March 30, 2008
Four W.Va. cities pledge to fight global warming
Fayetteville, Oak Hill, Shepherdstown, Morgantown agree to cut emissions
Advertiser

Four West Virginia cities have decided they can't wait for the federal government to stop global warming.

The mayors of Shepherdstown, Morgantown, Fayetteville and Oak Hill have joined more than 800 mayors across the country in adopting the Kyoto Protocol rejected by President Bush. The towns have pledged to cut their greenhouse gas emissions to 7 percent below 1990 levels by 2012.

"If we're not good stewards now, what are we going to leave for our children?" Fayetteville city manager Bill Lanham said.

Shepherdstown was the first West Virginia town to sign the U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement in 2006, when about 330 cities had signed on nationwide. Morgantown, Oak Hill and Fayetteville followed in 2007, along with the Fayette County Commission.

On Monday, the mayors are scheduled to meet in Fayetteville - the Shepherdstown and Morgantown mayors to join by energy-saving teleconference - at the first meeting of the Fayette County "Green Team," to come up with new ways to cut emissions. The public is invited to participate.

The towns have already made some changes, both tiny and huge. For example, Fayetteville has:

  • Switched to energy-saving light bulbs in its town hall. For outdoor lights, the town is switching to super-efficient LEDs, Lanham said.
  • Started an extensive recycling program for the city and surrounding communities. Recycling helps cut greenhouse gas emissions because it takes less energy to recycle products than it does to make new ones, and organic materials such as paper and cardboard aren't creating methane by rotting in landfills, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
  • Cut back on its city vehicle use. "Maybe one truck takes guys to different job sites, instead of each one driving a separate vehicle," Mayor Jim Akers said. And city police no longer let their cruisers idle unnecessarily. "That's helped quite a bit on our fuel bills."
  • Report a violation or offensive comment.
    [X] Close
    to report abuse.
    Advertisement - Your ad here
    Advertisement - Your ad here
    Advertisement - Your ad here