Colorado Better Buildings Project Final Report

Colorado Better Buildings Project Final Report
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2013
Genre:
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The Colorado Better Buildings project intended to bring new and existing energy efficiency model programs to market with regional collaboration and funding partnerships. The goals for Boulder County and its program partners were to advance energy efficiency investments, stimulate economic growth in Colorado and advance the state's energy independence. Collectively, three counties set out to complete 9,025 energy efficiency upgrades in 2.5 years and they succeeded in doing so. Energy efficiency upgrades have been completed in more than 11,000 homes and businesses in these communities. Boulder County and its partners received a $25 million BetterBuildings grant from the U.S. Department of Energy under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act in the summer of 2010. This was also known as the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grants program. With this funding, Boulder County, the City and County of Denver, and Garfield County set out to design programs for the residential and commercial sectors to overcome key barriers in the energy upgrade process. Since January 2011, these communities have paired homeowners and business owners with an Energy Advisor - an expert to help move from assessment to upgrade with minimal hassle. Pairing this step-by-step assistance with financing incentives has effectively addressed many key barriers, resulting in energy efficiency improvements and happy customers. An expert energy advisor guides the building owner through every step of the process, coordinating the energy assessment, interpreting results for a customized action plan, providing a list of contractors, and finding and applying for all available rebates and low-interest loans. In addition to the expert advising and financial incentives, the programs also included elements of social marketing, technical assistance, workforce development and contractor trainings, project monitoring and verification, and a cloud-based customer data system to coordinate among field advisors and across local governments and local service vendors. A portion of the BetterBuildings grant went to the Metro Mayors Caucus (MMC) who worked in partnership with the Denver Regional Council of Governments (DRCOG) to conduct a series of 10 energy efficiency workshops for local government officials and other interested parties. The workshops helped showcase lessons learned on energy efficiency and helped guide other local governments in the establishment of similar programs. The workshops covered a wide range of energy efficiency and renewable energy topics such as clean energy finance, social mobilization and communications, specific case studies of Colorado towns, energy efficiency codes, net zero buildings and solar power. Since the programs launched in January 2011, these communities have collectively spurred economic investments in energy efficiency, achieved greater than 5:1 leveraging of grant funds, saved energy and reduced greenhouse gas emissions, provided trainings for a robust local energy contractor network, and proved out viable and replicable program models that local utilities and other communities are adopting, with long lasting market transformation.

Local Government Fracking Regulation

Local Government Fracking Regulation
Author: Joel Minor
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2014
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ISBN:

The recent unconventional oil and gas development boom, better known as the “fracking” boom, is rapidly transforming communities nationwide. Substantial scholarly attention has focused on state and federal fracking regulations, but little has focused on local regulations. Articles that have addressed local government regulation have generally considered only whether local governments can regulate fracking and not how they should do so. But while scholars continue to debate which level of government should regulate fracking, local governments nationwide have already begun enacting regulations. Accordingly, this Article explores how local governments may regulate fracking under state preemption law, using Colorado as a case study. Colorado has a longstanding legal framework for local government oil and gas regulation due to the industry's continuous presence in the state prior to the recent fracking boom. Some eastern states have recently adopted Colorado's approach. But lingering questions remain about the details of local authority, and conflict is brewing as many local governments begin to regulate fracking in their communities. This Article addresses how the fracking boom presents unique challenges to local governments, their regulatory authority under Colorado law, and how they can approach regulation in a manner most likely to survive judicial review. It begins by explaining fracking's socioeconomic and environmental impacts, focusing on impacts in rural Western communities. It emphasizes fracking's socioeconomic impacts, which have been largely overlooked by other legal scholarship, yet constitute the strongest ground for local government regulation. The Article then addresses the legal basis for local government fracking regulation under Colorado law. It highlights that Colorado local governments, especially home rule municipalities, enjoy broad authority over land use matters. Next, the Article critically examines four frameworks for local government regulation -- guides published by two organizations, and ordinances already enacted in several Colorado cities. It concludes by advocating that Colorado local governments regulate the fracking boom through land use ordinances targeting the boom's socioeconomic impacts, rather than ordinances that directly regulate fracking or that target the fracking boom's environmental impacts.

Colorado Land Planning and Development Law

Colorado Land Planning and Development Law
Author: Donald L. Elliott
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2004
Genre: Land use
ISBN: 9781883726843

Colorado Land Planning and Development Law reviews relevant law for private and public planners, planning commissioners, government officials, consultants, and lawyers who work in the area of land use planning, development, and redevelopment in Colorado. Intended as a guide to understanding and avoiding potential legal problems, the book is filled with easy-to-follow case summaries and statutes addressing land use issues. While this book focuses on the status of land use law in Colorado, influential decisions from other jurisdictions have also been included to the extent they offer answers or alternative solutions to issues that remain unsettled in this state. Federal decisions that have a direct impact on Colorado land use law are also included, along with several instructive examples drawn from local land use regulations and zoning ordinances.