Mayor Newsom Announces San Francisco Ranked #1 in US City Rankings for Sustainability
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Mayor Newsom Announces San Francisco Ranked #1 in US City Rankings for Sustainability
(June 7, 2005)
San Francisco – San Francisco and Mayor Gavin Newsom announced that the city has been rated as the #1 in a peer-reviewed study called the SustainLane US City Ranking, which was officially released today by the non-partisan group.
San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom: "San Francisco is honored to be awarded by SustainLane (as a result of) its comprehensive sustainability US City Rankings study," said Mayor Newsom. "Sustainability is important not only for protecting citizens' health and ensuring a great quality of life here in San Francisco, but also for boosting the local economy with jobs and services in everything from clean technologies to fresh food and green building products produced in California."
After five mayors (including Mayor Newsom) from the top ten cities in its study were awarded Thursday at the United Nations World Environment Day event in San Francisco, SustainLane is providing this week complete US City Rankings on 12 categories for 25 cities. The results of the study are available on the web at www.sustainlane.com.
Said Mayor Gavin Newsom: "I'm a guy who drove an electric car for four years. I'd like to see no fossil burning fuels. I'd like to see zero CO2 emissions. I'd like to see no polluting power plants in or around San Francisco. I'd like to see tidal harvesting and wave harvesting of renewable energy, solar panels on every municipal building. I'd like to see comprehensive curriculum in our schools as it relates to environmental stewardship. I'd like this city to be the example for the rest of the country."
About the SustainLane US City Rankings
The SustainLane US City Rankings measure 25 US cities' cumulative performance and programs across 12 economic development and quality of life categories. The index, developed by the Bay Area, non-partisan organization SustainLane (www.sustainlane.com), integrates 20 public and non-governmental organizations' (NGOs) data inputs (US EPA, US Census, Natural Resources Defense Council, Environmental Working Group, Smart Growth America, Trust for Public Land) on each city with 18 qualitative inputs gathered from city interviews and surveys. Participating cities have confirmed that the peer-reviewed study is the first and most comprehensive US city sustainability performance benchmark.
US cities comprising SustainLane's top ten ranking (two tied) in order: #1 San Francisco; #2 Portland, Oregon; #3 Berkeley; #4 Seattle; #5 Santa Monica; #6 Austin; #7 New York; #8 Chicago; #9 Oakland; #10 Minneapolis (tied); #10 Denver (tied).
Other cities' rankings include: http://sustainlane.com/cityindex/citypage.php?page=1&name=other
#12 Boston; #13 Madison; #14 Philadelphia; #15 San Jose; #16 Sacramento; #17 Scottsdale; #18 Los Angeles; #19 Pittsburgh; #20 Atlanta; #21 Chattanooga; #22 Jacksonville; #23 Albuquerque; #24 Detroit; #25 Houston
Categories of data and information analysis utilized for ranking purposes include: Transportation; Air Quality; Tap Water Quality; Food and Agriculture; Land Use; Zoning; Planning; Green Building; Energy/Climate Policy; Solid Waste; City Innovation; and Knowledgebase. These scores were combined into a cumulative ranking.
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Contact:
Gloria Chan (415) 355-3733
Warren Karlenzig (415) 518-7575
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Department of the Environment
City and County of San Francisco
11 Grove Street, San Francisco, CA 94102
Telephone: (415) 355-3700 | Fax: (415) 554-6393
Email: environment@sfgov.org | www.sfenvironment.com
Energy
A dynamic city like San Francisco requires the efficient use of clean, renewable energy to meet the needs of today and future generations. Our innovative policies and programs help San Franciscans use energy wisely, while saving money and reducing environmental impacts.
Transportation
SF Environment aims to reduce travel-created carbon by getting people out of cars and instead traveling by walking, biking or public transit. We also are greening the City fleet of vehicles and encourage the public to reduce their impact by supporting cleaner fuels and vehicles.
Zero Waste
Imagine a world in which nothing goes to landfills or to incinerators. We think it is achievable, and SF Environment is doing everything we can to make it happen.
Toxics & Health
As the first city to adopt the Precautionary Principle, San Francisco strives to protect the health of its residents, visitors and the local environment. SF Environment develops programs and policies to help individuals and businesses make safer choices in products, practices and services.
Buildings & Environments
San Francisco is habitat for 800,000 people – meeting needs for space to work, play, and learn; for food, water, and air; for community with local flora and fauna. SF Environment provides support for urban agriculture and forestry and green buildings, helping residents and businesses harness environmental opportunities.
Education & Equity
SF Environment focuses on building community capacity - engaging people throughout the City’s neighborhoods and providing them with the tools, education, and job opportunities to ensure that the places where we live, play, learn, and work are safe and healthy.
Climate Change
Reducing carbon emissions is central to ensuring a sustainable future for San Francisco. Climate change will bring unstable weather, rising sea levels and damage to our city’s natural habitat and infrastructure. SF Environment is committed to mobilizing the City to deal with Climate Change.






