like biking, hiking, paddling and much more.

As part of the 60+ events that are typically scheduled, three signature events are featured during Great Outdoors Week:
Friday, May 11 - Learn to Row and Paddle
Friday, May 18 - National Bike to Work Day/Car Free Fridays
Saturday, May 19 - Venture Outdoors Festival Presented by Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield

Join us at the Great Outdoors Week Kickoff in Market Square - May 9
Stop by Market Square in Downtown Pittsburgh on Wednesday, May 9 from 11am to 1pm for some kickoff fun! You're invited to try out the Venture Outdoors climbing wall, visit with outdoor recreation groups, practice loading a bicycle on a bus bike rack, and listen to some great music from Scott Hall One Man Band. A free raffle drawing will also be held with lots of cool prizes! The event will go on rain or shine. Bring your lunch (and maybe your poncho!) and come get a taste of what's in store for Great Outdoors Week 2012!

Did you know?
The Keystone Recreation, Park and Conservation Fund (Keystone Fund) is Pennsylvania's only funding source that directs money specifically to community park and recreation grants and land trust grants. However, the proposed 2012-2013 state budget would permanently eliminate all conservation, park and recreation funding from the Fund.

The Keystone Fund has helped support approximately 850 trail projects; 120,000 acres of green space for county and municipal parks, greenways, wildlife habitat and other open space uses; 2,600 community park development projects, including ballfields and playgrounds; and state park and forest improvements including construction and rehabilitation of restrooms, parking lots, roads, water fountains, etc. Each Keystone Fund dollar typically leverages $2.28 in direct local investments in our parks, trails, and community green spaces.

Examples of local projects that have benefitted from support from the Keystone Fund include the Three Rivers Heritage Trail, sections of the Great Allegheny Passage between McKeesport and Pittsburgh, the Montour Trail, and Millvale Riverfront Park, among many others.

As you're enjoying the Great Outdoors this coming week, learn more about how to get involved in maintaining the Keystone Fund for future projects--and future enjoyment of the outdoors. A wealth of information is available at www.conservationadvocate.org.


One Public Meeting Remaining
Learn about and provide input on Bus Rapid Transit in Pittsburgh


Uptown:
Tuesday, May 8, 2012 from 6–8pm
UPMC Mercy Hospital, Sr. Ferdinand Clark Auditorium (2nd Floor, Building D)
1400 Locust Street
** Free parking in Mercy Garage—ticket will be validated.

Pursuant to the Pittsburgh-Oakland-East End Transit study, a series of community meetings are being held to provide an opportunity for the public to review and comment on potential alternate alignments for the proposed bus rapid transit (BRT) system connecting Downtown Pittsburgh, Oakland, and other eastern neighborhoods.

This final meeting to date will include a brief presentation on bus rapid transit and the project corridor, followed by an opportunity to review and comment on potential bus rapid transit alignments for each neighborhood area.

The Pittsburgh-Oakland-East End Transit study is a cooperative undertaking between the Port Authority of Allegheny County, the City of Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, and over 30 organizations and institutions. The study will identify ways to improve transit service, facilitate development, and enhance the quality of life in the study corridor, and will conduct required engineering and environmental studies to advance the preferred alternative.

For additional information on the project and on bus rapid transit in Pittsburgh, visit GetTherePGH.org.

The meeting locations are compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). In addition, persons interested in these meetings who do not speak English as their primary language or who has a limited ability to read, write, speak, or understand English or requires special assistance to view the plans or need additional information please contact John Clark at the following number (412) 973-9285.


Green Workplace Challenge Leaderboard Update
New businesses rise to the top as more green actions are put into practice

New businesses rise to the top as more green actions are put into practice
Businesses participating in the Green Workplace Challenge (GWC) continue their efforts toward energy efficiency and other sustainable practices, and the businesses that have pushed the most in the past few months have the competition points to show for their hard work.

In the Large Business category, Bayer climbed to the leading slot (87 points) from its earlier 3rd place position. PNC also nudged its way into the 2nd place slot (60 points) from its earlier 5th place position.

The Medium Business competition remained more stable, with Del Monte Foods (42 points) maintaining the leading slot.

EvolveEA (78 points, up from its earlier 5 points) flipped places with Pashek Associates, Ltd. (31 points) in the Small Business category.

In the competition’s Observer category, Allegheny County posted a 53-point gain, Over the Bar Bicycle Café climbed 33 points, the Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank jumped 30 points, and Carnegie Mellon added 14 points.

Some of the largest jumps occurred when several of the competitors chose to purchase 100% renewable power, in some cases producing a windfall of 50 competition points. Details on how points are awarded can be found in the Green Workplace Challenge Competition Manual.

Congratulations to our GWC competitors!

There are still many opportunities to earn points between now and the end of September, when this first competition comes to a close. The competition is entering a phase where energy conservation will begin to matter more: the competition awards the most points for conserving electricity, natural gas, and water usage each month over the course of the competition.

The next leaderboard update will occur on April 27 at the next GWC monthly workshop, where participants can learn about several community-group certifications that can earn competition points. Details and registration are forthcoming. If your organization would like to sign on as a Green Workplace Challenge Observer, you are welcome to do so here and save on future workshop registration fees.

The Pittsburgh Green Workplace Challenge is a yearlong competition demonstrating the triple bottom line business case for sustainable business practices. Over 50 entities are participating in the GWC, comprising businesses in the small to mid markets, as well as the Fortune 500 and nonprofit sectors. The GWC is an initiative of Sustainable Pittsburgh’s Champions for Sustainability business network. Learn more at greenchallenge.C4SPgh.org.


Innovation Spotlight: Sustainable Businesses Making a Difference
Featuring Underwood Solar Future, LLC


Southwestern Pennsylvania is tapping into cutting-edge people and companies that are offering products, services, and employment to growing markets that contribute to our regional economy based on green and sustainable principles. It is important that these stories are told so that our region’s workforce, consumers, potential business partners, and community members can connect and build relationships with these leading firms.
Champions for Sustainability (C4S), a program of Sustainable Pittsburgh, launched the Innovation Spotlight to help tell the informative and inspirational stories of Southwestern Pennsylvania’s green business organizations in this feature about innovative companies in green products, services, and jobs.

“Solar energy is the future. For every solar panel we bring on line, that much less coal is needed to generate electricity.”
- Fred Underwood, President and Founder, Underwood Solar Future

Read more about the inspirational work of Underwood Solar Future, LLC.


New Tools in the Fight Against Blight
A southwestern PA Training Series

3/8/12
Opening Remarks - C. Gould, Sustainable Pittsburgh
New Tools in the Blight Fight
Conference to kick off Blight & Abandonment municipal training series
(Click here for a program line-up) )

"This morning's 200 attendees is tribute to the sorry reality that blight and abandonment is pervasive across our towns and our Power of 32 region. It is wonderful to see such wide representation in the room from so many sectors and reaches of our region. . .

Once seemingly limited to the stereotypic image of urban decay, blight and abandonment is now a contemporary problem common to all communities. Just as it's a new America where poverty is greater in rural than urban areas, our region is a study of changing socio-economics where pockets of pernicious decline are cropping up in rural, suburban, and urban forms alike. A perspective we partners share is that not only is blight and abandonment ubiquitous across our landscape, but it is recognized to be a marker of larger region-scale concerns. . .

In step with the Broken Window theory, blight and abandonment is appreciated to be both an outcome as well as precursor to a whole host of social, economic, and environmental concerns. As vacant properties manifest, so begets community withdrawal and the onset of loss of control thus inviting a whole host of ills to take hold. While that decaying property with its broken windows may seem to some to be a low civic priority, it actually stands as is either the neighborhood unraveling by blind-eye neglect or the diamond in the rough asset that cries out to be transformed into productive re-use.

It is this "assets and opportunity" conviction that brings us together to explore the innovative and brave interventions our guest speakers will be sharing with you today. These are our pioneers who are revitalizing communities, building new structures, policies, incentives, and tools for community and regional economic development.

Read the full remarks.

See the description of the March 8 event.


Transit Crisis: The public has spoken. Is Harrisburg listening?

Sustainable Pittsburgh was pleased to be among the throngs of organizations staffing tables to show support at the 2/29 Port Authority of Allegheny County hearing on the looming transit cuts. Throughout the day one remarkable testimonial after another was delivered. The collective impact weighs heavily on the sorry days ahead if the Governor were not to provide a funding solution per his commission's recommendations. Sustainable Pittsburgh's remarks are found here.


Sustainable Pittsburgh - Accelerating the policy and practice of sustainability in SWPA

In 2011 Sustainable Pittsburgh (SP) intensified efforts to galvanize formal commitments among businesses and communities. SP's list of 2011 accomplishments truly illustrates what a small organization with solid strategy can achieve.

2012 brings a number of expanded initiatives for Sustainable Pittsburgh, including evolving the Sustainable Community Essentials Rapid Assessment into a sustainability certification program, formal adoption of a Sustainable Business Compact by our region's businesses, continuation of the Green Workplace Challenge, increased education opportunities on targeted sustainability issues, promotion of the region's outdoor recreation opportunities, and continuing strategic work on smart growth and transportation priorities.

Join along side fellow members of Sustainable Pittsburgh in helping us to accelerate the policy and practice of sustainability in Southwestern PA. Learn more.


Governor, as public transportation withers so goes the Commonwealth

Sustainable Pittsburgh urges its 3E Links readers to respond today to the Allegheny Conference's call to action:

"Please let Gov. Corbett and the legislative leaders know that you believe the recommendations made by the Transportation Funding Advisory Commission appointed by the Governor are a good framework for addressing the state’s transportation crisis. Action is especially urgent given the 35% cuts the Port Authority will be forced to make in September 2012 if the crisis is not resolved."

Go to the Conference's website, and scroll down to the "Call to Action" where the Governor's contact information is found: www.alleghenyconference.org/Transit/Default.asp
3E Links subscribers likely resonate with the following list of the ways in which public transportation pays on the triple bottom line:

Economy
- Over 50% of downtown Pittsburgh workers and 25% of Oakland workers rely on public transportation. Downtown Pittsburgh and Oakland are, respectively, the number 2 and 3 biggest contributors to Pennsylvania's economy and are the economic engines of southwestern PA.
- One bus takes 40 cars off the road, decreasing traffic congestion and commuting costs for all = more productivity.
- Fewer cars on the road = more available parking spaces.
- Fosters viable compact communities contributing to regional land efficiency and access to jobs.
- Gives consumers access to the retail economy.
- Increases property values and draws investment (transit oriented economic development).
- Reduces living costs per household, putting more disposable income into the regional economy.
- Connection to Pittsburgh International Airport and the world’s business community.
- Funding crisis is relevant to all transit systems in our region (4.6 million rides annually and growing; plus the Port Authority of Allegheny County's 230,000 daily riders and 65 million total passengers annually) and the state, as well as crumbling roads, bridges, and highways, i.e., all transportation infrastructure.
- Vital transit systems are a demand of young, talented knowledge workers who today have options and are highly discriminating in their choice of places to live and work.

Environment
- One bus removes the equivalent of 50 cars' airborne emissions for a region already struggling to meet federal regional air quality requirements and experiencing lives shortened because of pollution.
- Greater efficiency in consumption of precious regional resources.

Equity
- Access to opportunity thus allowing citizens to participate to their full productive potential.
- Facilitates the diversity vitality upon which our region's innovation was, is, and will be founded.
- A melting pot service for all walks (and those not so ambulatory) of life.
- Transit dependant citizens include our seniors, students, and those who don't own a car.
- Critical access to limited options for accessing healthy food.

Clearly we southwestern Pennsylvanians all benefit from keeping the wheels on the bus. Do let our Governor know your thoughts today.


These triple bottom line benefits of public transportation brought to you by Sustainable Pittsburgh's Board of Directors.


Don't Let Pittsburgh Be a Loser
The impending next wave of dire cuts to public transportation is a grave threat to Pittsburgh's, and thus the whole region's, economy. Roads, bridges, highways, and public transportation are the basis of our productivity. They are the lubrication of our economy. In particular, public transportation provides a lifeline for workers and for businesses. With an unusually high rate of transit ridership, (51% of all downtown commuters use public transit) and the positive economic ramifications of a strong transit system, it is no surprise that long overdue transportation funding solutions finally have bipartisan support in Harrisburg. This presents a golden platter win win opportunity for the Governor. The many ways in which the state has been instrumental in Pittsburgh's resurgence as a global model of resiliency now stand in the balance. There is no upwardly mobile, rising sustainable city in the world with a failing public transportation system. And these systems rely on public support as public services. In the past several years, the Port Authority of Allegheny County has remarkably reformed its management and operations -- more than any transportation entity in the nation. It should no longer be the recipient of the public's ire. The locus is now squarely on Harrisburg with Governor Corbett holding the wheel to steer us away from the precipice. Absent a state funding solution, the Port Authority is forced to deploy draconian service cuts. This could be the beginning of the end of public transportation as we know it and thus the unraveling of Pittsburgh and southwestern Pennsylvania's progress.

Bill O'Rourke
Board Chair
Sustainable Pittsburgh

Allegheny Conference Statement on Proposed Transit Cuts
The Allegheny Conference is extremely concerned about the impact proposed transit cuts would have on our region's people, communities and economy. But there is a solution. We call upon business executives and civic leaders, elected officials and others to encourage Governor Corbett and the General Assembly to act now on the recommendations presented last summer by the Transportation Funding Advisory Commission (TFAC).
Read the full comments here.

View remarks from Steve Bland, CEO, Port Authority of Allegheny County, to the House Democratic Policy Committee.

Visit the Port Authority website for more information.

To reach Governor Corbett, use this link.
Following are news stories covering the issue:
Read the Post-Gazette article:
More Port Authority transit cuts ahead Port Authority CEO says rollback plan 'not a scare tactic,' pleads for state aid

Read the Tribune-Review article:
Port Authority buses may not roll for 45,000


Sustainable Pittsburgh is now on Facebook!

Receive timely news items related to sustainability issues in the region, nationally, and internationally. Please visit Sustainable Pittsburgh on Facebook and "Like" us today!


Our Municipalities are Moving the Ball on Sustainability

With so many units of local government, this region would be well-served for its municipalities to become sustainability pacesetters. Our local governments have a profound role to play in the way we organize ourselves to live lighter, more justly, and with rising prosperity. Good news. Data from the 129 municipalities around the region that completed the on-line Sustainable Community Essentials Rapid Assessment demonstrate sustainability at the local level is taking hold. There is now an encouraging body of insight (91 policies and practices in the Rapid Assessment) serving to demystify what is means to be a sustainable community. And the many exemplar initiatives revealed a set convincing and inspiring precedent for municipalities to emulate the swelling tide of best sustainability practices among their peers. Toward accelerating this trend, in 2012, Sustainable Pittsburgh will be working with the Community Sustainability Coordinators and additional municipal leaders to evolve the Rapid Assessment into a formal SWPA Sustainable Community Essentials Certification Program. In the meantime, have a look at the following summary of the Rapid Assessment results and thank your municipal leaders for working to formally adopt sustainability as the way of ensuring the good life in our region.

View the summary.


 


New SWPA Sustainability Indicators launched at regional Smart Growth Conference

PittsburghTODAY launched its much anticipated Sustainability Indicators during the 11th annual Smart Growth Conference at the David L. Lawrence Convention Center on December 13. The indicators help to measure the region’s progress and offer insight to the region’s embrace of sustainability.

Sustainable Pittsburgh contracted PittsburghTODAY to create this new category. Currently it includes such indicators as air quality, housing vacancy, daily vehicle miles travelled, traffic congestion and others. The list will continue to be expanded over time.

Close to 300 individuals attended the December 13 Smart Growth Conference, entitled “Smart Growth is Smart Business.” Participants learned about Innovative Financing solutions for urban real estate, housing, and metropolitan infrastructure, heard first hand how Green Infrastructure investments result in cost savings and business opportunities, and they saw real life examples of how blighted properties were transformed into valuable real estate and the related challenges and opportunities experienced in such projects. Overall the emphasis was on specific opportunities and next step action items around which the business community can rally to effectuate positive change.

The conference was sponsored by the PNC Financial Services Group (Gold level) and Bakery Square, Bombardier, and HDR (Silver level). Essential Public Radio served as the event’s media sponsor. The conference was presented by Allegheny Conference on Community Development, Green Building Alliance, NAIOP Pittsburgh Chapter, Pittsburgh Technology Council, Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission, Sustainable Pittsburgh, and the Urban Land Institute Pittsburgh District Council.

An event summary and speaker slides are forthcoming on the conference web page. In the meantime, be sure to visit www.pittsburghtoday.org to review the latest sustainability indicators. Also, please see the news articles related to the conference below:

Former HUD chief Cisneros advises Pittsburgh to think young
The city of Pittsburgh should think young, according to Henry Cisneros, a former secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development and now executive chairman of Cityview, a Texas-based real estate investment and development firm. "That's one of the challenges facing the city," said Cisneros, but that wasn't the only challenge expressed at the 11th Annual Southwestern Pennsylvania Smart Growth Conference, held in the David L. Lawrence Convention Center, Downtown. Other challenges include encouraging city residents to work to benefit not just their own neighborhoods but adjoining areas as well as the entire city, and having the city's public leadership work to resolve existing stormwater problems that cause flooding and other damage.
More

Smart Growth Conference is smart business move
The conference features sessions on innovative finance, blight and abandonment, green infrastructure and the indicators of smart growth. Former Clinton cabinet member Henry Cisneros, head of the CityView institutional investment firm, and Robert Lang, a Fellow of the Urban Land Institute, lead a lengthy list of presenters. To be smart about growth, businesses need to realize that even multi-national corporations are still local to someone. “How that [local] community operates is going to affect their labor force, resourcing of materials, tax climate and regulatory climate,” says [Brian] Jensen, who also heads the Pennsylvania Economy League of Southwestern Pennsylvania. “The geographical climate they work in will affect their operability and ultimately their profitability.”
More

Smart Growth conference to focus on sustainability

"While the economy has changed dramatically, smart business is today -- as it always has been -- about keeping operating costs predictable and manageable, maintaining a dependable and skilled workforce and securing easy and affordable access to stable (if not growing) markets," [Brian Jensen, Executive Director of Pennsylvania Economy League] wrote. "As businesses invest in the sustainability of communities they help hold down the costs of government by growing the tax base and influencing policy decisions for wise capital expenditures and efficient delivery of public services" . . . Bill Flanagan, Allegheny Conference executive vice president, said the idea of smart growth is imperative to the organization's plans to revitalize communities and groups that haven't benefitted from growth the region has seen over the past two decades . . . "We're trying to create more seats at regional decision-making tables to allow our businesses to focus on ways in which quality of life, sustainable development and helping the regional economy equate to business opportunities," [Court Gould, Executive Director of Sustainable Pittsburgh] said.
More


Dearly Beloved Transit Rider... It's House In Order Time

Pittsburgh is a transit riders' town.  With such a high percentage of workers and the public using public transportation, you know transit and the economy are joined at the hip. 

Remember those drastic cuts this past spring?  There's worse trouble ahead.  We can anticipate those cuts will be nothing compared to what is coming now that Harrisburg has made it clear that a solution to the state's transportation funding crisis is not a priority.  So, unfortunately, it's time we all start planning for a drastically smaller transit system. 

Is weekend transit service important to you, or perhaps your employees?  How about weekday evenings and nights?  That's right.  These are the depth of service cuts the Port Authority of Allegheny County has no choice but to begin planning to deploy in the face of our funding crisis. 

The irony is that elected officials - who believe raising revenue for roads and transit will hurt the economy - are rendering our economy a calamitous blow by starving its life blood: affordable mobility that links us to opportunity, to jobs, to healthcare, to living.  Public transportation is at the heart of our shared prosperity.

The 9/24/11 article, "Port Authority 'death spiral' could come with more cuts", is a must read for all who - or whose employees - depend on the bus or the T.  We have about a 10 month window to contingency plan.  Van and carpools, 4/10 work weeks, bike commuting, telecommuting, new parking accommodations are among strategies to consider now. 

Our advance warning is here.  It's time to get our transit back-up plan in order.  We all, riders, and our economy depend on it.

Court Gould, Executive Director, Sustainable Pittsburgh
Ernie Hogan, Executive Director, Pittsburgh Community Reinvestment Group
Jeremy Waldrup, President and CEO, Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership


Sustainable Pittsburgh and partners target Blight & Abandonment and Waste Management & Recycling in new programming for municipalities:
Topics were identified as a result of municipal self-assessments of their communities’ sustainability

The 120 municipalities around our region that completed the Sustainable Community Essentials Rapid Assessmentprovided a wealth of information in terms of the policy and practice of sustainability here in the region. Responding to those insights, Sustainable Pittsburgh and the Local Government Academy have embarked on an ambitious training agenda to help municipalities hasten the pace sustainability on targeted topics based on evidenced need and opportunity.

The local philanthropic community recognizes the regional economic high stakes and key role of local government in advancing sustainable community development. The Buhl Foundation is supporting development of a municipal programming series to address Blight & Abandonment. Similarly, The Alcoa Foundation has provided grant support for a series on Waste Management & Recycling.

Additional generous funders and partner organizations are lending their support and expertise to enable a range of training programs intended to build on existing municipal best practices and precedent. A key benefit of the Rapid Assessment was to show that sustainability, as reported across 91 actions, is alive and thriving around our region. For 2012, our plan is to evolve this initiative into a formal Sustainable Community Certification.


Thank you for donating through Pittsburgh Gives!

According to the Pittsburgh Foundation, individual contributions that flowed into PittsburghGives on Tuesday, October 4, 2011 totaled $5.15 million. Contributions will each receive an equal pro-rated share of the $750,000 matching funds, creating a total of $5.9 million raised for nonprofits.

Thank you very much for supporting nonprofits in western PA. 

Read the Pittsburgh Foundation blog here.


Over 50 Main Street businesses earn Sustainable Business Designation through Sustainable Pittsburgh program

In late 2010, Sustainable Pittsburgh, in partnership with Town Center Associates, launched the Sustainable Business Designation program to advance sustainable practices among small, local businesses around Allegheny and Beaver County’s Main Streets. The program recognizes businesses for implementing sustainability actions that are simultaneously good for their bottom line, the environment, and the social fabric of their communities. To date, over fifty businesses have earned sustainable business designation through this program.

To create the program, Sustainable Pittsburgh developed a short checklist of sustainability criteria for businesses. These criteria include provisions related to energy conservation, waste reduction, stormwater management, land use policies, and alternative transportation, among other sustainability-related topics.

Sustainable Business Designation is reflected for each qualifying business in the business directory for their town, soon to be available at www.DowntownFirst.net, as well as through a certificate of acknowledgment and window display stickers. The designation helps customers identify and choose businesses that are committed to sustainability as a core principle to their operations and business model. Businesses can earn an additional, Local Business, designation in the directory as well.

The program is intended to inspire local, small businesses to apply sustainability practices and increase vitality among the region’s rich fabric of small towns and neighborhoods. If you and your business are interested in signing up for the program, visit: www.downtownfirst.net/sustainable-businesses.

Sustainable Pittsburgh is proud of the businesses who have shown their leadership in earning sustainable designation, becoming stars in their communities. Click here to view a list of businesses that have earned the Sustainable Business Designation.


Sustainable Pittsburgh offers Sustainable Solutions
Niche consultancy provides integrated sustainability analysis and recommendations for business, nonprofit, and municipal clients

After years of demonstrated results, Sustainable Pittsburgh is pleased to release case studies showcasing the positive impact its Sustainable Solutions Consultancy has had for its clients.

Through Sustainable Solutions, Sustainable Pittsburgh brings together a tailor-made multi-disciplinary team of experts to conduct a comprehensive Sustainability Assessment – an integrated examination of a client’s needs such as: energy usage, waste management, storm water management, transportation options, management practices, policies, strategic assets, and other areas. These Assessments use a whole systems approach and are intended to build capacity and provide specific quantified recommendations to save money in operations, conserve resources, enhance civic stewardship, and foster a culture of sustainability practice.

Sustainable Pittsburgh recognizes that businesses, municipalities, and nonprofits need assistance when it comes to incorporating more sustainable policies and practices into their operations. We’re happy to help. We’ve worked with a range of clients including The Mall at Robinson, Cranberry Township, YMCA of Greater Pittsburgh, and others.

Are you ready for a Sustainable Solution? Please visit our website to view our new case studies. And click here to view the Sustainable Solutions brochure.


Municipal Government joining business trend of appointing Sustainability Coordinators

The private sector around the nation and here in southwestern Pennsylvania is on a fast uptake in adopting sustainability as a top level business strategy. Remarkably, during these recession years, the membership of Sustainable Pittsburgh's Business Sustainability Coordinators/Officers professional development network has grown. There are over 70 Business Sustainability Coordinators we know of, representing companies of all types and sizes around the region. 

Given the special role local governments play in fostering sustainable development, it's a certainty that municipalities follow the business sector lead in the bottom line practicalities of appointing municipal Sustainability Coordinators. We've been watchful for the opportunity to begin convening such a cohort. But it was not until Sustainable Pittsburgh deployed the Sustainable Community Essentials Rapid Assessment that we learned of sufficient numbers of existing Community Sustainability Coordinators to launch this parallel network. 

Sustainable Pittsburgh is pleased to announce the trend of municipal sustainability programming is alive and well as evidenced by the fourth meeting of the Community Sustainable Coordinators network. One of the aspects most valued within the group is learning from peers and local experts about past and current practices and policies central to integrating sustainability in municipal operations, management, and public services. 

In addition to self-help, the Community Sustainability Coordinators are committed to work collectively at scale for regional progress. They've decided to focus initially on impacting waste management and recycling by deploying a training program geared to elected officials and municipal decision makers. Indeed, municipal leaders are at the front line of sustainable community development. It is from our home towns that we take a cue to living in ways that add social, economic, and environmental abundance.

If you know of a Community Sustainability Coordinator, urge them to contact Sustainable Pittsburgh to join in the growing group of sustainability professionals. When you see residents and leaders performing as sustainability coordinators from the following communities, be sure to congratulate them: 

Allegheny County, Cranberry Township, City of Pittsburgh, East Liberty, Township of Upper St. Clair, Borough of Monaca, Mt. Lebanon, Ohio Township, Scott Township, Urban Redevelopment Authority, and YMCA of Greater Pittsburgh.


Transportation Funding Update

Last week, Sustainable Pittsburgh shared with its 3E Links readers information regarding Governor Corbett’s Transportation Funding Advisory Commission’s recommendations. Included was Sustainable Pittsburgh’s encouragement to communicate to Governor Corbett just how critical transportation systems, infrastructure and public transportation are to our economy.

The recommendations of the Commission provide a positive framework from which to develop specific proposals that would benefit all modes of transportation. (note: the following two links will connect you to Sustainable Pittsburgh's latest 3E Links newsletter.)
- See a bulleted list on why you should be concerned if no improvements are made to State funding.
- See how this affects public transportation.


On Monday, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette featured Sustainable Pittsburgh’s letter to the editor, "Transportation group provided sound advice."

An article in Tuesday's Post-Gazette, "Panel: How to do more on roads," provides an overview of the Panel's recommendations.

The Transportation Funding Advisory Commission full report is now available at: www.tfac.pa.gov


Smart Growth Business Council - SWPA

Sustainable Pittsburgh is in good company with the growing numbers of business leaders nationally who recognize that regional growth and development patterns -- guided by principles of smart growth and sustainability -- improve quality of life, lessen the cost of doing business, increase long-term profitability, help reduce tax and infrastructure costs, and contribute to recruitment and retention of employees. We recognize however, that the growing trend of business leaders engaged in regional smart growth has yet to really take hold here in the Pittsburgh region.

Last Fall's 10th annual SWPA Smart Growth Conference, with over 400 attendees, signaled that we are reaching a critical mass. It also illustrated need for greater private sector participation. Business leaders we've spoken with recently feel that the sector is now ready to be catalyzed.
In the post G-20 Pittsburgh upswing, time is ripe for forming a business partnership that is focused on rationalizing our region's patterns of development to more successfully spur economic prosperity and extend this region's signature livability to more persons. The bottom line business case of smart growth is increasingly apparent. 

Sustainable Pittsburgh is looking for private sector leaders who seek ways to connect with their peers to identify: 
- leverage points for channeling the pattern and character of growth and development to hasten regional sustainability that protects and enhances business investments 
- policies and practices to ensure economic growth occurs without the impacts and inefficiencies of unchecked sprawl 
- regional and local scale actions businesses can take to promote sustainable communities 
- opportunities to have a seat at the table in regional, county, city planning and programming 
- incentives to level the field for development and redevelopment to revitalize our older urban centers 
- plans and policies at the new economics nexus of land use, transportation, housing, and development 
- ways to engage business leaders in helping make smart growth the way of doing business in SWPA 

This is an open invitation to the region's business community. Drop us a line if you are interested in establishing the Smart Growth Business Council - SWPA. Its launch will be the focus of the 11th annual Smart Growth Conference in October. Contact: cgould@sustainablepittsburgh.org


Sustainable Pittsburgh Provides Remarks on Marcellus Shale

Sustainable Pittsburgh provided remarks on Marcellus Shale development as part of the Leadership Alle-Kiski Valley's Economic Development Forum. Below is an excerpt. 

"The very definition of Sustainable Development provides a framework for considering the Marcellus gold rush: 'Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.' Within this definition is a value that meeting our needs responsibly means not shifting a burden from one population group or even from one generation to another. Let's consider such hard and fast lessons we can derive from the principles of sustainable development:
• Be mindful of the past lest we not replicate mistakes . . .
• Sustainable consumption . . . 
• Environmental justice . . .

. . . In these days where sustainable prosperity is dependent on raising all boats, we can ill afford to fracture the region and any one of ours' quality of life. The principles of sustainable development are a recipe for avoiding mistakes of the past. They give a compass to marrying environmental protection with safeguarding ourselves and our communities while enhancing our regional economy. These are just a few thoughts along the over used lines of "we have to get this industry right" in order to realize its lasting potential."

Click here to read the full remarks.


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