Tuesday night, the public’s invited to a meeting at Charlotte’s city-county government center uptown to discuss and share ideas for the city’s Energy Efficiency and Conservation Strategy (Energy Strategy). The city got a grant from the U.S. Department of Energy, and if it can develop and submit an energy strategy in 120 days it will be eligible for the first half of more than $6.4 million in grant funding.
The public workshop starts at 6:30 p.m. in the council chambers, then “idea sharing” in the lobby. If you can’t make it you can watch it on TV on Channel 16 (if you have Time Warner Cable) or online at http://www.charlottenc.gov/
Here’s my 2-cents worth. If you have yours, go tell the folks next Tuesday:
1. Figure some sort of horrific punishment for office building managers who set the A/C too cold during the summer. Maybe chain them to large blocks of ice in January? Force them to pick cucumbers in 95-degree sunlight? Think of all the energy we’d save if indoor summertime temps were normal (75 or so) instead of 68. I went around with a thermometer earlier this summer and noted numerous uptown offices that were icy.
2. Change the tree ordinance to require large maturing shade trees (not teeny crape myrtles or narrow cypress trees) planted in all surface parking lots and located so that they provide shade for the parking places, especially in the afternoon. Hint from a long-time Southerner: If you can park in the shade, your car won’t be 150 degrees when you get inside. The tree ordinance already requires trees, but apparently shade hasn’t been much of a value, hence the shrubby little things you see.