Sally Kurtz responses

 

1. Rural Economy

 

Rural Loudoun comprises approximately 200,000 acres of land in agriculture, forestry and open space.�� In addition to generating income for the county, this land benefits all Loudouners through enhancement of view shed, considerable improvement of air and water quality, provision of healthy, local agricultural products and activities, recreation, and reduction of infrastructure-intensive residential development.

 

In 2007, the General Assembly provided funding for the first time to the Office of Farmland Preservation to assist local jurisdictions preserve working farms and forest land through the purchase of conservation easements.��

 

Will you support reinstating the Loudoun PDR program? YES NO

Yes

 

The rural economy needs and deserves the incentives and protections enjoyed by other businesses in the county.�� At the same time, agricultural practices must be sensitive to the preservation of the natural resources they affect, especially water quality.�� Sustainable agriculture acknowledges and maintains the natural balance of the land while providing nourishment and entertainment for residents all over the county.

 

Do you support measures for preserving and encouraging a sustainable rural economy in Western Loudoun?YES NO

Yes

 

When transportation and land use initiatives are proposed that conflict with rural economic initiatives, how will you protect the viability of rural enterprises?

 

 

Rural Economy Comments:My record reflects my opposition to initiatives that did not protect the rural economy. I voted against the current Board initiative to rezone the northern rural Catoctin District to 5 acre residential density like that of western Fairfax County, done without study of its affect on transportation or rural businesses. My opponent�s webpage on the other hand says he is willing to put this issue to bed. I am not. I see the Staton/Clem zoning as fundamentally suburban sprawl that sets up a situation where rural commercial use of groundwater will be competing for residential use.

 

 

 

 

 


2. Carbon Emissions and Environmental Standards

 

Record profits for big oil companies, high gas prices and home energy bills, stronger hurricanes, heat waves and wildfires, and national security threats around the world are some of the increasing concerns that Loudoun residents share with other Americans.These are also all early symptoms of the twin looming environmental disasters of resource (fossil fuels, water) depletion and global climate change.

A consensus of scientists warn that the United States must begin to cut global warming pollution during the next ten years and reduce it by 60 � 80% by 2050 in order to mitigate the most severe impacts of global warming.��� Some of these cuts can be achieved by replacing our energy sources with renewable technologies, but most experts agree with Congressman Roscoe Bartlett�s suggestion that 65% of new energy come from decreasing our energy requirements through conservation.

 

Would you support a comprehensive energy conservation plan for Loudoun County? YES/NO

Yes

 

In the absence of national leadership in conservation and renewable energy initiatives, US cities and counties are insuring their own future by instituting comprehensive sustainability plans.A number of counties across the country, including Fairfax and Arlington, have announced the creation of the Cool Counties Climate Stabilization Declaration, a major new initiative to control carbon emissions and combat global warming at the local level.  Participating counties pledge to reduce global warming emissions 80 percent by 2050, an achievable average annual reduction of 2 percent. 

Fairfax County, working in conjunction with the Sierra Club, has produced a road map that shows the kinds of concrete actions that counties can take in the areas of energy efficiency, renewable energy, greening vehicle fleets, land use, transportation, water conservation, and educational outreach.

Would you support adoption of the Cool Counties Initiative for Loudoun County? YES/NO

Yes

 

 

 

Landfills are the single largest human generated source of methane, which is more than 20 times more effective in trapping heat in the atmosphere than carbon dioxide.�� Loudoun relies on landfills almost exclusively for our consumer and commercial waste disposal.�� Forward-thinking communities around the US, recognizing the unsustainability of legacy waste removal practices, are reducing their reliance on landfills by creating incentives for reuse and recycling while also imposing disincentives for throwing material resources away.

 

 

Would you support a policy that reduces our reliance on County Landfills? YES/NO

Yes, our current District Solid Waste Plan has as one of its goals to support public/private establishment of a recycling facility on the Landfill grounds

 

 

 

Carbon Emissions Comments:

As I read the Fairfax County General Guide I realized that Loudoun County already does many of the practices described, such as fleet replacement with hybrid cars, telework with about 300 employees participating, and an employer transit outreach program. Seems to me that what we need to do as is suggested in the Fairfax guide is to formalize the existing efforts into the suggested CoolCounties Initiative and beginour inventory, set goals, policies, targets, assignment of responsibility and then monitor.

 


3. Green Building Standards

 

Green building is a loosely defined collection of land-use, building design, and construction strategies that reduce the environmental impacts that buildings have on their surroundings. Traditional building practices often overlook the interrelationships among a building, its components, its surroundings, and its occupants. �Typical� buildings consume more of our resources than necessary and generate large amounts of waste.

 

In the late 1990�s, neighboring Arlington County made a decision to pursue improved energy and environmental performance in their public and private infrastructure.�� In 2003, Arlington County delivered its first public building designed according to the principles in the US Green Building Council's Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED�) Green Building Rating System.

 

The LEED� rating system allots points within seven specific categories for environmentally beneficial building materials and design, in categories such as site location, water efficiency, energy and the atmosphere, materials and resources, and indoor environmental quality. LEED � is one of the most popular standards systems used by professional organizations to master green building standards and practices. Information about Arlington County's Green Building programs is available.

 

Green buildings have many benefits, such as economical use of building resources, significant operational savings, and increased workplace productivity. Building green sends the right message about a company or organization - it�s well run, responsible, and committed to the future.

 

Would you support a county initiative to draft green building standards legislation to create incentives for public and private investment in green buildings?YES/NO

Yes

 

 

 

Green Building Standards Comments:

Yes, I had to push the school system to include waterless urinals in their Special Exception for HS-3 on the Fields Farm site, where ifanywhere conservation efforts needed to be made. Seems to me that green building is one area that could also benefit from establishing a standing School Board/Board of Supervisors Committee to monthly analyze the fiscal aspects of our investment in public education that I hope will have political will on the next Board of Supervisors.

 

 

 

 

 


4. Education and Schools

 

Loudoun County Public Schools maintains 68 school facilities including 10 High Schools.�� Rapid residential growth results in several new schools each year.��� LCPS offers an opportunity to demonstrate leadership within the county industries towards green building and sustainable practices.

Our public and private schools provide fertile ground for both preparing the new generation to successfully manage and even reverse current energy trends as well as practicing what we preach as we plan our school buildings and develop curriculum.

The white paper, Greening America�s Schools: Costs and Benefits summarizes the work on health benefits, teacher retention, test score increases, etc., as well as savings from reduced energy usage and reduced water consumption.

 

LCPS currently maintains an Energy Education Program whose mission has been �to reduce the use of energy throughout the school system�.�� LCPS could expand the mission and personnel of this office to develop resources that will embed sustainable development principles in school buildings, the curriculum and the community. ��

 

 

Would you support the development of a school system-wide Sustainable Schools initiative? YES NO

Absolutely.

 

 

Siting of new schools, especially in the Western end of the County, has been problematic recently due to past failures in planning.�� While financial and market considerations will always have a significant impact on school site selection, policies could give greater consideration to community input, to life cycle costs, and to natural resource impacts than it has in the past.�� Greater flexibility in school building & campus layout as well as school size could provide the accommodations that are needed to creatively place new schools in the communities they serve.��

 

Will you support changes in the school siting policies to give greater weight to placing appropriately sized schools near the communities they serve? YES NO

Yes

 

Will you support changes to the school building standards to accommodate green building principles, which would provide a healthier environment for our children, use resources sustainably and generate life-cycle cost savings for the taxpayers? YES NO

Yes

 

Education Comments:

I am not well versed in any of the efforts that the LCPS makes to provide green buildings or appropriately site schools, so perhaps my prejudices are unjustified, but I do know that Mark Nuzzaco and I met with Trout Unlimited and appropriate school administration staff to discuss the siting of HS-5 on the O�Conner property north of Leesburg. We knew that to urge proper siting to protect the naturally reproducing trout population in the Big Spring tributary that we needed to work with the school system early in the game.

Additionally the County needs to coordinate its own building of public facilities to incorporate sustainable practices.