DC sets new goals to be sustainable

Green city stock photo from 3RUS/Shutterstock.

In 2012, DC released its Sustainable DC plan, with ambitious goals for sustainability in energy, trash, transportation, and much more. Now, officials are updating it, and they have a new set of goals for you to look at. What do you think?

You can read the list and comment directly here. It includes goals like reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 50%, reusing 20% of all waste produced in the District, and ensuring 75% of residents live within a quarter mile of a full-service grocery store.

Here are some of the transportation targets and a few select sub-goals that catch my eye.

Some of these actions come from the current plan, while others are new or changed. Those top-level targets are most significant: the original plan set these aggressive targets of moving our commute mode share to 50% transit, 25% walk/bike, and just 25% car. Here's how that stacks up against reality:

2032 goal 2016 ACS 5-year estimate 2011 ACS 5-year estimate
Transit 50% 36.8% 37.5%
Walk/bike 25% 17.6% 14.6%
Car 25% 39.1% 41.9%

There's a ways to go, but DC has been moving in the right direction, except on transit, where it's been moving in the wrong direction.

Green house stock photo from ponsulak/Shutterstock.

The built environment

Here are some housing and building related goals:

Those last two, especially that third one, might be hard as long as historic preservation rules won't bend at all for sustainability.

Take a look at the whole plan outline. What do you think should be added or changed? You can comment until July 15.