I haven't lived in WNY since July of 2002. Since then, I feel more in touch with that area than I ever have in my life. Maybe I'm just getting older, and I'm starting to see the "big picture". In one of my classes, we began discussing livability and sustainability, and I'm trying to guide my group towards using Buffalo as our city to evaluate. I'm expecting it to fail miserably, and it upsets me. So, I present to you a jumble of words I'll call a case study, but is really nothing more than an example from my text book. I can't copy/paste, so please, lend me your eyes and minds for a minute. This is going to take a long time to transcribe.
Quote:
Thirty-five years ago, Chattanooga, which straddles the Tennessee River, was a decaying industrial city with high levels of pollution. Employment was falling and residents were fleeing to the suburbs, leaving abandoned properties and increasing crime. In 1969, the EPA presented the city with a special award for "the dirtiest city in America." Then, Chattanooga Venture, a nonprofit organization founded by community leaders, launched Vision 2000, the first step of which was to bring people from all walks of life together to build a consensus about what the city could be like. Literally thousands of ideas were gradually distilled into 223 specific projects. Then, with the cooperation of all sectors - including government, business, lending institutions, and average persons - work on the projects began, providing employment in constructino for more than 7,300 people and permanent employment for 1,380 and investing more than $800 million. Among these projects were the following:
-With the support of the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts, local government clamped down hard on industries to control pollution.
-Chattanooga Neighborhood Enterprise fostered the building or renovation of more than 4,600 units of low- and moderate-income housing.
-A new industry to build pollution-control equipment was spawned, as was another industry to build electric buses, which now serve the city without noise or pollution.
-A recycling center employing mentally handicapped adults to separate materials was build.
-An urban greenway demonstration farm, which schoolchildren may visit, was created.
-A zero-emissions industrial park utilizing pollution-avoidance principles was build.
-The river was cleaned up, and a 22-mile Riverwalk reclaimed the waterfront and built parks, playgrounds, and walkways alon the riverbanks.
-Theaters and museums were renovated, and freshwater and saltwater aquariums were built.
-All facilities and a renovated business district were made pedestrian friendly and accessible.
Revision With these and numerous other projects, many of them still ongoing, Chattanooga has moved its reuptation from one of the worst to one of the best places to live. Chattanooga Venture developed a step-by-step guide for community groups to assist them in similar efforts to build sustainable communities, and the city's experience is being modeled in other cities throughout the United States as well as internationally.
*taken from Environmental Science, Tenth Edition, by Richard T. Wright
Being distant from the area, I don't know if anything like this is under way.
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ksquier89 wrote:
Holy fucking fuck...Boyes couldn't suck a dick if it landed in his mouth.