HomeMy WebLinkAboutAir Quality Advisory Board - Minutes - 06/12/20231
06/12/2023 - Minutes
Air Quality Advisory Board
REGULAR MEETING
Monday, June 12, 2023 – 5:30 PM
222 Laporte Avenue, Colorado River Room
1. CALL TO ORDER: 5:32 PM
2. ROLL CALL
a. Board Members Present –
• Greg Boiarsky
• Mark Houdashelt (Chair)
• Sandra LeBrun
• Gavin McMeeking
• Dan Welsh
• Sandra LeBrun
b. Board Members Absent –
• Wayne Chuang
• Greg Clark
c. Staff Members Present –
• Cassie Archuleta, Staff Liaison
• Honoré Depew, Climate Program Manager
• DeAngelo Bowden, Senior Air Quality Specialist
d. Guest(s) –
• Samantha
• Kevin
• Matt Ayres
3. AGENDA REVIEW
4. CITIZEN PARTICIPATION
a. Samantha is part of a Colorado citizens pilot program that is trying to get
citizens engaged in government meetings.
b. Kevin is part of the League of Women voters.
c. Matt Ayers will be joining the Air Quality Advisory Board as a member later
this month.
5. APPROVAL OF MINUTES
a. Mark moved and Sandra seconded a motion to approve the May minutes as
amended. Motion passed unanimously 5-0.
6. UNFINISHED BUSINESS
2
06/12/2023 - Minutes
7. NEW BUSINESS
a. Climate and Sustainable Revenue
• Honoré Depew, Climate Program Manager, provided an overview of
Our Climate Future which included the goals, alignment of City plans,
the history of the plan, the success of the ambassador program, the
Big Moves, 2030 pathways, action roadmap, guiding principles,
shared leadership, and community partnerships. The Board shared
an appreciation for the plan. Honoré also reviewed Sustainable
Revenue for Parks and Recreation, Transit, Housing, and Climate.
They are looking for $40 to $46 million and looking at options like a
natural gas franchise fee, substance tax (tobacco, alcohol and
marijuana), property tax, sales tax, or large emitter tax.
• The Board expressed concern about the impact on community
members with different socioeconomic status. Honoré mentioned that
Council is also considering looking at income qualified assistance
programs and keeping food and other necessary products exempt
from sales tax. The Board expressed concern with the substance tax
and franchise fee because in the past it has demonstrated to unfairly
impact lower income residence and the property tax can be passed to
renters. Honoré stated that Council has also shared those concerns.
In Council discussion, the substance tax and large emitter tax had the
least support whereas the property tax and sales tax had more
support.
• The Board shared they would rather see more money go towards
climate than more parks and recreation facilities. Honoré mentioned a
climate umbrella fund could provide some flexibility on how the
money is used each year. Council will vote in July on what they want
to see on the ballot. The Board does have time to provide input to
Council and staff.
• The Board discussed the timeline, Big Moves, and the roadmap to
reach the 2030 climate goals. Honoré mentioned having to work
within constraints due to timeframes and how much Council and the
community can do at once. The Board emphasized that electricity
and buildings are ¾ of the total and focusing time and money there.
They also emphasized focusing on human assets vs just money.
• The Board also expressed concern around communication and
insufficient utilization of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) incentives to
help reach the 2030 climate goals. They also expressed concern
around rebate programs and how some community members cannot
provide those kinds of funds up front to be eligible for the rebates.
b. Regional Community Air Quality Monitoring Advisory Committee
• DeAngelo Bowden, Senior Air Quality Specialist, provided an update
regarding preliminary planning for formation of a regional air quality
monitoring advisory committee, which is a commitment under an EPA
air toxics grant. Although the committee will help provide direction for
the grant, it will not be grant funded, so they can have flexibility to
discuss other pollutants and emissions. Preliminary plan is for 14
members with some sub-committees of technical experts.
• The Board suggested considering emitters to be part of the
committee and some suggested that the project be balanced
between using funds to promote and communicate it and funds to do
3
06/12/2023 - Minutes
the actual project. Air toxics can get complicated and can turn people
off because they are ‘scary’. The Board recommended having
qualified opinions, like a respiratory doctor, to share with the
community on why air toxics can be bad. They also advised to be
careful to not fall into the trap of education as the only outcome.
Another concern was that people might not know enough to have an
opinion on air toxics, so staff will have to be careful about how they
ask for the community’s opinion. Cassie stated a lot of advocacy
groups are interested in monitoring, but she doesn’t know if it is
reflective of the general community.
• The grant will have a focus on oil and gas but will also include other
sources. It will include monitoring and communication of results. They
also proposed an art piece.
• The Board asked why they are creating another committee instead of
having AQAB do it. Cassie shared that AQAB represents the City and
not the County. This committee is driven by the grant and needs to be
more regionally representative. She also shared that AQAB is there
to advise Council and has its own set of priorities. They will make
sure to provide updates to AQAB as the project moves forward.
8. BOARD MEMBER REPORT
a. Gavin shared that he is involved in a statewide indoor air quality ventilation
assessment and facility improvement project. They are looking for an
additional 10-15 sites for the project. They must be nonresidential. If you can
think of any, please contact him.
b. Mark shared that he went to the super issues meeting regarding sustainable
funding and the Land Use Code. It was more informative than discussion
based. He also shared that their Council Liaison, Julie Pignataro wants to
attend a future AQAB meeting to find out what air quality priorities the board
would like to see the next Council adopt. Mark also spoke before Council last
week to put an emphasis on climate and difficulties reaching the 2030 goals.
He recommended tapping into IRA and coming up with a plan to deploy that.
9. STAFF REPORTS
10. OTHER BUSINESS
a. 6 – Month Calendar Review and Agenda Planning
• Planned Agendas for Next AQAB Meeting:
• July – Badges, new member introductions, oil and gas
setbacks and operational standards.
• August – Council priority discussion (Councilmember
Pignataro will be joining), ozone SIP update.
• Sept – CSU smoke ready grant, legislative process update.
11. ADJOURNMENT
a. (7:55pm)
Minutes approved by a vote of the Board on 07/17/23