HOWTO GUIDE FOR EMERALD CITIES December 17, 2010
Transcription
HOWTO GUIDE FOR EMERALD CITIES December 17, 2010
HOWTO GUIDE FOR EMERALD CITIES December 17, 2010 Version 3 -1- TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................................................................3 ECC NATIONAL ........................................................................................................................................................4 GOALS .......................................................................................................................................................................5 NATIONAL – LOCAL RELATIONSHIP ..........................................................................................................................6 LOCAL EMERALD CITIES COLLABORATIVES...............................................................................................7 BUILDING A LOCAL COUNCIL ....................................................................................................................................7 Assembling the Stakeholders................................................................................................................................8 Sign-On Threshold .............................................................................................................................................10 Governance Structure ........................................................................................................................................13 Organizational Structure ...................................................................................................................................15 Selecting a Fiscal Agent.....................................................................................................................................16 PROJECT DEVELOPMENT..........................................................................................................................................17 Planning.............................................................................................................................................................17 Project Selection ................................................................................................................................................19 Project Elements ................................................................................................................................................20 Building Technology ..........................................................................................................................................20 Financing ...........................................................................................................................................................22 Workforce Development.....................................................................................................................................26 Community Organizing ......................................................................................................................................27 Public Policy ......................................................................................................................................................29 MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT ..............................................................................................................................32 Blank Assessment Tool.......................................................................................................................................34 GLOSSARY ...............................................................................................................................................................36 -2- INTRODUCTION Welcome to the Emerald Cities Collaborative. The Emerald Cities Collaborative (ECC) is excited about teaming up with many impressive energy efficiency, workforce development, and community organizing efforts on-the-ground in cities around the country in order to improve our metropolitan communities. By connecting national and local resources and expertise, as well as coordinating work among local stakeholders, we can, together, greatly scale up our environmental, economic, and democratic impact. The hubs of these local activities will be local ECC councils. This guide provides a quick snapshot of the many considerations in launching a local ECC council, creating a governance and organizational structure, selecting preliminary local projects, developing each of the many elements needed to implement the work, and evaluating success. While every local member is familiar with particular aspects of what is required to make a successful Emerald City, all join with unique experiences and questions. With this guide, we hope to help coordinate the conversation about our collective efforts through a broad overview that provides common understanding across both partners within a city and local ECCs throughout the country. This guide is not intended to be prescriptive – we seek to raise ideas for consideration and not to tell you how to do this work. We hope to enrich this guide with your own strategies and pointers as all of you successfully develop ECC on the ground. We will also supplement this document with more in-depth guides to topics referenced in many of these sections. We hope this can be a resource as you get started, and we look forward to your feedback so we can continue to improve our advice for each new Emerald City. Even if you are not a member of ECC, thank you for your interest and please read on! This guide can serve as a resource for community organizations, labor unions, city governments, businesses, and foundations around the country interested in working together to green our cities, build our communities, and strengthen our democracy. While these groups may not have a formal relationship with the national ECC, many of the considerations and ideas presented here can be applied to any green, collaborative effort. We hope that this guide can help all interested stakeholders build successful local partnerships to further their goals. -3- ECC NATIONAL ECC is a working partnership of diverse organizations – businesses, unions, community organizations, social justice advocates, development intermediaries, research and technical assistance providers — united around the goal of greening our metropolitan areas in “high-road” ways that advance fair opportunity, shared wealth, and democracy within them. Our initial focus is to collectively craft models and systems that ensure that the public investments in energy efficiency retrofits of America’s building stock are scalable; intentionally include low-income, communities of color, and create viable jobs and careers. ECC’s assembled assets are substantial and significantly contribute to building scalable models of energy conservation, workforce and community development. The Local Initiatives Support Corporation, Enterprise Community Partners, NeighborWorks America, and the Council of Large Public Housing Authorities finance and manage over a million units of affordable and public housing and have replicable green building programs and services. The Corps Network, YouthBuild USA, the Community Action Partnership and the Building and Construction Trades (AFL-CIO), operate a combined 1,500 labor and community based training centers, which offer both pre-apprenticeship and apprenticeship training curricula. PolicyLink, Green for All, and the Partnership for Working Families are effective national and local policy advocates. Center on Wisconsin Strategy, based at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and the Community Innovators Lab at MIT contribute policy, planning and research. We also bring investment and financial assets through our banking, pension and investment partners such as Bronze Investments. Our goal is to work jointly, stitching together our disparate programs, resources and expertise to ensure sustainable and scalable impact on our mutual efforts to rebuild America. ECC is the only “table” in the country that brings together these national organizations and local operations that are engaged in designing and implementing an integrated strategy of comprehensive retrofits that incorporate all of their assets. We offer our local partners that embrace ECC’s principles of community change a variety of support, including: a ‘starter kit’ of building stock/inventory; increased access to training and high quality jobs and careers; access to private capital; prototype project designs by building type; technical assistance in program design, management, and evaluation; promotion and facilitation of labor-community organizing; assistance in policy and regulatory reform; and shared learning and knowledge dissemination. -4- Goals ECC’s diverse member organizations are united around the goal of rapidly greening our nation's central cities and their surrounding metropolitan regions in equitable and democratically accountable ways. We envision a future in which American cities are the greenest and most equitable in the world, leading the way to head off global climate change while creating a vital new economic sector. Through a series of projects implemented in collaboration with an expanding network of cities, ECC seeks to: • Green our cities by conducting comprehensive and deep building retrofits to significantly reduce the city’s carbon footprint and increase energy efficiency. • Build our communities by generating good jobs and lifetime careers, creating new enterprises, promoting social and economic equity, and raising living standards. • Strengthen our democracy by giving greater voice to community and labor united and increasing access to consequential decision-making about the urban future. We believe that we can achieve these goals through efforts to: • • • • • • Substantially increase the energy efficiency of citywide building stock over ten years while prioritizing low-income communities; Implement deep, not simple, retrofits wherever possible; Support high-road job creation through the requirement for labor standards; Expand access to high-quality jobs and contracts to minorities, women, and lowincome residents; Build lasting democratic capacity to shape the urban economy; and Support regulations and legislation furthering these goals. In order to become an Emerald City, we require that cities and their communities affirm the goals and principles of ECC. The local section of this guide details our threshold of support for local stakeholders. -5- National – Local Relationship The national ECC will provide financial, political, and technical support for the development of local ECC tables, project planning, and project implementation. The following are proposed areas of aid to local ECC councils, with specific assistance depending on the particular needs of each community. Finance Though ECC is not a funder, helping local affiliates develop new financial mechanisms and find resources for project development is a top priority. Through its national partnership, ECC brings together financial experts who have years of experience in the field of energy and energy efficiency, and development financing. In such challenging financial times, it is also incumbent on ECC to help local members figure out creative ways to use public financing and attract private financing to undertake retrofit projects in the aggregate. Political Support With its extensive network, ECC can help local affiliates gather the political will that is needed to accomplish agreed upon goals. We recognize the challenges to leaders who are asking their constituents to work with groups that are either unfamiliar or have histories of conflict. Through strategic injections of support, ECC can help affiliates create new partnerships and leverage old ones. ECC, directly and through our member organizations, expects to actively work with you to create a policy environment that supports our environmental, economic and social equity goals at both the national and local levels. Technical Assistance With the complexity of large-scale retrofit projects, it is inevitable that local Emerald Cities’ affiliates will need some kind of technical assistance, whether on building technology, community organizing, or workforce development. ECC will provide technical assistance services through various means. The following are proposed methods of technical assistance delivery: • • • • • • Direct tailored assistance ECC Website Rapid response team National conferences TA stable Training opportunities (as we scale up) ECC national will also facilitate communication across our cities by developing a peer-to-peer learning network. By developing a system for local ECC councils to share information and best practices, ECC hopes to encourage their dissemination not through a top down, prescriptive approach, but rather by those who are implementing projects on the ground. -6- LOCAL EMERALD CITIES COLLABORATIVES Building a Local Council A distinguishing quality of ECC is an unwavering commitment to not only rebuild America’s regional economies to be greener and more sustainable, but to also bridge America’s economic and social chasms. ECC’s success requires building more robust and effective economic systems. A sustainable and productive energy efficiency system must seamlessly connect all the segments of our economy: business, labor, government and community. We need a predictable and more coherent workforce system, linking community-based, academic and labor training programs. We need to align the market forces – real estate, finance, business – with public sector finances. Similarly, ECC looks to forge a new social compact. Ensuring that the new green economy is broadly accessible to all Americans is as important as building a new economy. This means intentionally involving all segments of the community in the planning and implementation process. This also means being open (and prepared) for new and, often, difficult conversations across class, racial and ethnic lines. The Local Council is organized to build a better “economic mouse trap”. But beyond ECC’s system building approach, stakeholders can achieve much more by working together. The environmental, economic, and democratic challenges that confront our cities require collaboration that can harness the strengths of all stakeholders for local success. Collectively, we can design and implement an ambitious program grounded in scaled projects that reduces the carbon emissions of our building stock; generates high quality jobs for residents throughout the community; and links a variety of constituents to guide local decision-making in a unified direction. The first step to achieving our shared goals is to build the table needed to facilitate coordination among community, labor, city government, and civic organizations. This process has several elements, each described in detail in this section: • • • • • Assembling the stakeholders Achieving the threshold of local commitment Designing a governance structure Creating an organizational structure Selecting a fiscal agent -7- Assembling the Stakeholders ECC national includes a diverse group of national organizations with both resources and capacities to generate demand and labor supply in the emerging green economy and “on-theground” operations in cities across the country. This is a natural starting point for an ECC conversation. Our labor, community, environmental, business and financial partners are committed to marshalling their national and local assets to drive results in your region. Refer to our list of board members to develop your inventory of potential members. Then a call to the national office gets the ball rolling. We will work with you to enlist our local partners into your local ECC Council. This, however, is only a starter kit to building a local ECC Council. Each city/region hosts a varied and unique array of assets that need to be harnessed into a rich and broadly representative stakeholder Council. Be certain to critically assess who should be at the table, what they bring to the ECC mission, what capacities they bring to the table. Perhaps most importantly, be sure that you are able to assess the collaborative nature and culture of your organizational partners. After this initial inventory, assess your gaps. Who needs to be there, what types of capacities do you need that does not yet exist? There is no minimum or maximum number of organizations that make up a local ECC Council. Yet, it is important to have each major segment of the community represented: government, labor, community and business. You can and will continue to expand the table over time. The hardest part of the job is not identifying the right organizations or people, but convincing them to “drink the Kool-Aid” and getting them to join yet another collaboration. The more you are able to appeal to their self-interest and align with their organizational mission, the more successful you will be. National Board Members Bronze Investments International Union of Painters and Allied Trades Building and Construction Trades, AFL-CIO Laborer International Union of North America Center on Wisconsin Strategy The Local Initiatives Support Coalition Community Action Partnership MIT Community Innovators Lab The Corps Network NeighborWorks America Council of Large Public Housing Authorities Partnership for Working Families Enterprise Community Partners PolicyLink Green For All United Association of Plumbers and Pipefitters International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers YouthBuild USA -8- Community Engagement Creating a more democratic and fair society is a core principle of ECC. We strongly reject the disenfranchisement of communities of color and impoverished communities in economic and political development efforts. In thinking about creating a more democratic and fair society, ECC partners must share the vision and expectations for a broad and inclusive table—a table that can only be set through intentional, thoughtful community engagement strategies. It is important to ECC national that our partner cities work intentionally to include these historically disenfranchised communities in their effort to comprehensively retrofit their build stock. By developing an ECC campaign on the ground, local members also acknowledge that a place-based approach to energy retrofit work will help create political support. These considerations are relevant at multiple stages of ECC work: 1. Before creating a Community Engagement and Organizing Strategy: • • • Make an effort to understand the landscape of the current retrofit market, organizational landscape, and individual knowledge Determine whether there are organizations that already have a community base Be prepared to develop or learn about effective communications strategies that embrace language that everyone can understand 2. During outreach, there are several basic things to keep in mind, which might be useful when conducting outreach and community engagement activities: • • • • Use the information that you gathered to create a framework for common language around energy issues Listen to the concerns of those whom you are engaging Create opportunities for meaningful work in your campaign to aggregate energy retrofits Be prepared to help mend frayed relationships 3. At this stage, consider who is invited to the table. Once the partnership-building process has started, it will be up to the anchor organization to convene a broad set of stakeholders. The coalition should engage both groups who represent key constituents and groups who have so far been disengaged from the green jobs movement. Local ECC councils should reach out to the following community groups: • • • • • • Organizations that have base, credibility, and the ability to mobilize Organizations with a direct mission-fit Organizations with a transparent culture and deliberative capacity Organizations that represent key constituents (geographically, economically, professionally, and demographically) Affordable-housing developers, public housing authorities, and tenant rights organizers Neighborhood associations and other Community Based Organizations -9- • • • • • Youth empowerment organizations Religious groups Public health advocates Immigrant rights advocates Universities, Community Colleges, and Public Schools Collaborative Building Process As you determine the type of work that you must undertake, think about the following strategies: • • • • • Start with a shared vision and mission and operating principles Clearly define Roles and expectations and codify in an MOU Seek to understand your partners’ perspectives and goals Have a plan with defined interim and final goals Be totally honest about measures, standards, and implementation policies SignOn Threshold The composition of the local ECC councils will vary based on local circumstances. We would like local membership to reflect the unique strengths and relationships within each community. At the same time, all cities are required to meet a national baseline in order to establish a formal relationship with the national ECC. We expect that local ECC councils will meet an initial threshold of interest across stakeholders to launch their efforts. This core group of members should continue to grow as ECC establishes itself and implements projects on the ground. Local ECC councils can establish their threshold for local membership in several broad steps: 1. The local ECC council obtains the support of key stakeholders in city government, labor, community, and the civic infrastructure: • Local Government: The mayor of each Emerald City must agree to comprehensively retrofit the city’s building stock within ten years in an equitable way. Moreover, he or she must agree to work with Emerald Cities partners representing the three groups outlined below, to develop a serious plan for how this work will be done. While it is desirable for a mayor to sign a formal agreement, he or she is not required to do so at the outset; nevertheless, a commitment to ECC and its goals and principles must be signaled in a serious and public manner. The mayor must also pledge to seek additional public partners for local ECC efforts. The support of additional city administrators is also recommended, and these individuals or organizations should be identified locally. • Labor: The necessary commitment of the labor unions is that the Building and Construction Trades Council and its affiliated local unions formally endorse ECC - 10 - efforts and its goals with a standard resolution and agree to collaborate with community partners, civic leadership, and city government on the terms of a social compact promoting both job quality and job access. This resolution should occur after a structured meeting with the national Building and Construction Trades Department, AFL-CIO. • Community: Community encompasses a broad set of groups including social justice advocates, development intermediaries, neighborhood associations, church and other religious organizations, and social service providers. ECC requires the commitment of a set of such groups that are sufficiently representative of the local community, particularly low-income and minority populations. Community organizations should indicate intent to work in solidarity with ECC and collaboratively with labor, business and government on the terms of a collective document declaring ECC’s mission and principles. • Civic: The achievement of ECC goals will rely upon significant private investment. Thus, a threshold commitment from cities includes the core support of philanthropic or business partners such as private developers and Workforce Investment Boards. While this sector is not coherent, the engagement of several respected leaders within the civic sector is required. These civic leaders are expected to push for retrofits at scale consistent with the goals of a local ECC plan and to embrace the underlying principles of ECC. We recommend outreach to private sector partners including: o Material Suppliers and Manufacturers o Minority and Women-Owned Contractors o Signatory Contractors o Energy Service Companies o Credit Unions and Banks o Community Development Finance Institutions o Equity Fund and Green Investors o Small Business Associations The local ECC council documents formal support of local members for Emerald Cities: • A baseline signatory agreement that includes the principles of national ECC. All local members throughout the country will be required to sign this document. The mayor must also agree to these principles and is strongly encouraged to sign on, but this remains optional in case the city government is concerned about the legal implications that it would entail. • We strongly encourage each local ECC council to amend the national agreement with a statement of local principles. This amendment would ensure that any organization joining a local ECC council meets not only the national baseline, but also the expectations of other local members. If a local ECC council does choose - 11 - to create a local attachment, local members will sign one master document that includes both the national agreement and local amendment. 2. Local members should continue their outreach to additional partners. As new members join the local ECC council, they should sign the same master signatory document as existing partners. As this membership list grows, the local ECC council should keep national ECC updated on the current members. This list will serve as the formal record of local members for the national ECC. - 12 - Governance Structure Once local members have joined ECC, you will need to create a strong governance structure that both drives local work and ensures diverse input in all key decision-making. We highlight several considerations here as a first step in articulating a standard process and criteria for building effective and democratic governance structures for local ECC councils. While we recognize that each city has unique political and demographic circumstances, we seek to achieve some level of consistency among our local ECC councils. Local ECC members can create a robust governance structure by considering both what the structure is and how it works: 1. Local members should determine what committees are needed to drive critical ECC work. Some of these committees may be permanent, while others function more like working groups that shift with project demands. Ideas for committees to help organize the basic components of local ECC coordination and project implementation include: • • • • • • • • Steering or Executive Workforce development Demand generation (real estate/financing/energy technology/building science) Business development or contracting Public policy Community organizing, outreach, or marketing Project implementation – task forces might be needed by building sector Monitoring and assessment 2. The local ECC council should then determine how these committees will function, including the roles of each member within each part of the governance structure. This aspect of the leadership design includes several components: • Who leads the local ECC? (Anchor/ Convener) The local leaders and organizations that convene and anchor the early phases of partnership-building are key actors in the local ECC council. An ideal anchor organization has the following characteristics: o Well-established and well-trusted in the community o Flexible and adaptable o Adept at mediating conflicts between disparate interests o Able to clearly articulate the significant value-add that ECC offers o Able to lead groups through a process of creating a shared vision and agenda o Well-connected to a wide spectrum of groups that reflect the racial and ethnic composition of the city • How do members construct a shared mission or vision? (Set Priorities) After a broad coalition is convened, the first challenge will be to agree upon common - 13 - priorities. These priorities will vary somewhat across local ECCs depending on who is at the table. The key to success will lie in the convener’s ability to uphold the deliberative space necessary for coming to consensus on a long-term vision that inspires commitment and collaboration among members. During this phase, the local ECC council will be tested in its ability to uphold the commitment to fostering mutually-affirming, equitable, non-dominating relationships. Interests will be divergent and all parties will have to commit to the ethics of creating a common good. For this task, it is helpful if some part of the council is well-trained in consensus-building. • How are roles defined? (Leadership, Accountability, Structure) One of the challenges with convening a broad set of members is working efficiently. Once a large group of stakeholders is engaged, core leadership committees are likely to emerge. ECC requires meaningful and equal representation on local steering groups, sub-committees, and other core leadership entities. When selecting core leadership members, careful attention must be paid to replicate the diversity of the larger coalition so that all interests are represented. At a minimum, one representative each sector of Labor, Community, Government, and Civic must be part of the core leadership group. • How is internal conflict mediated? (Avoiding impasse) Support structures will be required to help local members mediate conflict and build community support. The national ECC will be available to mediate conflicts as well as train local partners to mediate internal conflicts. 3. Local ECC councils can also consider multiple categories of membership. A steering or executive committee will require a larger commitment by organizations than general membership. In addition, the Oakland Emerald Cities Collaborative is considering establishing a third tier of membership. This tier will be a passive membership that allows member organizations to signal support for the local ECC without committing organizational time or resources. While other local ECC’s may not choose this particular structure, we encourage you to design a membership structure that best captures the support and commitment present in your community. - 14 - Organizational Structure National ECC does not require local ECC councils to adopt any specific organizational structure, because we recognize that you must respond to local needs. This checklist of considerations can help systemize your process of designing the organization that supports the local ECC council: Staff What are the primary staff responsibilities? Facilitation Strategic development Project development Policy research and/or advocacy Fundraising Communications Other: __________________________________________________ How many staff members does this require? Do stakeholders prefer distributive leadership and staffing or centralized operations? Roles of Member Organizations What are the functional expectations of member organizations? Will local member organizations be required to donate staff time? What responsibilities will be provided pro bono by member organizations? How will resources be distributed among local organizations for the work they provide for the local ECC? Will member organizations be required to sign detailed MOUs, or will these agreements remain informal? Operating and Project Financing What is the projected size of the annual operating budget? Does the local ECC Council expect to receive local, state or federal funding? What percentage of funding is protected to be from private grants? Are there strong, trusted organizational partners capable of and committed to meeting the programmatic and financing needs of the Council? Is the city participating in any state or federal programs for which ECC can consult or partner? Are there any revenue generating opportunities for ECC locally? Operations and Legal Status Where will the offices be located? Is there an anchor organization to house the Council? What is the rent, and is it available pro bono from a member organization? Is there a local nonprofit incubator to provide legal, financial and fundraising support for the Council? Is there a local foundation that can serve as a fiscal agent? Are stakeholders willing to assume legal and fiduciary responsibility for managing a new, separate nonprofit organization? If so: who is on the Board of Directors? What type of non-profit best meet the needs of the Council (c3, c4 or c7)? - 15 - Selecting a Fiscal Agent For a number of good reasons, few ECC Local Councils establish themselves as separate nonprofit organizations at their inception. Yet, they need to immediately fund raise for operating and project financing to staff the collaborative and to deliver on the promise of economic progress. It is important, therefore, for Local ECC Councils to identify an organizational partner willing to serve as a fiscal agent for the Collaborative. A fiscal agent assumes a special role and responsibility. They assume accounting, legal and reporting responsibility for the ECC Collaborative. And yet, they are not, in the strictest sense or in the ideal situation, responsible for the programmatic direction or outcome of the Local Council. Local Councils operate with a democratically designed organizational structure. Decisions are derived through a consensus, voting or other democratic process. It is important to establish a Memorandum of Understanding among the key organizational stakeholders that codifies the terms and conditions of the fiscal agent. This might include: how long they will assume the responsibility and the desired reporting and scope of service. The Local Council should also consider, under the best of circumstances, the level of compensation for taking on the job. In selecting a fiscal agent look for the following qualities: 1) a well established and respected organization, 2) an organization tat is fully invested in the success of the Council, 3) an organization with strong financials and that can demonstrate 2 years of positive cash flow, 4) an organization that has no audit exceptions in the prior 2 years of audited financials, and 5) adequate staff capacity to meet the contracted obligations. - 16 - Project Development While ECC strongly believes in the value of facilitation, building the table is not enough to improve our cities. The projects themselves are needed to mitigate the environmental impact of our building stock, generate high quality jobs, create economic opportunities for disadvantaged communities, and sustain a focused opportunity for residents to transform their neighborhoods. To achieve all of these goals, energy efficiency retrofit projects must be implemented on a broad scale. They should both deeply reduce the carbon emissions of each building selected and target a comprehensive range of building stock. Successful project development begins with a planning process that assesses the needs and opportunities within each city. Next, particular projects can be prioritized and the roles of individual member organizations can be defined. Finally, project implementation must address the myriad elements critical to project success, including building technology; financing; workforce development; community organizing; and public policy. Planning Weatherization projects have been increasing over the last year, spurred in part by funding available through the federal stimulus package. However, most of the efforts to date have focused on a single building sector without stakeholders working together to leverage their assets and expertise. Tax credits and many audit programs target single-family homeowners; nonprofit developers focus on strategies to assist a single target building sector such as multifamily housing; city governments are beginning to retrofit municipal buildings; and school systems, commercial, and industrial sectors individually evaluate the energy savings of retrofitting their own building stock. This piecemeal strategy misses many of the opportunities for deep retrofits that are possible through neighborhood level projects and other programs that jointly retrofit buildings across building sectors. We recommend that local ECC councils begin their project development with a planning process that transcends the individual orientation of local members and instead capitalizes on the greatest needs and opportunities across the city. Energy use in these areas should demonstrate high inefficiency. In addition, this planning should incorporate equity and the ability to coordinate among multiple building owners, residents, and workers. A citywide planning process entails several steps: 1. Local members work with the city government, utilities, and other organizations with relevant data to map the city’s building stock according to a variety of measures including: • • • • Energy usage, benchmarked against similar buildings Structural deficiencies or health hazards Ownership or management by local ECC members Ongoing municipal development projects - 17 - • • Location of large public institutions such as hospitals, schools, churches, and community centers and their potential to erect solar, cogeneration, wind, or other renewable sources that could generate power for neighborhood residents Available financing, including private investment; city incentives; and state and federal grants 2. The local ECC councils can similarly identify and map local geographies of need. While it is ultimately most useful if captured in a map that can be overlaid onto the data collected above, this information should not simply be collected from existing datasets. Community input from town halls or focus groups can enrich census data such as residential income levels or unemployment rates in determining priority neighborhoods and projects. Other considerations may include neighborhood vulnerability to foreclosure or the need for broadband. 3. Many local ECC members are already retrofitting buildings for energy efficiency, training workers onsite, promoting economic development in targeted neighborhoods, or otherwise providing relevant services at a building or community level. The ECC council should map existing membership efforts so that future projects can coordinate and scale up this work. • • • • Affordable housing developers can see where they have units to contribute. Community-based organizations can map their membership and locate supportive local businesses and institutions. Unions and community-based trainers can identify the neighborhoods where their workers live and projects that are ongoing. Contractors can map the buildings currently under construction or in the pipeline. 4. Finally, members combine these maps to develop a cohesive citywide strategy that identifies gaps in ongoing work to determine where new efforts are needed. - 18 - Project Selection Once an overall strategy has been set through a collaborative planning process, we recommend that the local ECC council set priority projects consistent with that strategy. Selecting initial projects will require a commitment from building owners, organized commitments from members in specific implementation roles, and filling in any gaps needed to complete a retrofit. This requires several steps: 1. Members each decide what aspect of the program they can implement, what budget is required, and what dollars they can leverage for this effort. Local members can consult with their national affiliates or ECC for advice. • Community-based members might take on roles for advertising, outreach, and marketing the retrofit programs to building owners and occupants. These members would need to develop a clear written strategy for how they will convince local people to participate. • Trades members might assume the role of defining which contractors are doing which part of the work. All contractors should abide by labor standards, wage requirements, and local hiring agreements wherever possible. Ideally, these contractors could commit to and budget for training new workers through this retrofit program. • Workforce training members might define which curriculum each partner is offering and how curriculums all feed into one another. Ideally all new green sector trainees should be enrolled in standardized pre-apprenticeship training that can lead to an apprenticeship with a union trade. • Other partners might take on the responsibility of providing support services to ensure that new trainees can access these work opportunities. Such services might include: daycare, transportation, language interpretation services, job counseling, GED courses, and job placement. 2. The local ECC council might need to recruit an energy services contractor (ESCO) to immediately audit a sample of buildings in the target area and recommend a specific retrofit program. This ESCO might also help with the design and/or implementation of the impact monitoring and verification system. An ESCO that joins the local ECC council should commit to hiring and training local people as the project grows and moves forward. 3. Where there are other capacity gaps in program delivery or implementation, members can recruit other new members to their local ECC council. • New members who might help with the financial sustainability and leveraging include: credit unions, banks, community development finance investors, and social equity fund investors. - 19 - • New members who might help scaling up of efforts include: small business associations, main streets organizations, construction retailers, appliance retailers, materials manufacturers, churches, universities, and public housing authorities. Project Elements Conducting large-scale energy efficiency retrofits will require pulling together many elements that enable each stage of work. This section provides considerations and recommendations for each of these projects elements. Building Technology Having selected particular buildings and communities, local ECC members should next define the particular interventions that are most needed. This will be critical to defining the scope of work of a project, the financial and environmental costs and benefits, and the job skills required. Many existing citywide plans and other large-scale energy efficiency efforts focus on simple solutions such as changing lighting or caulking windows. While these efforts pay off quickly, they do not maximize the potential energy savings of a building. We recommend that local ECC councils pursue deeper retrofits at both the building and neighborhood level. Here are some considerations for each of these strategies: Building level retrofits We encourage local ECC members to quickly involve engineers and contractors to evaluate the energy savings of each retrofit option in a given project with a focus on aggregating interventions or jointly working across buildings. Beyond caulking windows and adding insulation, more comprehensive building improvements can provide much greater levels of energy savings. Several types of considerations are important at this stage: 1. Local members and building experts should evaluate the causes of energy inefficiency in an existing building. Common systems that need to be replaced or repaired include: • • • HVAC systems such as boilers Windows Plumbing and other piping 2. The teams evaluating retrofit options should consider how to combine energy efficiency improvements with other needed building repairs. Local ECC members that frequently provide weatherization services may be helpful in identifying the types of structural problems and health hazards that prevent energy efficiency improvements. Particular types of building improvements that could be coordinated with these retrofits include: • Broadband installation - 20 - • • • • Lead and asbestos abatement Mold and mildew removal Roof repair or replacement Seismic retrofits 3. Building technology experts should work with ECC members to provide an environmental and economic cost benefit analysis of these changes. The local ECC council can use these estimates as the basis for financing discussions with potential investors. Neighborhood level retrofits We recommend that local ECC councils explore building systems changes at a neighborhood level. Despite their potential for broad level energy savings, these types of systems have not been widely adopted. Local ECC councils can take several steps to move these projects forward: 1. Local ECC members can engage building technology experts, including engineers and contractors, to determine what building systems changes are possible at a neighborhood scale. Because these projects are not yet common, local ECCs may want to look to national ECC experts for guidance. In addition, for each of these options, the local ECC council should evaluate what large institutions could anchor these projects. The types of interventions to consider at a neighborhood level include: • Cogeneration plants: These building systems can capture and direct the heat created in generating electricity to buildings throughout a neighborhood. Hospitals are a prime candidate for anchoring this system, because of their interest in generators that can provide back-up electricity when problems occur in the grid. Schools also have an interest in stabilizing their utility bills and cogeneration plants are a promising strategy for doing so. • Chillers: Just as cogeneration plants provide heating for a neighborhood, largescale chillers can provide similar opportunities for cooling. Many colleges and universities already have multi-building systems in place that could serve as models. 2. As an inclusive table, the local ECC council can help illustrate the benefits of this type of neighborhood level project. This work has been stalled, in part, by the lack of a clear lead actor interested in benefits to all stakeholders Resources who is willing to design and implement the retrofit. LEED Public Policies http://www.usgbc.org/DisplayPage.aspx? 3. The local ECC council can coordinate the CMSPageID=1852 decision making and management required to move forward. Long-term choices about Green Building Basics management and ownership that arise because http://www.youthbuild.org/site/c.htIRI3P the systems cross properties must be resolved IKoG/b.5158829/apps/nl/newsletter3.asp up front. - 21 - 4. Local members can also mobilize constituents to support policy and regulatory changes to encourage neighborhood level projects. In most cities, the permitting and inspections process for these building interventions are slower than for other types of retrofits. This barrier could be addressed by policy modeled on Chicago’s “Green Permit Program” that expedites buildings with green elements. Financing None of the environmental and economic promise of ECC will be realized without financing for the retrofit work itself. We recommend that local ECC councils consider different financing models for this work, and weigh in on the city’s decision-making process. Keeping in mind the importance of leveraging and long-term sustainability, we encourage local members to advocate for finance mechanisms that will allow low- and middle- income owners and renters to invest and benefit from increased building energy efficiency. ECC has provided “Assessing Your Local Energy Efficiency Financing Environment” on our website (http://www.emeraldcities.org/images/resources/Local%20Finance%20Assessment.pdf) to help local partnerships define your finance needs, identify existing public and private resources, and measure your existing financing gap. Public Local ECCs can help secure project financing by supporting the creation of public streams of funding for energy efficiency retrofit work. These resources can take many forms, including: • On-bill financing: Utility companies can serve as key lenders or intermediaries by managing a loan fund to provide building owners the capital costs of retrofit work. Utilities then collect repayments through a fee on utility bills, while the guarantee that a tenant’s total monthly bill remains lower than prior to these energy improvements. This strategy offers the advantages of a straightforward payment system for building owners and a low default rate for investors. • Property Assessed Clean Energy (PACE): Municipalities have used PACE to provide loans to residential or commercial property owners to finance the cost of energy efficiency improvements. The owners than pay the city back through their property tax bill over a term of up to twenty years. This payment transfers with ownership, so the cost of the capital work remains tied to the benefits. The primary obstacle to implementing PACE in the residential market right now is that the program gives cities the first lien on the property, conflicting with the needs of mortgage lenders. • Bonds: Public entities that are empowered to issue bonds could use this mechanism to raise funds for the capital costs of retrofit work. The most likely building sectors to work with local ECC councils to issue energy efficiency bonds are municipal buildings and schools. For example, Washington State has recently - 22 - issued $100 million of school bonds statewide for retrofits, and a referendum slated for this fall would add $500 million to the effort. Local ECC councils can take several steps to unlock these public resources: 1. Local members should begin by evaluating the state and local legislative context. The potential for particular finance mechanisms will depend on state level legislation and local relationships with the dominant utility companies. A few questions can help guide this evaluation: • Is there state enabling legislation for on-bill financing or PACE? • • Have any local officials already proposed new programs? Have any proposals gained any traction? If so, who are the major supporters and their constituents? If not, what were the primary barriers to support? Have the utilities taken a leading role retrofit programs? Do they offer rebates or other incentives for energy efficiency improvements? • 2. Local ECC councils can help shape the terms of policy regulations. To do this, members can draft new policy platforms or endorse strong existing proposals created by local officials and nonprofits. Members should also consider how the specific design of these programs can create resources for local ECC partners. 3. The local ECC councils can work together to organize a broad public campaign supporting these policies. Our community organizing section has more tips on how to fully engage a wide range of constituents, but here are several ideas for a targeted policy campaign: • • • • Members can engage their constituents directly through in-person efforts such as canvassing; and online, through partner websites and e-newsletters. The local ECC council can jointly reach out to the media through press releases, conferences, and letters to the editor. Local members can coordinate a group meeting with public officials such as the Mayor, City Council, School Board, or City Manager. Local members can organize public events such as rallies or town hall meetings. Attendance and impact would be bolstered if local officials attend. Private Market Retrofitting all of a city’s building stock is a major undertaking that cannot be financed by public investment alone. Rather, we recommend that local ECC councils quickly engage the private market to access necessary capital. Energy efficiency projects can pay for themselves through utility savings. However, members must identify mechanisms to recapture savings, acceptable payback periods, interest rates, and minimal risk to attract investors. A number of types of organizations could be interested in this kind of investment including banks, union, city, and state pension funds, and businesses Local ECC councils can take several steps to activate these resources: - 23 - 1. Identify progressive investors and intermediaries, and find out whether they have already invested in any retrofit projects. Local members should think creatively to expand the potential pool of funders. Do you have connections to any potential investors? For example: • Affordable housing managers that deposit security deposits in banks can pool their resources and approach those banks about creating loan opportunities. • Unions can encourage their pension funds to invest in projects that create jobs for their members who are currently on the bench. • Construction companies and contractors, engineering firms, or others with services that they provide to ECC members could provide initial services as part of their client generation. For example, in exchange free audits, ECC members could promise the firm any market-rate retrofit work in that building. 2. The local ECC council should learn the basic terms that would be required for an agreement with an investor or intermediary. Key considerations include: • A minimum dollar amount will generally be required by investors, often in the range of $25 million. With a target in mind, ECC members can work together to aggregate their properties into sufficient scale. • The interest rate on the capital and payback periods may vary by investor. Short payback periods make it difficult to provide deep retrofits that will have the most environmental impact as well as create demand for skilled labor. • Many investors seek credit enhancement or loan guarantees, and this may require public or regulatory assistance at the state and federal levels. • Investors will seek reliable data that illustrates adequate energy savings to finance the repayment. The more data you have available, the stronger the pitch you can make to potential investors. 3. Once you know that you can meet the terms required by the investors, we urge local ECC councils to also define your terms for the agreement. This is important for ensuring that the project not only creates improvements in the buildings, but also furthers the economic and equity goals of ECC. • ECC members can specify who does the work on these projects. Use this as an opportunity to define the role of partner organizations and expand job access. For public housing projects, be aware of the need to fulfill Section 3 requirements. • These agreements can also include job standards. Project labor agreements and community workforce agreements are helpful for setting wages and benefits in addition to expanding job access. - 24 - 4. With the above elements in place, local ECC members can finalize the deal. Local Foundations Local ECC councils will need to secure funding for the ECC table itself, beyond project financing. We encourage local members to pursue the support of local foundations for these efforts. Securing the assistance of these foundations takes several steps: 1. Determine what relationships already exist between local foundations and ECC members. You may choose to rely on these organizations guide targeted fundraising strategies based on their individual knowledge. Another option is to gather all of the local foundations that have worked with any local ECC members for a collective funders briefing. 2. We recommend building a local funders collaborative that can engage the local ECC council both financially and intellectually. Many of these foundations have expertise about a number of the challenges faced by ECC, and can contribute to program design and evaluation. Foundations also have communications expertise that can help local ECC campaigns. Local foundations can be collectively energized about the mission and work of your local ECC through regular activities, such as a monthly breakfast or rotating site visits. 3. In addition to your broad funding strategy, you may also build focused relationships with foundations that can contribute in targeted ways beyond grants. Local foundation contributions might include: • • • Serving as a fiscal agent for the local ECC council Providing office space for ECC staff Hosting a conference or other ECC events Resources The Paid from Savings Guide to Green Existing Buildings: http://www.usgbc.org/Store/PublicationsList_New.aspx http://pacenow.org/blog/ http://www1.eere.energy.gov/wip/solutioncenter/financialproducts/default.html Guide To Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy Financing Districts: http://www.greenforall.org/what-we-do/building-a-movement/community-ofpractice/citywide-retrofitting-resources Financing Energy Retrofits: http://ase.org/content/article/detail/1238 - 25 - Workforce Development In order to complete energy retrofit work, using high labor standards, and creating jobs that are accessible to historically excluded communities, local ECC members may want to create a workforce development committee. This committee would be tasked with improving local community/labor relationships, creating a workforce pipeline that adequately meets the amount of work that will be done, and creating Project Labor Agreements or Community Workforce Agreements that meet high ECC standards. Job Quality and Job Access A centerpiece of Emerald Cities is to ensure high labor standards for all workers. High standards include wages that support families and access to healthcare and other benefits. In addition to explicit support for high road labor standards, local partners should commit to opening access to those jobs to communities that have historically been excluded from such opportunities. Those communities include people living in poverty, people of color, women, and other disadvantaged groups. Community/Labor Relationship Every city can expect a different relationship between community and labor. It is the goal of the national Emerald Cities Collaborative that local members will come together to create or strengthen bonds between the two parties. The development of these bonds can be mutually beneficial as community members are allowed access to the opportunities that labor unions provide, and labor unions build support for collective bargaining. Workforce Pipeline In order to develop a strong, prepared force that includes people living in the communities where the work is being done, local community based training organizations, labor unions, and other community groups must develop a systematic effort to deliver prepared workers. This system will allow new entrants to know the course they must take in order to end up with a high road job in energy efficiency, and will ensure that projects are fully staffed by prepared workers. Project Labor Agreements and Community Workforce Agreements One of the primary ways to ensure that labor standards are met and that community has a voice in the process of development is through the creation of project labor agreements and community workforce agreements. These legally enforceable documents can help to create wage standards, provide job access to community members, and ensure that there are vehicles for dealing with management/labor issues. Resources Getting to the Table, A Project Labor Agreement Primer Insight National Economic Development and Law Center, by Liam Garland and Susie Suafai: http://www.insightcced.org/publications/wdpubs.html Partnership for Working Families http://communitybenefits.org/section.php?id=265 Oakland Port and other information on PLAs and CWAs http://www.plaswork.org/Resources.aspx - 26 - Community Organizing Emerald Cities' ambitious goals require, local partners to assemble a critical mass of people to influence their cities’ economic, social, and environmental future. Experience tells us that local partnerships that do not prioritize base-building are vulnerable to political and bureaucratic roadblocks that prevent success at scale. Local ECC members need to engage in community engagement and organizing efforts that build community support and harnesses community energy. This effort will be key to the movement building activities, which are a major focus of ECC. A message of opportunity If we want to be successful, ECC councils must reach communities with a message of opportunity, one that resonates with everyday, practical considerations. While helping communities attain energy savings and career opportunities, ECC members can also call upon community members to show support for the movement by actively participating in legislative advocacy and community organizing efforts. By helping community members understand how they will benefit from energy retrofit efforts and how they can help facilitate it in the aggregate, local ECC members will build a strong and supportive community platform. Creating Demand The market for energy retrofits is not yet robust, particularly around home energy retrofits, local members must engage in a campaign and organizing process to help individuals understand the power of the market. This process must create a message around • • The benefits of energy efficiency retrofits The need to create a movement around retrofits and environmental justice issues. As more community members join the movement, they should be enlisted to help organize other residents. Using creative messaging and the latest in social networking techniques to spread information about energy efficiency retrofits will be important to reaching those who might not otherwise know about this market. Workforce Opportunities Because Emerald Cities seeks to create high road employment opportunities for communities that have been historically excluded from them, local members should convey to them the work opportunities associated with retrofit work. Local training partners will likely share in the responsibility to help prepare individuals for the workplace. Keep in mind that, the very first step is to inform people that these opportunities are available. Legislative Advocacy You will also need to gain political support for local, state, and national ECC legislative priorities, community members must be engaged, aware, and educated about those priorities, as well as the work that will be required to attain those goals. To help prepare community leaders and others for such advocacy, local ECC partners will need to create educational training programs to help prepare for this process. - 27 - Programs should incorporate a curriculum that offers participants training and opportunities to develop skills, have mentors, be exposed to best practices in the policy development field, and have increased visibility in the policy world. Helping participants understand and use data effectively will enable them to bring credibility and strategic focus to advocacy efforts and policy initiatives. Resources Increasing Demand for Home Retrofits http://www.greenforall.org/resources/driving-demand-for-home-retrofits Leadership for Policy Change http://www.policylink.org/site/apps/nlnet/content2.aspx?c=lkIXLbMNJrE&b=5136581&ct=6999753 Making Development Work for Local Residents: Local Hire Programs and Implementation Strategies that Serve Low-Income Communities http://www.communitybenefits.org/section.php?id=217 http://www.coastalalliance.com/reports/reports.html Making the Transition: Helping Workers and Communities Retool for the Clean Energy Economy http://apolloalliance.org/reports/ Advocating for Equitable Development: A PolicyLink Manual http://www.policylink.org/site/apps/nlnet/content2.aspx?c=lkIXLbMNJrE&b=5136581&ct=6999375 http://www.greenforall.org/what-we-do/building-a-movement/community-of-practice/ee-demandgeneration Research driven organizing http://massclu.org/our-research-model-supporting-organizing-campaigns - 28 - Public Policy ECC supports the expansion of public policies that further the energy efficiency, workforce development, and community opportunity goals of our partners. To create such public policy, we acknowledge that local partners will have to work diligently to create influential communities and partnerships. As the national organization implements its peer-to-peer learning network, with an eye toward disseminating best practices, we acknowledge that effective public policy will be one of the cornerstones of a successful Emerald City. Local The following are just a few areas around which your organization might want to pursue public policy options: 1. Utilities: Ensuring that local utilities are working toward the energy efficiency goals of local governments and communities will be a key piece of any local policy agenda. Perhaps the first effort of any local ECC partnership will be to ensure that local Utilities disassociate their profits from their sales of carbon-based energy commodities. Instead, decoupling encourages utilities to be rewarded on how they meet customers’ energy service needs. In addition to this decoupling effort, local and national ECC partners increasingly want access to information regarding energy usage. In most places, no mechanism exists that allows consumers to directly get information from utilities about real time energy usage, potential savings from energy efficiency measures, and other important information. Changing how aggregate information on energy usage is obtained will be key to helping change the way that utilities do business. 2. Audit Requirements: The first step in the process of energy efficiency work begins at the assessment level. This work is the only way to determine the type of retrofits required for a particular building. Without incentives to do energy audits in the municipal, residential, commercial, and industrial sectors, this work is unlikely to be done expediently. Requirements alone, however, won’t take away from the cost. Public policy that ensures a cost-effective way of conducting audits, particularly for individuals and organizations that are facing financial challenges, is key to completing this work. 3. Climate Action Plans: Many cities throughout the country have created, or are in the process of creating Climate Action Plans, which focus on reducing carbon emissions. Local ECC councils should begin to engage with policy makers who are working on these issues, to ensure that ECC priorities, including carbon targets, workforce issues, and community needs, are being heard. Federal There are numerous federal incentives for energy efficiency work. Stimulus funding has supplemented what had previously been under funded initiatives. It is important for communities to be aware of the various funding mechanisms and opportunities to engage in - 29 - creative approaches to completing energy efficiency work. ECC will regularly update our local partners about critical Federal legislation that may impact them. The following are merely samples of federal programs that do, or could potentially involve energy efficiency retrofit work. Additional opportunities can be found at www.grants.gov Sustainable Communities (HUD) EPA joined with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the U. S. Department of Transportation (DOT) to help improve access to affordable housing, more transportation options, and lower transportation costs while protecting the environment in communities nationwide. Through a set of guiding livability principles and a partnership agreement that will guide the agencies' efforts, this partnership will coordinate federal housing, transportation, and other infrastructure investments to protect the environment, promote equitable development, and help to address the challenges of climate change. HUD, DOT, and EPA will work to assure that their programs maximize the benefits of their combined investments in our communities for livability, affordability, environmental excellence, and the promotion of green jobs of the future. HUD and DOT will work together to identify opportunities to better coordinate their programs and encourage location efficiency in housing and transportation choices. HUD, DOT, and EPA will also share information and review processes to facilitate better-informed decisions and coordinate investments. Weatherization Assistance Program (DOE) The purpose of the Weatherization Assistance Program is to increase the energy efficiency of dwellings owned or occupied by low-income persons, reduce their total residential expenditures, and improve their health and safety. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) increases the income levels eligible for the program to 200% of the federal poverty level, raises the amount of assistance available for each unit to $6,500, and increases the amount of funding that is available for training and technical assistance up to 20%. Green Jobs Innovation Fund (DOL) The Green Jobs Innovation Fund is part of the Department’s vision for ensuring that workers have the necessary skills, knowledge, and abilities to succeed in a knowledge-based economy that includes high growth and emerging industry sectors, including green industries. Through competitive grant opportunities, the Fund will help workers receive job training in green industry sectors and occupations, and access green career pathways. DOL has identified several strategies to help workers access green training and green career pathways, including: (1) enhanced pre-apprenticeship and registered apprenticeship programs in green industry sectors and occupations; (2) targeted sector strategy and partnership efforts; (3) connecting existing education opportunities in green industry sectors and occupations to green jobs; and, (4) support for existing partnerships that effectively connect community-based organizations in underserved communities with the workforce investment system to better serve targeted populations through a new focus on career advancement in green industry sectors. - 30 - DOL plans to use the requested funds to award approximately 40-50 grants and expects that 14,110 participants will receive training. Resources State Leadership for a New Energy Future: A four Point Initiative for Clean Energy and Good Jobs (Apollo Alliance) http://apolloalliance.org/reports/ Federal policies to Increase Energy Efficiency in the Built Environment (Enterprise Community Partners) http://www.enterprisecommunity.org/public_policy/ www.grants.gov - 31 - Monitoring and Assessment Monitoring, program evaluation, and assessments of the ECC efforts can help local efforts in several ways. Externally, measures of success can help local ECC councils fundraise and attract additional organizations to join ECC. Internally, local ECC members can use evaluation efforts as a way to ask each other: How is a successful coalition measured? With strong definitions and metrics for measuring democratic capacity and implementation capacity, local members can align ECC efforts to partnership goals. National ECC would like to work with local partners to develop a core set of metrics that can be used to measure success across the country. While this list is nowhere near exhaustive, this list provides ideas for potential metrics: Green our cities • Million metric tons CO2 reduced • Dollars saved, and who captures those savings • Internal Rate of Return for retrofit work • Number of buildings audited or retrofitted • Percentage of retrofits by building type • Share of work done in oldest or least efficient building stock • Number of retrofits conducted at neighborhood level • Degree to which retrofit work does not skip buildings that need other work Build our communities • Number of people recruited to and/or completing training efforts • Number of trained residents who qualify to work on crews for neighborhood energy conservation projects • Number of high quality jobs created • Jobs opportunities created for women and minorities • Elevation of small, women, and minority owned employers gaining access to broader, more lucrative markets • Number of units and/or dollars covered under community workforce agreements • Number of slots placed within apprentices for individuals from targeted employment categories Strengthen our democracy • Number of ideas implemented based on government hearings held on ECC goals • Number of organizations supporting public awareness campaign • Dollar value of donated space, airtime to public awareness campaign • Frequency of joint labor/community attendance in public decision making forums • Resources committed by organizations to collaborative community building - 32 - Resources Enterprise Retrofit Audit Protocol http://www.practitionerresources.org/ CAA Standards of Excellence http://www.communityactionpartnership.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=4 0&Itemid=125 Success Measures http://www.nw.org/network/ps/successmeasures/default.asp - 33 - Blank Assessment Tool National ECC would like to assess its local opportunities and impact around the country. A broad assessment can also guide local efforts by highlighting the areas that need the most attention. To this end, local collaboratives should complete this self-evaluation annually and provide the responses to national ECC. This is a broad examination of the local context as well as opportunities for projects and unique learning. It should not replace any program monitoring or evaluation by the local ECC as it begins to implement specific projects. Please fill out this table as a group, and your responses will be combined by parallel assessments conducted by the national ECC. Please use a scale of 1 (lowest) to 5 (best), unless noted. Governance Current Status Local enthusiasm of elected officials ECC Density - # Engaged local affiliates ECC Intensity - level of affiliate engagement Community Engagement: Number Community Engagement: Decision making power Trades: Passed resolution Trades: CWA/PLA presence Section Average 0.00 Success Factors Current Status Local Capacity Available financing Utility/Conservation/Regulatory Environment Workforce Infrastructure Section Average 0.00 - 34 - Strategic Impact Current Status Scale - # of potential affiliate units/projects: PHA Affordable Housing Units Other Scale – EECBG project Potential building / project types (initial): Note: provide narrative description Residential PHA Multifamily Commercial / institutional Neighborhood scale Other Importance of City: Size; national image; importance of product type; local innovation; funder interest Geographic Diversity ECC Opportunities: Branding Potential ECC Opportunities: Unique learning Potential projects or strategies that are different than other locations and/or national leaders Note: provide narrative description Section Average 0.00 - 35 - GLOSSARY Cogeneration Plants use a heat engine or a power station to simultaneously generate both electricity and useful heat. It is one of the most common forms of energy recycling. Community Workforce Agreement (CWA) is a pre-hire collective bargaining agreement with one or more organizations that establishes the terms and conditions of employment for a specific construction project. ESCO is a commercial business providing a broad range of comprehensive energy solutions including designs and implementation of energy savings projects, energy conservation, energy infrastructure outsourcing, power generation and energy supply, and risk management. Net Operating Income (NOI) is earnings before interest and taxes. On-bill financing allows utility companies to serve as key lenders or intermediaries by organizing a fund to loan building owners the capital costs of retrofit work. They then collect repayments through a fee on utility bills. (Property Assessed Clean Energy) PACE allows municipalities to provide loans to residential or commercial property owners to finance the cost of energy efficiency improvements. The owners than pay the city back through their property tax bill over a long period of time, often 20 years. That added property tax fee transfers with ownership, so owners are not burdened with high capital costs if they do not remain in the house for payback. Project Labor Agreement (PLA) Recapitalization is restructuring a company's debt and equity mixture, most often with the aim of making a company's capital structure more stable. Weatherization Assistance Program (WAP) enables low-income families to permanently reduce their energy bills by making their homes more energy efficient. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) provides funding to states, U.S. overseas territories, and Indian tribal governments, which manage the day-to-day details of the program. These governments, in turn, fund a network of local community action agencies, nonprofit organizations, and local governments that provide these weatherization services. - 36 -