HomeMy WebLinkAboutSCMinutes_2019_02_13Sustainability Council
February 13, 2019
A meeting of the Sustainability Council was held on Wednesday, February 13, 2019 at 4:00 p.m. at
Brookings City & County Government Center with the following members present:
Norma Nusz Chandler, Nels Granholm, Shelly Brandenburger, Bob McGrath, Mike Lockrem, Jennifer
McLaughlin, Robin Buterbaugh and Paul Peterson.
Absent: Betty Beer and Jane Hegland (No student member currently)
Others present: City Manager Paul Briseno and Jacob Meshke(interviewee for Assistant City Manager
position) from the City and public attendee Lawrence Novotny. Frank James from DRA spoke with the
Council near the end of the meeting.
Chair Jennifer McLaughlin called the meeting to order at 4:04pm.
I. Agenda approval: Robin/Bob/Motion passed
II. Minutes from January approval with one change to correct Norma’s name:
Bob/Stephanie/Motion passed
III. Subcommittee Reports:
a. Education & Communication: (1) They are working on sustainability awards – the release
will go out on April 1st to gather nominations, there will be a May 1st deadline for
nominations to go to Angie Ritter and then a June 1st notification from the committee to
the Mayor. (2) Green Drinks are going to be twice a year. For spring, the Council
discussed coordinating with the Children’s Museum as they are bringing in Stephanie
Arne sometime around Earth Day and we could have a Green Drinks with her as the
guest speaker. Discussed changing the name to “Green Tea” as would be at the
Museum and family friendly, not at the bar. Jennifer will look into contributing to her
coming financially with our budget. (3) the Brookings Bonanza has been set for August
24th and more information will be coming on this.
b. Local Foods: (1) the local foods subcommittee is a little short staffed as Caleb has left
the Council and Jane has some other commitments right now so Robin & Shelly will do
our best (2) the subcommittee will resume work on the City Ordinances review and (3)
the work on the Local Foods Co‐Op is progressing nicely. Shelly has been meeting with
Kristen Gjersdal (owner, Carrot Seed) and Louise Snodgrass (Farmer’s Market Manager)
to get the ball rolling. Louise is attending the national Food CoOp conference in early
March and a public forum has been set for March 16th from 10‐12am at the Library with
a Facebook page created https://www.facebook.com/groups/283932872291377/ and
flyers being posted around town as well as an email being sent to a large number of
potential stakeholders (community organizations, food groups, local producers,
retailers, etc). Paul Briseno noted that we should resume conversations with
Community Development on the ordinances review.
c. Energy: (1) the group is working on ideas for renewable energy and energy efficiency
for the City. Paul Briseno noted that the City Inspector is now ICC (International Council
Code) certified. He will check with the inspector to connect with the Council on these
issues.
d. Waste: the subcommittee has not met but will be soon. It was discussed today that a
faculty/grad student from SDSU Sociology are doing a recycling survey assessing
attitudes and knowledge. They are asking us to help disseminate the survey and will
share the results with us. We had a long discussion on improving recycling, focusing on
education, possibly focusing on reducing package and such upfront as the recycling
market is struggling. Paul Briseno noted that the Council could contact him with public
education ideas and the City could put it out on their social media (as they could also do
with the recycling survey).
IV. Liaison Reports:
a. Bike Committee: Mike reported that the bike share program will be in place by spring!
This will be a dockless system where bikers can park the bikes in designated areas
controlled by GPS.
b. Water: Nels reported that he is on the board for Friends of the Big Sioux River which
now has 300 members. They are bringing Dr. Catherin Zeman to Sioux Falls on March
21st to talk about nitrates in the water supply – 7pm at Augustana University
V. Other business:
a. Frank James from Dakota Rural Action was invited to speak to us about sustainability
related legislation. A few bills Frank brought to our attention:
i. SB184 is up on 2/14 and covers PUC permits. Currently, we recertify new
construction projects every 4 years in S.D. if construction hasn’t been
completed. There were some issues around this with the Keystone XL pipeline.
This bill states the PUC would have to follow the administrative rules process
(Ch1:26) if this situation comes up again.
ii. HB1090: Provides for the establishment of commercial property assessed clean
energy plans. This bill was deferred to the 41st legislative day.
iii. HB1239 & HB1240 – these bills will revise temporary & permanent water
permits where the county or municipality could request a hearing in their
community if they feel a project could hurt their water. These bills are in
committee currently.
iv. HB178 – not directly sustainability related but this bill would affect voters as it
would shorten the absentee voting period. This bill was passed in State Affairs
committee on 2/13.
v. HB1234 and HB1223 – these are related to the excise tax on animal feeding
operations and how it is distributed. Both are scheduled for hearing presently.
vi. HB1191 – the hemp legalization bill. This bill has been very controversial in the
state. It is currently scheduled for hearing on 2/19.
vii. SB4: This and other bills are looking at taxation of agricultural lands. SB4 is
currently in committee.
viii. SB112 – this bill would have changed how we assess grasslands (would be more
favorably than cropland). The bill has failed.
ix. SB64 – scheduled for hearing on 2/14. This bill would require new wind turbine
operations to have lights that only come on when aircraft is near.