HomeMy WebLinkAboutGreenleaf Commission 2019-01-16
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MINUTES OF THE 11 REGULAR MEETING OF
GREENLEAF COMMISSION ON SUSTAINABILITY
On Wednesday, January 16, 2019, the above meeting for the Greenleaf Commission on
Sustainability of the City of Livonia was held in the West Conference Room of the Livonia
Department of Public Works,12973 Farmington Road, Building 12, Livonia. Chairperson James
Baringhaus opened the meeting at 7:00 p.m.
Members present: James Baringhaus
Elizabeth Calhoun
John Grzebik
Michael Shesterkin
Paul Sgriccia
Members absent: None
Also present: Jacob Rushlow, Superintendent of DPW
Victoria Krause, Secretary I at DPW
Shawn Grose, Eco-Schools at Hoover Elementary
Terry Cullum, potential Commission Member
1. Hoover Elementary Eco-School Update.
Shawn Grose returned to give the Greenleaf Commission an update on how Hoover
Elementary has progressed as an Eco-School in the two months since the last Greenleaf
Commission Meeting. He informed the commission that Chairman Baringhaus had visited
Hoover Elementary and witnessed the third graders audit food waste at lunch time. The students
were taught how to weigh the uneaten food that is being thrown away. They have found that 20
pounds of food were being wasted daily at Hoover. Mr. Grose extrapolated and figured out that
they were wasting 3,600 pounds a year just at Hoover Elementary. He estimated that they are
wasting approximately 49,000 pounds of food a year in Livonia at the K-4 level. In order to
reduce the amount of wasted food, the students are looking at a food share table or donating
the food to a shelter. Additionally, they are working with General Motors on a Go Green Project,
1 of 12 in the Midwest where an engineer comes in to work with the students.
Chairman Baringhaus asked Mr. Grose how many of the thirteen K-4 Livonia Schools are
active in sustainability. Mr. Grose responded that some are Michigan Green Schools. The
schools are considered elite after teaching the students 25 lessons whereas Eco-Schools are
student lead. The Chairman also asked how Mr. Grose would expand into other schools. Mr.
Grose said that he would be meeting with principals and offering to audit their schools. The
Chairman asked to be appraised of dates and Eco-School events at Hoover Elementary.
2. 2019 City of Livonia Greenleaf Award.
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11 Regular Meeting of January 16, 2019
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Chairman Baringhaus presented three nominees for the 2019 City of Livonia Greenleaf
Award. The first nominee was Livonia Public Schools nominated by Performance Engineering
Group Inc for their new boiler program. The building automation systems that were added over
a five-year period identified excess boiler use. Due to this information, they decided to install
high efficiency boilers in Frost Middle School as a pilot program. With the new boilers, they saw
reductions in energy use, greenhouse gas emissions, costs, and natural gas usage. The second
nominee was the Eco-Action Program at Hoover Elementary and was nominated by Shawn
Grose. Hoover Elementary was the first Michigan school to receive the Green Flag Award by
the National Wildlife Federation. The third nominee was Great Lakes Recycling (GLR) which
was put back into the running by the Chairman after being previously nominated. GLR recycles
metal, electronics and junk cars. GLR owns www.scrappost.com, a global marketplace to list
and purchase scrap. In addition, GLR is involved with the National Alliance on Mental Illness
(NAMI) Detroit chapter, creating vehicle donations to support mental illness services.
Commissioner Shesterkin began the discussion. He said that Livonia Public School’s
main focus was on being green but that is not what this is all about. He was also shocked that
they were using such inefficient boilers for so long. Commissioner Shesterkin felt that Shawn
Grose’s work with the Eco-Action Program at Hoover ranked high. On the other hand, GLR is a
business within the community that is making money off scrap and doing it more efficiently and
less impactfully than most. Commissioner Grzebik concurred stating that Livonia Public Schools
was making a good step forward and being a good steward of the taxpayer’s money, but they
should be recognized by the school board. Hoover Elementary has already received recognition
for the work they have done to become an Eco-School. GLR most fits the award criteria and
why the award was created. Commissioner Calhoun liked the work being done at Hoover
Elementary, but they are working with the Chamber of Commerce for the award and they prefer
a business. Commissioner Sgriccia agreed that business is what the award is intended to
acknowledge so his first pick would be GLR. The Chairman asked for Terry Cullum, a potential
new commissioner, to share his thoughts. His background was in scrap metal for GM and
believed that if you are doing it well you should be recognized, so he was in agreement that GLR
was the best candidate for the award.
Upon a motion made by Shesterkin, seconded by Grzebik, it was:
#1-19 RESOLVED, that the Greenleaf Commission on Sustainability does hereby
agree to present the 2019 City of Livonia Greenleaf Award to Great Lakes Recycling (GLR).
A roll call vote was taken on the foregoing resolution with the following result:
AYES: Baringhaus, Calhoun, Grzebik, Sgriccia, and Shesterkin.
NAYS: None.
The resolution was adopted unanimously.
Chairman Baringhaus informed the commission that this year’s award would be designed
by last year’s award recipient, End Grain Woodworking. They will be using a wood beam from
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an old farm house in Livonia that is being torn down. As the Greenleaf Commission logo is still
a work in progress, they will use the City of Livonia logo on the award.
3. 2019 Greenleaf Commission Goals.
The Chairman briefly discussed the 2019 Greenleaf Commission Goals.
o 2019 Greenleaf Award Presentation
o Launch Greenleaf Sustainability Leaders Recognition Program
o Earth Day Event
o Zero Waste Education Development
o Greenleaf Website Redesign
o Greenleaf Commission Logo
o Star Community Metrics Implementation
The 2019 Greenleaf Award recipient was chosen at this meeting and the launch date was
scheduled for February of 2019. The Greenleaf Sustainability Leaders Recognition Program will
be discussed at the March 2019 meeting and launched in the second quarter of 2019.
Chairman Baringhaus indicated that they needed to start looking into what they wanted to do
for their Earth Day Event as they may need to apply for grants or solicit donations.
Commissioner Grzebik volunteered to start looking into an event. He was going to get in contact
with the DPW and the Parks and Recreation Department to see what event they have scheduled.
The Chairman stated that zero waste education will be added to the website once the
redesign has been done. Commissioner Sgriccia suggested that the redesign of the website
needed to be funded so that they could hire someone to complete it. The Chairman notified him
that the website would be redesigned by the City of Livonia IT Department. Commissioner
Sgriccia said that it is not getting there, and a consultant is needed. He thought that they may
be able to get a grant to have someone hired for the redesign. He informed the commission that
RRRASOC uses Iris for their website design. Commissioner Shesterkin felt that by hiring
someone for the redesign, they would be getting a sense of credibility and expertise. He also
suggested the commission have an app for residents. The Chairman said that the City has
discussed an app and he would make a recommendation about the designer. The goal is to
discuss zero waste education at the March meeting and launch it in the second quarter of 2019,
while the website redesign would be discussed at the May meeting and launched in the third
quarter of 2019. With the redesign of the website the Chairman would like to see the Star
Community Metrics dashboard included.
Chairman Baringhaus has decided that the current logo designs are not in line with what
the commission would like. He believes that they should just start from scratch as the Madonna
University Students that did the first logo designs have mostly graduated. He stated that they
need to give the new student designers more guidance on what they wanted. On that note, he
asked the commissioners to forward him any designs that they see that they like so that they
can give the students a reference of what they would be looking for in a logo. The logo will be
discussed further at the May meeting and launched in the third quarter of 2019.
4. Recycling and Reuse Charette.
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Commissioner Shesterkin informed the council that the purpose of the charette is to
determine the will of the people involved and that today there is general lack of political will do
things because voters may get upset. He explained that a charette is a small group input session
in order to advance a project with optimal success. For the proposed charette he determined
that they would need ninety-five people. In order to find these people, they would need to enlist
the assistance of the leaders of the Nextdoor App in neighborhoods throughout the city. Using
the app, they would try to find an equal number of residents that actively recycle and those that
do not. Once they had the ninety-five participants, they would break them into two groups to
make them more manageable and to need fewer facilitators. The group of approximately forty-
eight would then be broken down into small groups of six or eight with a facilitator for each group.
Each small group would start with a team building exercise to build trust and foster open and
honest conversation. They would then do small group conversation followed by reporting and
wrap-up. Commissioner Shesterkin thought they may be able to find a college student that
would be willing to volunteer to help for a capstone or practicum project. He felt the charette
would show that they were taking effort and using science to determine the actual desire of the
residents of the City of Livonia.
Commissioner Sgriccia stressed the need for a neutral title, for example Municipal Waste, so
that non-recyclers would not be defensive walking into the charette. Chairman Baringhaus
suggested that the small group meeting to collaborate on the recycling ordinance could also
organize the charette. The Chairman wanted to ask Jacob Rushlow, Superintendent of DPW,
about the progress of the large recycling carts with the City Council, but Mr. Rushlow had to
leave due to a large watermain break. Commissioner Shesterkin stated that the need for the
charette was dependent on if the carts were still an option. Commissioner Sgriccia stated that
the council needed to know what the residents wanted either way.
5. Hines Park Mill Run Project.
Chairman Baringhaus stated that he couldn’t see the Greenleaf Commission on
Sustainability doing anything directly. Commissioner Calhoun shared that it was going to be on
tonight’s Council Meeting only in that they would be agreeing to put it on the agenda for the
Committee of the Whole on Wednesday, January 23, 2019.
Commissioner Sgriccia asked if the land being sold in the Hines Park Mill Run Project were
flood plains. Chairman Baringhaus informed the commission that the 14+ acres surrounding
Willcox Mill are the issue. There are only 1.8 acres being sold with Newburgh Mill. The sites
that are for sale are not currently accessible and the sale of these properties with give the public
more access.
6. New Business.
Ford Police Cruiser 2020
Chairman Baringhaus mentioned the email that he sent to all the Commissioners containing
the link to information on the new 2020 Ford Hybrid Police Cruiser. He mentioned that they
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might want to make a recommendation to the city. He also suggested researching local cities
to see if they are using hybrid cruisers.
Introduction from Terry Cullum
Commissioner Sgriccia asked Terry Cullum, potential commissioner, to introduce himself.
Mr. Cullum informed the commission that he has been a Livonia resident for 31 years and was
a recent retiree from GM. Most of his career at GM he dealt with materials engineering by getting
recycled materials into the vehicles and hazardous materials out. He was the representative of
sustainability for GM.
Recognition for Leaving Member
Commissioner Grzebik asked if there is any recognition done, such as a letter of recognition,
for members when they leave a commission. The Chairman was unsure but said that he would
check with the mayor to see if they were provided a certificate to recognize their service.
Inquires
There was one inquiry to the Greenleaf Commission on Sustainability made by Best Buy.
They would like to have some of their sustainable home products added to the Greenleaf
website. The Chairman said that this was something that they could investigate when the
website is redone.
Audience Communication
None.
7. Approval of Minutes.
On a motion by Calhoun, seconded by Shesterkin, the Minutes of the November 14, 2018,
meeting was approved with Grzebik abstaining since he did not attend the November meeting.
On a motion by Sgriccia, seconded by Calhoun, and unanimously adopted, the meeting of
January 16, 2019, was adjourned at 8:38 p.m.
Next Meeting –March 20, 2019 at 7:00 p.m.
West Conference Room, DPW Administration Office
JAMES BARINGHAUS, CHAIRPERSON
GREENLEAF COMMISSION ON SUSTAINABILITY