Policy Guide On Planning For Sustainability: I. Findings

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Policy Guide on Planning for Sustainability

Adopted by Chapter Delegate Assembly, April 16, 2000


Ratified by Board of Directors, April 17, 2000, New York, NY
Printer version (pdf)
I. Findings
There is growing concern for the issue of sustainability — whether the Earth's resources will be able to meet
the demands of a growing human population that has rising aspirations for consumption and quality of life,
while maintaining the rich diversity of the natural environment or biosphere.

Patterns of human development — physical, social, and economic — affect sustainability at the local and the
global level. City and regional planning is integrally related to defining how, where, and when human
development occurs, which affects resource use. Planners can therefore play a crucial role in improving the
sustainability of communities and the resources that support them.

There are several dimensions to the "sustainability" issue:

1. We want to sustain communities as good places to live, and that offer economic and other
opportunities to their inhabitants.
2. We want to sustain the values of our society — things like individual liberty and democracy.
3. We want to sustain the biodiversity of the natural environment, both for the contribution that it
makes to the quality of human life and for its own inherent value.
4. We want to sustain the ability of natural systems to provide the life-supporting "services" that are
rarely counted by economists, but which have recently been estimated to be worth nearly as much as
total gross human economic product.
A sustainable community is one that is consistent with all of these dimensions of sustainability.

A range of indicators suggest that there is a growing gap between human consumption of resources and
Earth's capacity to supply those resources and reabsorb resulting wastes. Several of these are described
below:

Global Indications of Unsustainability


Global Warming. Human activity, particularly the combustion of fossil fuels, adds gases like carbon dioxide
and methane to the atmosphere. The world's scientific community continues to document that this buildup
of gases is altering global climatic patterns. Over the past century, the land surface temperature worldwide
has risen an average of 0.8 -1.0 Fahrenheit degrees. Over the same period, average precipitation has
increased about 1% while the worldwide sea level has risen about 6-8 inches.
Soil Degradation. For the past 50 years, agricultural mismanagement has resulted in severe degradation
of the Earth's soils, erosion being the most common type of degradation. Soil lost to wind and water erosion
ranges from 5-10 tons per hectare annually in Africa, Europe, and Australia, 10-20 tons per hectare in
North, Central, and South America, and 30 tons per hectare in Asia. Given that soil is created at roughly one
ton per hectare per year, current rates of erosion are depleting the nutrient base of agriculture.
Deforestation. The world has lost 1.5 billion acres of forest in the last 200 years. Tropical rainforests,
which support more than 60% of all known plant species are currently disappearing at a rate of 2.4 acres
(two football fields) per second, 214,000 acres (larger than New York City) per day, and 78,000,000 acres
(the size of New Mexico) per year.
Species Extinction. Human activity is creating a "biodiversity deficit" by destroying ecosystems faster than
nature can create new ones. Rates of species extinction are currently estimated at one hundred to one
thousand times higher than pre-human levels. In North America, an estimated 36% of fish, 35% of
amphibians, 17% of mammals, and 11% of birds are either in jeopardy or are already extinct.
Declining Fisheries. After many years of continually increasing worldwide seafood catches, the tonnage of
seafood harvested peaked in 1989 and has plateaued since. Harvests for many species have declined. For
example, the annual salmon catch in British Columbia fell by nearly 50% from 1985 to 1995.
Economic Inequity. The fifth of the world's people living in the highest-income countries controls 86 per
cent of world gross domestic product (GDP), 82 per cent of world export markets, 68 per cent of foreign
direct investments, and 74 per cent of world telephone lines.
In addition to these global indicators, a variety of local and regional indicators also show unsustainable
trends. The reasons that our lifestyles are unsustainable are varied and complex. Here are a few of the key
factors contributing to unsustainability.

What is Contributing to Unsustainability?


Overconsumption. Over the last 40 years, the increase in per capita energy and material consumption has
increased even faster than the world's human population. Scientists estimate that our present consumption
level is exceeding the Earth's carrying capacity by 30%. We are making up that difference by depleting
"natural capital". The United States leads the world in material consumption and waste generation. The
‘ecological footprint'(estimated amount of land to support consumption and waste generation patterns) of
the typical U.S. resident per year is 25.5 acres, compared to 6.9 acres for the average world resident and 2
acres for the average resident in India.
Population Growth. The world's human population is growing at a rate of 385,000 per day. Almost all of
this growth (98%) is occurring in developing nations. Many developing nations remain impoverished
because economic development cannot keep pace. Even in the United States, where the growth rate is a
relatively modest 1.1%, the nation's population will double in roughly 60 years.
Dependence upon Non-Renewable Resources. Modern economies rely on a host of substances that are
not part of nature's cycle of growth and decay. Because these substances are not renewable, their supplies
are constantly diminishing. This causes competition for limited resources, with societal repercussions and
resulting damage to the environment.
Pollution. The use of substances that accumulate in the ecosphere and are not part of nature's cycle causes
environmental pollution in various forms. Carbon dioxide has increased 30% over its natural occurrence in
our atmosphere. Poisonous elements mined from below the Earth's crust, such as cadmium and lead, are
found at five and eight times, respectively, their natural rates in the ecosphere. Over 70,000 chemical
compounds are now present and accumulating in the ecosphere. Many of these may be toxic to humans or
other species.
Environmentally and Socially Destructive Development Patterns. Historically, human development
has not considered the natural processes upon which we depend, thereby damaging or destroying the
systems that support us. The typical suburb paves over land that was once the habitat of other species. It
also reduces opportunities for social interaction, once as easy as walking down the street to go to the corner
store. Today, fewer than 10% of daily commute trips in the U.S. are by walking or bicycling.
Inequities in Resource Distribution. Between 1960 and 1994, the disparity in per capita income between
the richest and poorest fifth of the world's nations rose from 30:1 to 78:1. The historic solution to poverty —
economic growth — has generally served to exacerbate inequities, while degrading the resources upon
which all life depends.
Limited Public Participation. Problems arise when sectors of society are disenfranchised from political and
economic decision-making, contributing to social and economic inequalities. Limited public participation and
lack of equity undermine the ability to sustain the natural and community systems upon which all people
depend.
One of the root causes of the problems described above is the failure to recognize the fundamental limits to
Earth's ability to withstand alterations to its natural systems. As a result, most Americans consume
wastefully, using our limited resources inefficiently and inequitably. People need to acknowledge that we are
an interconnected part of nature. Policies and actions must reflect the important linkages among a healthy
environment, a strong economy, and social well being. Indeed, it may be necessary to change some of the
operational definitions of "strong economy" and "social well being.

These global problems are reflected in — and are affected by — localized unsustainable activity in
communities and regions throughout the United States and in other regions of the Earth. Many of these
environmentally, economically and socially unsustainable practices are directly connected to local —
including remotely influenced local — decision-making. Some examples are summarized as follows:

U.S. Indications of Community Unsustainability


Suburban Sprawl. Current growth in urban and suburban land use far exceeds the population growth in
many major metropolitan centers in the U.S. Between 1970 and 1990, for example, metropolitan Chicago's
population grew by 4% while the amount of land dedicated to housing grew by 46%. During that same
period, metropolitan Cleveland's population fell by 11% but developed land still increased by 33%. This
trend has resulted in increased costs for public services, the decline of central cities, increased vehicle miles
traveled and emissions of carbon dioxide, the destruction of farmland and open space, and arguably a loss
of community.
Segregation/Unequal Opportunity. Communities all over the United States continue to be largely divided
along economic and racial lines, both physically and socially. Poverty is increasing among whites as well as
minorities. Minority groups continue to have less access to economic opportunities, adequate food and
shelter, and needed services. Nationwide, nearly 28% of people of color live below the poverty level, as
compared to about 11% of whites.
Loss of Agricultural Land and Open Space. From 1970 to 1990, more than 19 million acres (30,000
square miles) of rural lands were developed. Every year, construction transforms 400,000 acres of high
quality farmland. This amounts to 45.6 acres every hour of every day. Such development weakens the
agricultural basis upon which people depend, as well as the natural resources upon which all life depends.
Depletion and Degradation of Water Resources. Groundwater over-pumping is occurring in many of the
nation's regions. In California, groundwater overdraft averages 1.6 billion cubic meters per year, which
amounts to 15% of the state's annual groundwater use. Depletion of the High Plains Aquifer System, which
underlies nearly 20% of all irrigated land in the U.S., totals 325 billion cubic meters while current annual
depletion is estimated at 12 billion cubic meters. Despite progress made under the Clean Water Act,
carcinogens have been found in wells in fourteen different states throughout the Corn Belt and many of the
nation's waterways remain badly polluted. In addition, the continuing increase in impermeable surfaces such
as parking lots and buildings acts to prevent groundwater recharge, create destructive runoff patterns, and
destroy the treatment capacity of natural systems.
Loss of Wetlands. Among the most productive ecosystems in the world, wetlands on non-federal lands in
the U.S. are disappearing at a rate of 70,000 to 90,000 acres annually. In the 1600s, over 220 million acres
of wetlands are thought to have existed in the lower 48 states. By the 1980s, only an estimated 103 million
acres remained.
Traffic Congestion and Air Pollution. Vehicle-clogged roadways and deteriorating air quality diminish
quality of life and health for millions of Americans in cities, suburbs, and outlying areas. Since 1970, vehicle
miles traveled have increased by 121%, more than four times the population growth over that same period.
Traffic congestion is estimated to cost the nation $168 billion in lost productivity. Although air quality has
improved in several metropolitan areas due to more stringent emission standards, 46 million Americans
continue to live in counties that do not meet federal air quality standards.
Disproportionate Exposure to Environmental Hazards. Low-income people and people of color continue
to be disproportionately exposed to environmental hazards in urban and rural areas. In Los Angeles County,
California, minorities are three times as likely as whites to live within half a mile of a large, hazardous waste
treatment, storage, or disposal facility. Nationwide, Black children from poor families are five times as likely
to have dangerous blood lead levels than wealthier White children. White children from households with
annual incomes of under $6,000 are three times as likely as White children from families with incomes over
$15,000 to have dangerous blood levels of lead.
II. Framing the Issue
Sustainability is the capability to equitably meet the vital human needs of the present without compromising
the ability of future generations to meet their own needs by preserving and protecting the area's ecosystems
and natural resources. The concept of sustainability describes a condition in which human use of natural
resources, required for the continuation of life, is in balance with Nature's ability to replenish them.However,
humans are depleting and degrading many resources faster than Earth's natural systems can replenish
them, and human consumption continues to grow every year. This is a far-reaching issue that extends well
beyond the realm of today's urban and regional planner. Nevertheless, planners are in a position to protect
the natural environment and its ability to support human life by working with communities to implement
concepts of sustainability in their current and long range planning daily practices.
Planning for sustainability promotes responsible development — not anti-development. It requires a
democratic process of planning to achieve the greatest common good for all segments of our population,
protect the health of the environment and assure future generations of the resources they will need to
survive and progress. Specifically, planning for sustainability includes the following processes,
practices and outcomes.
Planning processes include:

 Making planning decisions in a holistic and fully-informed manner that involves all segments of the
community and the public and private sectors.
 Educating all age groups to raise public understanding of and regard for the future consequences of
current planning decisions and ultimately change human behavior.
Planning practices include:

 Developing a future-oriented vision, which look beyond current needs and recognizes environmental
limits to human development.
 Fostering projects/activities that promote economic development by: efficiently and equitably
distributing resources and goods; minimizing, reusing and recycling waste; and protecting natural
ecosystems.
 Upholding a widely held ethic of stewardship that strongly encourages individuals and organizations
to take full responsibility for the economic, environmental, and social consequences of their actions,
balancing individual needs and wants with nature and the public good.
 Taking leadership in the drafting and implementation of local, regional and state policies that
support sustainability, such as APA's Growing Smart statutes.
Planning outcomes include:

 Local and regional development patterns that expand choice and opportunity for all persons,
recognizing a special responsibility to address the needs of those that are disadvantaged..
 Resilient, diverse, and self-sufficient local economies that meet the needs of residents and build on
the unique characteristics of the community to the greatest extent possible.
 Communities with a healthy economy, environment and social climate that function in harmony with
natural ecosystems and other species and allow people to lead healthy, productive and enjoyable lives.

III. Policy Positions


A. GENERAL POLICY OBJECTIVES
The American Planning Association and its Chapters have identified four basic objectives for planning toward
greater sustainability that can be used as a framework for policy development at each level of decision-
making — local, state, regional, and federal — in the broad range of matters with which planners are
concerned — land use, housing, transportation, economic development — among others. The four objectives
are based upon a framework developed by a group of scientists in Sweden and the U.S combining
knowledge of physics, biology, and other fundamental sciences with understanding of societal decision-
making.

Using these basic objectives as a guiding framework, planners and decision-makers can develop policies,
legislation, and action plans toward sustainability that are appropriate to their particular circumstances and
communities. For example, efforts to reduce the use of fossil fuels ( Objective 1)may take very different
form in an urban settlement compared to efforts in rural communities. Similarly, initiatives to improve the
quality of life for disadvantaged residents may be very different in a bedroom suburb than in an inner-city
neighborhood (Objective 4). The Specific Policies in the section that follows are guided by these objectives.
The attached Appendix illustrates how these objectives can be used systematically to generate a
comprehensive strategy of planning actions in the direction of sustainability. While any one of these
objectives pursued separately is a worthy endeavor, it is the integrated, comprehensive application of all
four objectives that is needed to move toward sustainability in planning and development; hence, no one
objective is more important or of greater value than the others.
Objectives Of APA's Strategy for Planning for Sustainability
Planning for sustainability requires a systematic, integrated approach that brings together environmental,
economic and social goals and actions directed toward the following four objectives:
1. Reduce dependence upon fossil fuels, extracted underground metals and minerals. Reason:
Unchecked, increases of such substances in natural systems will eventually cause concentrations to
reach limits — as yet unknown — at which irreversible changes for human health and the environment
will occur and life as we know it may not be possible.
2. Reduce dependence on chemicals and other manufactured substances that can accumulate in
Nature. Reason: Same as before.
3. Reduce dependence on activities that harm life-sustaining ecosystems. Reason: The health and
prosperity of humans, communities, and the Earth depend upon the capacity of Nature and its
ecosystems to reconcentrate and restructure wastes into new resources.
4. Meet the hierarchy of present and future human needs fairly and efficiently. Reason: Fair and
efficient use of resources in meeting human needs is necessary to achieve social stability and achieve
cooperation for achieving the goals of the first three guiding policies.
B. SPECIFIC POLICY POSITIONS
Planners have a leadership role in forming and implementing the strategies by which communities seek to
use resources efficiently, to protect and enhance quality of life, and to create new businesses to strengthen
their economies, and supporting infrastructures. The best practices of comprehensive community
planning — the way we plan the physical layout, or land use, of our communities, is key to sustainable land
use.
Two main features of our land use practices over the past several decades have converged to generate
haphazard, inefficient, and unsustainable development sprawl — zoning regulations that separate housing,
jobs, and shopping, and low density development that requires the use of the car. Our economic
development and infrastructure planning practices present opportunities for us to encourage businesses and
community facilities that offer creative, economically beneficial solutions to wasteful resource use and
environmental degradation. Only through the best planning practices can we hope to create healthy
communities that can sustain our generation and secure a promising and sustainable future for all children.
The listed order of specific policies follows the logic of the four objectives and does not reflect an implied
priority of action or importance. As is the case with the four policy objectives, while each of the specific
policies are of merit if followed separately, they need to be pursued as a whole in an integrated,
comprehensive, systems approach in order to move toward sustainability in community planning and
development. While certain policies may be of greater immediate relevance to particular regions, levels of
government, and planning expertise, planners can contribute substantially to communities and to society
through maintaining this perspective of the whole in our thinking and in our planning approaches.
1. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support planning policies and legislation that
encourage alternatives to use of gas-powered vehicles. Such alternatives include public transit,
alternatively-fueled vehicles, bicycle and pedestrian routes, and bicycle and pedestrian-friendly
development design.
Reason: Use of privately-owned gas-powered vehicles significantly contributes to increasing carbon
dioxide concentration and greenhouse gases in the atmosphere at the global level, and to air pollution,
as well as nuisance and societal costs of traffic congestion at the local and regional levels. Planning and
development actions that reduce the need to drive can in turn help to reduce carbon dioxide and other
emissions, as well as help reduce traffic congestion and add system capacity.
2. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support planning policies and legislation that
encourage all types of development to use alternative renewable energy sources and meaningful
energy conservation measures.
Reason: Use of alternative renewable energy sources will contribute to reduced dependence upon fossil
fuels for heat and power, also helping to reduce concentrations of carbon dioxide and other gases in
the atmosphere. Increased use of alternative energy sources will also contribute to healthier, more
stable local economies through reduced dependence on one or two energy sources whose own
economic future is uncertain.
3. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support planning policies and legislation that
encourage development, agriculture, and other land uses that minimize or eliminate the use of
extracted underground substances such as mercury, cadmium, phosphorus.
Reason: The increasing concentrations in natural systems of extracted underground metals and
minerals — for example, mercury, cadmium, phosphorus — which do not readily disappear or get re-
absorbed by the Earth — are increasing toxicity in natural systems. This in turn jeopardizes
ecosystems, wildlife, water supplies, soil, food, and human health. Development and agriculture that
reduces or eliminates the use of these substances can contribute to the increased long-term safety of
human, animal and plant health, and ecosystems both for the near future and for generations to come.
4. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support planning policies and legislation that
encourage development and businesses to reduce the use of chemicals and synthetic compounds in
their construction and building materials, operations, products, and services.
Reason: Chemicals and synthetic substances that do not easily break down also are increasing in
society, producing increased toxicity in ecosystems, water supplies, soil, food, the built environment,
the working environment, and human health. Planning, economic development strategies, and policies
that affect the built environment can help safeguard the natural and man-made environments through
encouraging development that reduces or eliminates the use of these substances.
5. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support planning policies and legislation that
encourage methods of landscape design, landscape and park maintenance, and agriculture that reduce
or eliminate the use of pesticides, herbicides, and synthetic fertilizers as well as encouraging the use of
compost and conserving water.
Reason: Pesticides, herbicides, and synthetic fertilizers accumulate in natural systems, water supplies,
soil, food, animals, and humans. Landscape design, maintenance of parks and open space, and
agricultural practices that use alternative approaches to pest control can help reduce toxicity in
ecosystems, water, food, and human health.
6. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support planning policies and legislation that
result in compact and mixed-use development that minimizes the need to drive, re-uses existing, infill,
and brownfields sites that have been thoroughly reclaimed and remediated before using open land, and
that avoids the extension of sprawl. ("Sprawl" refers to low-density, land-consumptive, center-less,
auto-oriented development typically located on the outer suburban fringes). APA's "Growing Smart"
Initiative is consistent with this Policy Position.
Reason: Scattered, land-consumptive development is bringing about the deterioration and loss of open
lands, forests, ecosystems and species. These are essential elements of Nature's capacity to re-create
the materials upon which all life — including ours — depends. Threatened also is the traditional and
historic character of our communities and countrysides — a major source of community "quality of life",
heritage and economic viability. Encouraging compact development and redevelopment of existing sites
can avoid further encroachment upon diminishing land and other natural resources, helping to
safeguard these for our well-being and those of future generations.
7. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support planning, development, and
preservation policies and legislation that conserve undeveloped land, open space, agricultural land,
protect water and soil quality, consciously restore ecosystems, and that minimize or eliminate the
disruption of existing natural ecosystems and floodplains. Such policies and legislation include Growing
Smart and other innovative planning approaches.
Reason: Safeguarding important lands, water, wetlands, soil, forests, coastal areas as natural
ecosystems also helps to preserve the productivity and diversity of life upon which human life and well-
being depends.. Efforts are needed to protect the critical land mass required to maintain the level of
agricultural production needed to maintain viable agricultural operations and provide sufficient food
supply for our population.These critical natural and open space resources contribute as well to "quality
of life" as an essential part of local and regional community character.
8. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support planning policies and legislation that
encourage forms of development, business, and agriculture that reduce the use of water, re-using
wastewater on-site, and that employ innovative wastewater treatment that minimizes or eliminates the
use of chemicals (example: using plants for sewage treatment).
Reason: Groundwater over-pumping is occurring in many of the nation's regions. Reducing use of and
re-using water using alternatives to chemical treatment, can use this resource more efficiently,
allowing for its renewal through groundwater recharge, and minimizing or eliminating increased
concentrations of chemicals in natural systems.
9. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support planning policies and legislation at all
levels of government that support and implement sustainable development policies that seek to
equitably protect public health, safety and welfare, and which incorporate the needs of those currently
disenfranchised in the process.
Reason: Certain planning decisions may improve the quality of life for some individuals at the expense
of others for example, constructing a roadway, siting a bus depot or sewage treatment plant, or
building housing near an industrial zone. This problem is acute in disadvantaged communities where
equal consideration, fair siting decisions, and open planning processes are not always offered.
Sustainable planning and development goals aim to provide equal protection and access to
opportunities in all communities regardless of income status, race, gender, or ethnicity.
10. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support planning policies and legislation
encouraging businesses, communities, institutions and development that pursue reduction and re-use
of by-products and waste, especially approaches that also employ waste as a resource, such as eco-
industrial development.
Reason: Reducing the amount of wastes and by-products reduces the likelihood of pollution while also
reducing disposal problems and related costs for communities and businesses alike. Communities and
businesses that make use of their own or each other's excess energy, water, and materials by-products
can reduce or eliminate disposal and pollution problems and save, if not generate, significant revenues.
11. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support planning policies and legislation
encouraging participatory and partnership approaches to planning, including planning for sustainability,
integrally involving local community residents in setting the vision for and developing plans and actions
for their communities and regions. Planning decisions that follow should be consistent with those
community visions.
Reason: Plans that are citizen-based, reflecting citizen intents and visions for their communities'
futures, have the highest probability of successful adoption and implementation. Citizen participation in
planning helps ensure fair and efficient targeting of resources to community needs.
12. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support initiatives and partnerships with other
organizations that: a) support research and development of technology promoting the four general
policy objectives for sustainability; and b) provide best available economic, social, and environmental
data and indicators on impacts, alternatives, costs, and benefits for integrated decision-making at all
levels of government.
Reasons: Well-informed policy choices that take into consideration the fundamental links among the
economy, the environment, and society will be more likely to result in actions that serve all three
rather than one at the expense of the others. Most of the innovation or technology to achieve greater
sustainability either does not exist, is in the early stages of development, or is not readily available. For
example, the use of alternative fuels is growing. However, some private users or transit authorities are
reluctant to purchase alternative fuel vehicles because the fueling stations are scarce and the
technology is still new.
13. The American Planning Association and its Chapters support planning policies, programs, and state
and federal legislation that support incentives and other economic tools to improve the sustainability of
our natural environment, enhance natural resources, and improve community subdivision and building
design standards.
Reason: Economic tools such as incentives hold promise for bringing about the implementation of
sustainable development. Local, state, and federal legislation can support and strengthen the use of
these approaches.
Appendix A
Planning Actions Toward Sustainability
[The following section is not APA policy, but rather a guide to the user showing examples of actions planners
can take in support of sustainability.]
This Appendix contains examples of how the four guiding objectives can be employed as a framework to
systematically generate a comprehensive strategy of specific planning actions toward sustainability. The four
principles are applied to a range of areas for which planners are concerned— land use, transportation,
housing & building, economic development, open space and recreation, infrastructure, growth management,
floodplain management, watershed planning, and planning processes and education. The appropriateness of
a specific action to, say — reduce fossil fuels —will vary from community to community and region to region,
as well as from level to level of governmental responsibility. Hence, the most fruitful planning approach may
be for communities and agencies themselves to generate a planning and policy agenda toward
sustainability, using the four guiding objectives as a framework in a participatory planning process.
I. Land Use Actions toward sustainability:
A. Reduced dependence upon fossil fuels, underground metals, and minerals by promoting:

1. Compact development that minimizes the need to drive


2. A mix of integrated community uses — housing, shops, workplaces, schools, parks, civic
facilities — within walking or bicycling distance
3. Human-scaled development that is pedestrian-friendly
4. Development oriented around public transit
5. Home-based occupations and work that reduce the need to commute
6. Local food production and agriculture that reduces need for long-range transport of food.
B. Reduction of activities that encroach upon nature through:

1. Guiding development to existing developed areas and minimizing development in outlying,


undeveloped areas
2. Maintaining a well-defined "edge" around each community that is permanently protected from
development
3. Remediation and redevelopment of brownfield sites and other developed lands that suffer from
environmental or other constraints
4. Promote regional and local designs that respect the regional ecosystems and natural functions which
support human communities.
5. Creation of financial and regulatory incentives for infill development; elimination of disincentives
C. Meeting human needs fairly and efficiently by:

1. Eliminating disproportionate environmental burdens and pollution experienced by historically


disadvantaged communities.
II. Transportation Actions toward sustainability:
A. Reduced dependence upon fossil fuels through:

1. Reduction in vehicle trips and vehicle miles traveled through compact, infill, and mixed use
development
2. Use of alternatives to the drive-alone automobile, including walking, bicycling, and public transit
3. Development and use of vehicles powered by renewable fuel sources
4. Local street designs that encourage pedestrian and bicycle use and discourage high speed traffic
5. Street designs that support/enhance access between neighborhoods and to neighborhood-based
commercial developments.
B. Meeting human needs fairly and efficiently, by:

1. Providing affordable, efficient transportation alternatives for everyone, especially low-income


households, elders, and others comprising 30% of the national population that cannot or do not own
cars
III. Housing and Building Actions toward sustainability:
A. Reduced dependence upon fossil fuels, extracted underground metals, and minerals through:

1. Solar-oriented design of development


2. Use of regenerative energy heating and cooling source alternatives to fossil fuels
3. Provision of housing near places of employment
4. Selection of building materials with low "embodied energy," which require less energy-intensive
production methods and long-distance transport
B. Reduced dependence upon chemicals and unnatural substances through:

1. Use of chemical-free and toxic-free building materials


2. Reduction of waste and recycling of building waste materials and promoting recycling by residents
3. Landscape design standards that minimize the use of pesticides and herbicides
C. Reduction of activities that encroach upon nature, through:

1. Reuse of existing buildings and sites for development


2. Compact and clustered residential development, including reduced minimum lot sizes
3. Removal of code obstacles to using recycled materials for building
4. Water conservation measures, to minimize environmentally destructive side effects of developing
new water sources
5. Responsible stormwater management that reuses and restores the quality of on-site run-off —
(example, — constructed marsh or wetlands systems).
6. Reduction or elimination of impervious paving materials
7. Use of recycled building materials, helping to minimize the mining of virgin materials
8. Use of "cradle-to grave" (life cycle) analysis in decision-making for materials and construction
techniques.
9. Recycling of building construction waste materials and appropriate deconstruction techniques.
D. Meeting human needs fairly and efficiently, by providing for:

1. Communities and housing developments that are socially cohesive, reduce isolation, foster
community spirit, and sharing of resources (example: cohousing)
2. Housing that is affordable to a variety of income groups within the same community
3. A diversity of occupants in terms of age, social, and cultural groups
4. Housing located near employment centers.
IV. Economic Development Actions toward sustainability
A. Encourage businesses that reduce dependence upon fossil fuels, extracted underground metals, and
minerals; for example, businesses that:

1. Reduce employee and product transport vehicle trips


2. Use regenerative energy alternatives to fossil fuel, or that are working to reduce dependence on
fossil fuel
3. Do not use or are reducing use of cadmium, lead, and other potentially toxic metals and minerals
that can accumulate in the biosphere.
4. Are locally-based or home-based, reducing or eliminating the need to commute.
B. Encourage businesses that reduce dependence upon chemicals and unnatural substances; for example,
enterprises that:

1. Actively seek ways to minimize the use of toxic manufactured substances


2. Meet or exceed clean air standards
3. Minimize or reduce use of chemicals and employ proper disposal and recycling mechanisms for
these
4. Use agricultural methods that reduce or minimize use of pesticides, herbicides, and manufactured
fertilizers
5. Use byproducts of other processes or whose wastes can be used as the raw materials for other
industrial processes
C. Encourage businesses that reduce activities that encroach upon nature; for example, enterprises that:

1. Use recycled or by-products of other businesses, minimizing the use of virgin raw materials
2. Prevent activities that emit waste or pollutants into the environment
3. Use agricultural approaches that build up rather than deplete topsoil, and conserve or minimize
water use
4. Maintain natural terrain, drainage, and vegetation, minimizing disruption of natural systems
5. Re-use processed water.
D. Encourage businesses that meet human needs fairly and efficiently; for example, enterprises that:

1. Fulfill local employment and consumer needs without degrading the environment
2. Promote financial and social equity in the workplace
3. Create vibrant community-based economies with employment opportunities that allow people
economic self-determination and environmental health
4. Encourage locally-based agriculture, such as community supported agriculture, providing a nearby
source of fresh, healthy food for urban and rural populations
V. Open Space/Recreation Actions toward sustainability
A. Reduced dependence upon fossil fuels, extracted underground metals, minerals, by:

1. Providing recreational facilities within walking and bicycling distance


2. Using local materials and native plants in facility design to reduce transport distances and reduce
maintenance
3. Landscape and park maintenance minimizing use of equipment powered by fossil fuels
B. Reduced dependence upon chemicals and synthetic substances; for example by

1. Use alternatives to chemical pesticides and herbicides in park and facility maintenance (example:
integrated pest management)
C. Activities that reduce encroachment upon nature, such as:

1. Funding for open space acquisition


2. Preservation of wilderness areas
3. Urban gardens, community gardens
4. Preservation of wildlife habitats and biological diversity of area ecosystems
5. On-site composting of organic waste
6. Restoration of damaged natural systems through regenerative design approaches
7. Creation of systems of green spaces within and among communities
8. Development of responsible alternatives to landfilling of solid waste
9. Using regionally native plants for landscaping
10. Encouraging landscape and park maintenance that reduce the use of mowers, edgers, and leaf
blowers
VI. Infrastructure Actions toward sustainability:
A. Reduced dependence upon fossil fuels, extracted underground metals, minerals, by promoting:

1. Facilities that employ renewable energy sources, or reduce use of fossil fuel for their operations and
transport needs
B. Reduced dependence upon chemicals and synthetic substances, by promoting:

1. Treatment facilities that remove or destroy pathogens without creating chemically-contaminated


byproducts
2. Design approaches and regulatory systems that focus on pollution prevention, re-use and recycling.
C. Reduction of activities that encroach upon nature, through:

1. Promotion of innovative sewage and septic treatment that discharges effluent meeting or exceeding
federal drinking water standards while minimizing or eliminating the use of chemicals (example:
greenhouse sewage treatment facilities)
2. Recognition of the "cradle to grave" costs of waste generation and disposal
3. Promotion of and removal of regulatory barriers to composting and graywater reuse systems
D. Meeting human needs fairly and efficiently, by:
1. Cleaning, conserving, and reusing wastewater at the site, neighborhood or community level,
reducing the need for large, expensive collection systems and regional processing facilities
VII. Growth Management Actions toward sustainability:
A. Reduced dependence upon fossil fuels, extracted underground metals, minerals, by promoting:

1. Development near existing transport systems; minimizing need for new road and highway
construction
B. Reduction of activities that encroach upon nature, by promoting:

1. Appropriate development and population growth policies linked to carrying capacity of natural
systems and community facilities
2. Development patterns that respect natural systems such as watersheds and wildlife corridors.
C. Meeting human needs fairly and efficiently, by promoting:

1. Fair and equitable growth management policies maintaining diversity in local populations and
economies
VIII. Floodplain Management Actions toward sustainability
A. Reduction of activities that encroach upon nature, by:

1. Guiding development away from floodplains


2. Guiding development away from barrier beaches
3. Preserving or restoring wetland areas along rivers for natural flood control
VIX. Watershed Planning/Management Actions toward sustainability
A. Reduction of activities that encroach upon nature, such as:

1. Preservation and enhancement of water quality


2. Reduction in water use
3. Recharge of groundwater basins
4. Use of flood control and stormwater techniques that enhance and restore natural habitats
5. Prevention of wetlands destruction; restoration of degraded wetlands
X. Resource Conservation Actions toward sustainability:
A. Reduced dependence upon fossil fuels, extracted underground metals, and minerals, by:

1. Minimizing energy use


2. Encouraging the development of renewable energy sources
3. Discouraging the use of products that utilize packaging derived from non-renewable, non-
degradable resources
4. Promoting the recycling of waste materials derived from non-renewable, non-degradable resources.
5. Developing community gardens that reduce the need for long-range transport of food and
associated consumption of fossil fuels.
B. Reduction of activities that encroach upon nature; for example, by:

1. Promoting the preservation and planting of trees and other vegetation that absorb carbon dioxide
and air pollutants
XI. Planning Processes/Education Actions toward sustainability:
A. Support activities that reduce dependence upon fossil fuels, extracted underground metals, and minerals;
for example, by:

1. Encouraging and enabling people to use transport other than gasoline-powered vehicles
B. Support activities that reduce dependence upon chemicals and unnatural substances; for example, by:

1. Educating citizens and public servants about both short- and long-term risks associated with the use
and disposal of hazardous materials
C. Support activities that reduce encroachment upon nature; for example, through:

1. Educational efforts to reduce levels of consumption and waste generation at the household and
community levels
D. Support meeting human needs fairly and efficiently by:

1. Integrally involving local community residents in setting the vision for and developing plans for their
communities and regions
2. Establishing avenues for meaningful participation in decision-making for all citizens and in particular
for historically disadvantaged people
3. Providing for equitable educational opportunities for all members of society
4. Promoting retraining of those displaced in the short-term by a shift to a more sustainable economy

References
The topics and material covered in this Policy Guide on Sustainability are germane to a range of additional
policy guides developed by the American Planning Association, most notably Policy Summaries addressing:

Role of Government and Growing Smart


General/Comprehensive Planning
Design and Historic Preservation
Community Development
Environmental Quality
Housing
Human Services
Transportation
American Planning Association, Summary of Planning Policies, Washington, DC.
Source Materials
American Planning Association Agenda for America's Communities, Planning and Community Equity,
Washington, DC, undated.
Baugher, Eleanor and Leatha Lamison-White, U.S. Bureau of the Census, Current Population Reports P60-
194, Poverty in the United States: 1995. U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 1996.
Hempel, Lamont C.: Sustainable Communities: From Vision to Action, Claremont Graduate University, 1998.
Hempel, Marilyn: Sustainable Communities: A Guide for Grassroots Activists, Population Press, Volume 4,
No.5, undated.
Krizek, Kevin and Joe Power: A Planners Guide to Sustainable Development, Planners Advisory Service
Report No.467, American Planning Association, December, 1996.
Local Government Commission: The Ahwahnee Principles, 1994.
Lyle, John Tillman: Regenerative Design for Sustainable Development, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York,
1994.
Rees, William, and Mathis Wackernagel: Our Ecological Footprint: Reducing Human Impact on the
Earth, New Society Publishers, Philadelphia, 1996.
Robert, Karl-Henrik, Herman Daly, Paul Hawken, and John Holmberg: A Compass for Sustainable
Development, The Natural Step Newsletter, Winter, 1996.
San Francisco, City and County of: Sustainability Plan for the City of San Francisco, October, 1996.
Schlesinger, Michael; Andronova, Natalia; Mendelsohn, Robert; & Morrison, Wendy; Country-Specific Market
Impacts of Climate Change, Paper presented at the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Asia-Pacific
Workshop on Integrated Assignment Models, held at the United Nations University, Tokyo, Japan. As cited in
Science Bits Quarterly, Summer, 1997. University Corporation for Atmospheric Research.
Steingraber, Sandra, Living Downstream, Vintage Books, New York, 1998.
Urban Ecology, Inc., Blueprint for a Sustainable Bay Area, November, 1996.
United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, Agenda 21: Program of Action for Sustainable
Development, Rio de Janeiro, 1992.
United Nations Development Programme, Human Development Report, 1999.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency: http://www.epa.gov.
Wackernagel, Mathis, interview, "Leaving Smaller Footprints", The Natural Step Newsletter, Fall, 1998, and
revised footprint estimates, 1999.
World Conservation Union et al.: Caring for the Earth: A Strategy for Sustainable Living, Glad,

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