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Website Comment Summary
Comments repeatedly recognize the importance of this goal and suggest
diverse policy ideass to address air pollution concerns. Several
comments address more than one of the "10 Goals," particularly the
climate change and the congestion goal. Most comments suggest policy
options that can be directly achieved at the city level, including
retrofits of city vehicles, tree-planting initiatives, and congestion
pricing.
Numerous comments encourage air quality improvements through expanding
existing urban forestry or "greening" initiatives for purposes of
reducing air pollution or decreasing the urban heat island effect.
Many combine a tree-planting focus with advocacy for green roofs,
frequently concentrating on the heat island impacts rather than
specific air quality improvements. To accomplish these broad goals,
comments encourage enhancements to the existing DPR Greenstreets
program, the creation of additional parkland, and tougher ordinances
to require landlords to plant and maintain trees in front of their
properties.
Many other comments focus on reducing traffic and/or overall car
use in order to accomplish air quality goals. Echoing a dominant
recommendation of the congestion goal, many advocate the imposition
of a congestion or pollution charge, channeling revenues toward
strengthening mass transit systems or subsidizing transit use in
underserved neighborhoods. Additional suggestions along this theme
include promoting cycling as a transportation alternative, prohibiting
traffic at particular times or in particular neighborhoods, and
more effectively targeting illegal idling and inefficient delivery-vehicle
behavior.
From a transportation angle, many comments propose specific city
government initiatives that would help reduce the city's contributions
to overall air pollution. Many comments specifically encourage the
upgrade or replacement of polluting city vehicles, especially school
buses and sanitation trucks. Others encourage the city to promote
and require the development of hybrid and hydrogen vehicles and
cabs, which could be a gradual process in order to make the transition
more feasible. Finally, multiple comments suggest that the city
reconsider its own parking permit policies to support additional
public transit use, and recommend that the city set its own vehicle
efficiency and emissions standards.
Town Hall Comment Summary
Decrease Vehicular Emissions and Pollutants
More than half of the suggestions for improving air quality addressed
the need to reduce vehicular emissions and pollutants. The most
common category of ideas relate to increasing the use of alternative
vehicles and fuels, such as: incentivize/mandate taxis, buses and
city fleets to be electric or other hybrid vehicles; support biodiesel;
encourage pedicabs and other "non-motorized transport;" and designate
"sustainable vehicle lanes." Other common suggestions involved promoting
biking and walking with improved bike and pedestrian infrastructure,
encouraging or mandating less-polluting trucks, enforcing idling
laws, facilitating mass transit use, and discouraging driving through
decreased parking availability or "car free days in certain areas."
A few calls were made to tax "gas guzzlers," SUVs, and SUV limos.
Plant More Trees and Protect Open Space
Participants from all boroughs also strongly supported increasing
the City's tree canopy and open space, with suggestions including:
provide tax credits for planting trees, promote green roofs (such
as "on all city buildings") and green streets, and "build more open
space, protect it from development."
Miscellaneous
Common miscellaneous comments included: increase recycling and conservation,
"encourage alternative forms of power," expand the Green Building
Law, and increase air quality monitoring (including mobile emissions
testing). Individual ideas included: "focus resources on worst neighborhoods
first," "implement a gas tax and dedicate funds to health care,"
and "work with neighboring states to clean our downwind air."
Community Leader Comment Summary
Decreasing Emissions and Pollutants Caused by Transportation
Modes
Community leaders provided numerous suggestions for decreasing emissions
and pollutants from personal and freight transportation modes. Numerous
comments were directed at reducing car use with tactics such as
congestion pricing, increased gas tax and parking fees, incentives
for hybrids and surcharge for SUVs, "car-free streets and districts
(on weekends)," and "discourage city employees from driving,
no free parking." With respect to commercial traffic and freight
transport, there were several suggestions for truck/freight emissions
reductions, enforcement of idling rules, and promotion of modes
other than trucks (e.g., rail, ferry) to move freight. Many comments
also expressed continued support for mass transit usage as well
as cleaner fuel and engines for city buses.
Groups from the Bronx, Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan also addressed
highway construction issues, which varied from "stop building
highways" to suggestions regarding specific highways such as
"deck over the BQE" or "charge tolls on Cross Bx
Expressway to reduce emissions."
Individual notes were made to "separate bike and vehicle lanes"
and to "ban recreational helicopters."
Plant More Trees
Outer borough leaders shared the sentiment to "plant trees everywhere."
Specific, individual suggestions included: "do a tree census," "more
green roofs," and "better maintenance of existing trees."
Address Asthma Issues
Several community groups raised the need to address asthma concerns.
Individual suggestions included: address "existing and future asthma
risk in EIS process," solve childhood asthma problems, create tougher
asthma standards, and clean up rat and roach problem.
Miscellaneous
Community groups in Lower Manhattan encouraged the use of wind energy
and biofuels as cleaner energy sources. Bronx community groups added
that environmental laws should be enforced to reduce pollution,
schools and hospitals should not be sited near pollutions sources
(e.g., highways), and improved air quality monitoring should lead
to greater resources and focus on the most polluted areas.
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