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HomeMy WebLinkAbout10-06-2025 Climate Action CommissionIowa City Climate Action Commission Agenda Monday, October 6, 2025, 4:00 p.m. Emma J. Harvat Hall, City Hall 410 E. Washington St., Iowa City Meeting Agenda: 1. Call to Order 2. Roll Call 3. Approval of Sept. 8, 2025 minutes 4. Announcements/Reports a. Action items from last meeting: Commission members asked to provide prioritization scoring for transportation items ahead of October meeting. b. Recap of Climate Fest events c. Events i. Volunteer Bike/Ped Count Data Share Out (Oct. 23, noon-1 p.m., virtual) ii. Iowa Energy Summit (Oct. 29-30, Coralville Hyatt) iii. Other events in the community (Commissioners) 5. New Business a. Small scale nuclear class project presentation (Grace Dillingham, Adam Swartzendruber, UI engineering students) — report presentation and discussion 6. Old Business a. Prioritization scoring of Accelerating Iowa City's Climate Actions Plan i. Final scoring of action items related to transportation — review and refine ii. Preliminary discussion of a potential metric for an action item related to buildings 7. Public Comment on items not on the agenda Commentators shall address the Commission for no more than 3 minutes. Commissioners shall not engage in discussion with the public concerning said items. 8. Recap a. Confirmation of next meeting time and location i. Monday, November 10, 2025 4-5:30 p.m. b. Actionable items for commission and staff 9. Adjourn If you will need disability -related accommodations in order to participate in this meeting, please contact Sarah Gardner, Climate Action Coordinator, at 319-887-6162 or atsqardner@iowo-city.org. Early requests are strongly encouraged to allow sufficient time to meet your access needs. MINUTES IOWA CITY CLIMATE ACTION COMMISSION SEPTEMBER 8 — 4:00 PM — FORMAL MEETING EMMA J. HARVAT HALL PRELIMINARY MEMBERS PRESENT: Michael Anderson, Emma Bork, Wim Murray, Brinda Shetty, Michelle Sillman, Angie Smith, Robert Traer MEMBERS ABSENT: Jamie Gade, Ben Grimm, Zach Haralson STAFF PRESENT: Daniel Bissell, Sarah Gardner, Diane Platte OTHERS PRESENT: Chelsea Cozad APPOINTMENT OF TEMPORARY CHAIR: Due to the absences of both Gade and Haralson, Smith volunteered to serve as temporary chair to run the meeting. CALL TO ORDER: Smith called the meeting to order at 4:01. APPROVAL OF AUGUST 4, 2025 MINUTES: Traer moved to approve the minutes, Krylov seconded, and the motion carried. ANNOUNCEMENTS: Action items from last meeting (staff): Gardner sent an email reminder for open meetings training. Staff followed up on a question about the EV chargers at Dubuque St. Parking ramp being out of service and confirmed they are again operational. Gardner shared EV charging data with commissioners. Commissioners were invited to do some preliminary thinking about prioritization scoring for transportation action items in the Climate Action and Adaptation Plan. Events: • Volunteer Bike/Ped Count, Sept. 9-11 • Climate Fest, Sept. 19-25. Event descriptions and details at icgov.org/climatefest o Pop -Up Pocket Park, Sept. 19, 3:30-5:30 p.m., City Hall o Drive Electric Car Show, Sept. 20, 7:30 a.m.-noon, Farmers Market o Solar Energy Art Show and Tour, Sept. 22, 4-6:30 p.m., Airport o Tending Iowa's Land Read Aloud, Sept. 23, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Lagoon Shelter House o Resilience Hub Hang Out, Sept. 24, 5-8 p.m., Bike Library o Film Screening, Sept. 25, 6:30-8 p.m., Dream City • Other events in the community (commissioners): Smith shared information about an event on Oct. 22. The author of When Driving Is Not an Option book will give a noon lecture at UIHC, Climate Action Commission September 2025 Page 2 of 5 conduct a bike audit in the evening, and possibly hold conversation with transportation leaders in between. The public is invited to the lecture and the bike audit. OLD BUSINESS: Comprehensive Plan Discussion, continued • Smith shared a summary of public input sessions provided to the steering committee by the consultants. Priorities identified included: housing, mixed use development, senior housing, more trails and parks, expand public transit, bike safety improvements and shared use paths, green infrastructure, home improvement assistance, street trees, and public art. • Gardner suggested picking up the discussion of EVs from the last meeting, noting that the Accelerating Iowa City's Climate Actions Plan calls for implementing recommendations from the EV Readiness Plan to meet the goal of accelerating EV adoption. Based on this, she suggested identifying key themes from the EV Readiness Plan that should be included in the Comprehensive Plan. • Krylov expressed a concern that business, not government, should be driving the installation of EV charging stations, noting decision -makers should be mindful of where the tipping point might be in letting private entities take over the installation of chargers so that government is not competing with a business. • Traer expressed curiosity about how usage data compares for specific charging systems (Tesla, DC Fast Chargers, etc.). Not every vehicle can use a Tesla charger, so this may leave behind EV owners who do not have a converter. Data collection on usage of various available systems would be useful. • Gardner noted in Iowa Clty there currently are more privately -owned chargers than public chargers, and that owning some chargers allows the City access to data it would not otherwise have about how the stations are used. The City is also able to offer lower -cost charging than private entities to help ensure people are universally served. • Gardner asked for details about concerns regarding charging in parks. Krylov expressed a seasonality concern and noted that workplace charging is reported to be most useful. Traer noted he did not feel concerned about wildlife impacts but thought dwell -time at different parks should be considered. There was consensus that placing chargers in parks with amenities like sports fields and swimming pools should be a higher priority than placing them in parks where people may not stay as long. • Krylov expressed concern about rising costs of electricity as a result of Al and data centers. Gardner noted that powering a vehicle using electricity is far cheaper than powering one using gas, so even if rates rise, it would still likely cost less to fuel a vehicle using electricity for the foreseeable future. • Grimm asked if we know at what point the market would be saturated with EV chargers across town. Gardner shared that during the development of the EV readiness plan, a target of 450 charging ports per million residents helps spur EV adoption. • Bork asked how many charging stations are in Iowa City, both public and private. Bissell answered there are 16 public charging ports. Including privately owned, there are 30 ports. DC Fast Chargers are all privately owned. City chargers are Level 2. Climate Action Commission September 2025 Page 3 of 5 • Bork asked for information about the usage of City chargers. Bissell estimated 400 charging sessions per month, characterizing it as steady demand. • Traer asked if the hospital has chargers. Bissell answered in the affirmative, noting that the hospital charges 40 cents per kilowatt hour, whereas the City charges 16 cents per kWh. He noted as an EV driver himself 40 centers per kWh is more in line with what he would expect to pay for DC fast charging rather than level 2 charging. • Gardner asked if commissioners thought EV charging should be included in the amenities available within a 15-minute walk anywhere in the city. • Shetty suggested focusing on intentional planning of housing types should be prioritized with a focus to start with ensuring charging is available within 15 minutes of apartments or condos rather than within 15 minutes of every household. • Smith suggested amenities for all citizens regardless of their income status are the ones to prioritize in 15-minute cities: groceries, doctor, work, and the like. • Sillman noted that used EVs and used hybrids are going to become more accessible to people, thus more income levels will be represented by the EV market. • Smith noted that our transportation planning is still car -centric. Anderson added that the 15- minute city should require no car, so EVs are not really part of that conversation. • Traer suggested staying time (shopping, business, hospitals) should be a better measure of where chargers should be located. • Krylov asked why — in the CAAP — the stated goal was for only 50% of City vehicles be electric, why not 100%. Gardner noted she was not present for the development of the plan and so could not say with certainty how that number was chosen, but speculated one possibility might be the lack of viable electric models for certain large vehicles such as snowplows making it difficult at the time the plan was written to set a target of 100%. • Gardner summarized the emerging consensus as not including EV charging as an amenity in the 15-minute city concept, as it is focused more on walkable and bikeable spaces, but as far as the City's strategy for public EV infrastructure, it should be to locate charging where people spend a significant amount of time. • Smith offered an analogy to advancing bike usage as requiring infrastructure, shaping human behavior, and organizational partners. The EV equivalent would be building charging stations, promoting EV usage, and working with organizations like workplaces and hospitals to help accelerate EV adoption. Prioritization scoring of Accelerating Iowa City's Climate Actions Plan • Commissioners responded to the final scoring of action items relating to buildings, as outlined in the agenda packet. "Net zero public housing" as a Tier 1 priority was discussed, and it was decided that "increasing energy efficiency in public housing stock and moving toward net zero" would be a better characterization of this goal. • Gardner asked about updated wording of specific actions. Commissioners affirmed that the updated wording in the agenda packet was acceptable. • Gardner asked about combining items such as BE-1, BI-1, and BI-3. Commissioners determined it was best to leave them separate. • Gardner asked if every action item should be given a verb and commissioners affirmed yes Climate Action Commission September 2025 Page 4 of 5 • Scoring of action items related to transportation — preliminary review will take place before the October meeting. Sillman asked if TCP-1 "Establish and electric and fuel -efficient vehicle purchasing policy" meant City purchasing. Gardner affirmed it did. PUBLIC COMMENT OF ITEMS NOT ON THE AGENDA: • None RECAP: Confirmation of next meeting time and location: • Monday, October 6, 4-5:30 p.m. Emma J. Harvat Hall Actionable items for commission and staff: • Gardner will email the transportation report and scoresheet. Commissioners will score them and send scores back. Gardner will average the scores and present them at the next meeting. ADJOURNMENT: Shetty moved to adjourn, Sillman seconded, and the motion carried. Meeting adjourned 5:31. 4 Climate Action Commission September 2025 Page 5 of 5 CLIMATE ACTION COMMISSION ATTENDANCE RECORD 2024-25 \ N \ \ \ \ \ NAME TERM EXP. 00 N V N �' 0 N N N � N Un W N In W N U, V N L, U'i N In N N U, A N LJ Oo Lf .A A Michael 12/31/2025 X x X X X X O/E X X X O/E X Anderson Emma Bork 12/31/2026 O/E X X X X O/E X X Michal Eynon- 12/31/2024 X X X X Lynch John Fraser 12/31/2024 X X O/E O/E Jamie Gade 12/31/2025 O/E X O/E X X X X O/E X X X O/E Ben Grimm 10/31/2026 X X X X X O/E X O/E O/E X X X Zach Haralson 12/31/2025 O/E X X X X X X X X X X O/E Nadja Krylov 12/31/2026 X O/E X X X X X X Wim Murray MidAmerican X X X O/E X O/E X X O/E X X X Rep Michelle Sillman 12/31/20025 X O/E X X X X X X X X X X Brinda Shetty UI Rep X X X X X X X X X X X X Angie Smith 12/31/2025 X O/E X X X X O/E X X O/E O/E X Gabe Sturdevant 12/31/2024 X X O/E X Robert Traer 12/31/2026 X X rx X X X X I-x KEY: X = Present 0 = Absent 0/E = Absent/Excused NM= No Meeting * No longer on Commission Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering An Overview of Terra ower 5 s Natrium Nuclear Reactor Grace Dillingham, Adam Swartzendruber October 6, 2025 Case Study: TerraPower's Natrium Nuclear Reactor • Waste Management How would any type of waste be handled? Safety 'what are the pleats safety features. • Economics How much would it CoSt? j ep-arlme rat of Chemical and Bioch ernira l Engineering 0 t cjvp.rvi-,$, NATRiF1UM Delm•n Water F. Stearn Genera Stand pyDi WWADUNO Admin Vzo 9 Shutd"e, (rb N:1 Power Di 0 sudidmg ,4uea madding Aux- Bum Oepartme n t of hem i c-a I and Biochemical E nglnee n r Aurbine tuIkling �I POW Center nert -Gas cip Storage Tanks iAWOMIMAM yeti LLC 11 AWM rn jyivcrzrdkukvj 0 4 Solid waste ISL preed on sIte3,7,9 Dry waste isclassified by 10 CFR 61.55then compacted, packaged and stored Wet waste (slurry) has water evaporated and remainder stored Liquid waste can be reused or stored as solid waste ,7. Filtering, dernineralization, and ion exchange is used to reduce radioactivity allowing for reuse in the pleat Residual radioactive liquid is evaporated and treated as solid waste Gaseous waste is diluted for environmental release3,7.9 Filtered through activated charcoal beds and diluted through the ventilation system to be released to the environment j Department of Chemical and Bio h errs it al Engineering Safety It cooling allows for extreme reaction temperatures at atmospherJc pressure".1D,11 Sodium's boiling point is 882.80C (11621 OF). while the reactor operates around 350"C (6620F) Water is approximately 300'C and pressurized to a range of 7-15 MPa when used as a coolant rather than sodium Separate boundaries between the nuclear sector and the energy secto r"y Separate independent sectors with communication abilities Mitigative systems include"OJI. Guard vessels Cooling air systems Automatic control rods I I I "i Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering Econo ics"' • Generates 345 MWe at 41 % thermal efficiency • Able to store 1800 MWh of thermal energy • Wyoming plant cost $4 billion �? 50% of the Wyoming plant was subsidized by USDoE • Scheduled to be finished in 2030 * Cost breakdown2 Fuel: $34-15 million/year a Maintenance/Staff: $69.51 million/year o Decommission Fund; $6.04 million/year Expected lifetime of 80 years y�r Nuclear reactors have a 40-year permit + � r extensions y Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering Analysis Assumptions I& Energy Sources scaled to produce an average of 345 MW * Electricity is sold at $0.08/kWh5 * Battery System' Batteries Capital Cost: $2501kWh Electronics and installation Capital Cost, $200/kW ci Battery Oplera,ting Cost- $2.5/MWh Solar 0 pe rate s at peak rapacity for 4 hour /day Requires 20-hour StWage Wind turbines c, Operate constantly at 50% capacity Requires 12-hour storage Carbon taxes, renewable energy subsidies/tax credits, and interest on loans is not considered Department of Chemical aril Bibchemical Engineering Solar Panels 23 4.1 4.8 18 30 w/ storage Natrium 0.2 - 4 36.3 31 80* Reactor SMR LW 2 0.2 2.7 42.3 4 60* Large LW R2 1 2.6 35.0 Solar Pan I 1 . Wind Turin w/ Storage 350 Turbine Wind Turbines 4 350 Turbines .7 Natural GaS4 1. Ritar Power (2024, Ci ter). 5OMW Battery Storage Cost: An in -Depth Aneiysis-RITAR Imernatipnal Group Limited. Retrieved Wom ,va�ar.riG rii-air°�r.r rrt��nrp"u kr info rm ki nl i d'o' -Ekakk ry- 1[7r 7 c l �4n-In-�1 [si -An, l.� i 2&6'.himl 2. Alaou•Jaoude, A., $ Larsen, M_ L. (2024, Jkjly). Meta -Analysis of Advanced Nuclear React -or Cast Estimations. Retrieved from hi91�s:�dinldi°7ilallit�rarV inl.����+°rs�l�s�:�1�,+sii"orl i��as:al�a.nrf .. Cothran, E., & K garian, Z. (2024, :De mt)er). From Reactors. to Repositories: wisp l Pathways for Advanced Nuclear Reactor Waste- Retrieved from Nu��iear I nno a6on Alliance: rit1,n.r ,fnUCIe,'3Tin rinvation a Ilia nce.oQ� sites defa Lj IUTi"1202'4-1I2fFrom 20': rlcrs'OQ4tQ%. 20Ra[05itQ.ri %20z %2ODis,,,ocsal%20PF3thwa%-P.%2 ffor,r%..2tSAdxrarvoed%2ONuci4eer%2BReant�or%20Wasi:e.G 4. Energy Information iminisiration. (n.d.), S+ output. hikras:��4ren�a�.pia. �r� r:kri�i�r�annua.11h9mUataa 08ikl.html 5. Find Energy (n.d,). Jcahn"n County, Iowa Electricity Res and ataOstics. Retrieved from h11a5:��`fins�energ�y.cnmria is'�hn��n c��ur7t�-�'I�� ri�it},r�r_;iti�� 6. Nuclear Power Rears - World Nuclear Association. (ri_cl). hfiys:itkacrld-nuclear.org informiation-lihrar4^fmcl-par-fr��l ��+d le,�rtiu�l�ar-[���r-rea�t�rs+r�u�Ce$r-nor-r�F.3or 7. Pet en, G- M_, & °Carvajal Nunez, tol. (2024, March). Preliminary Analysis, of Advanced Reacloi3 Storage, Transportation,, and Disposal. Retrieved From h ips:f1in1diniiallit)rartil.inl.! coy/sAesa'Sti,sjVSgrt 8233.5.pdf a. Stehly. T., ITV*' P.L. & Hernando, D. M. (2024, Novemtier), Cos# of Wind Energy Review: 2024 Edition. Natiional Renewable Energy Latooratory. g. TerraPower. (2024). Kemmerer Power Station Unit 1 Preliminary Safety Analysis Reporl_ 10j TerraPower. (2025). The Nes! Generation of Power is Here: The Natriulm Reactor and Energy Storage System, Retrieved from hllrn:ttwww.lerrapower.comidownload5LJ.25 TR Nathi,iniTechnodogyWhite.Dd 11 TerraPcwer. (n,d.). FINAL SAFETY EVALUATION OF TOPICAL REPORT NATi3-LICRPRT- 01, "REGULATORY MANAGEMENT OF NATRIUM NUCLEAR ISLAND AND ENERGY ISLAND DESIGN INTERFACES' Re4fieved from NuGk,-ar Regulslory Commission; hkins:lfwww.nrc..! pgv�dccsiML.2 L2J2,97A2.98.nctf 12 'Wiser, R. H., Seel, J., & Bolinger, ,M. (2020, Jane)- Benchmarking Ldility+-spade FV operational expenses and 1project lifetimes: Resullts from a surrey of U.S. solar industry Professionais I Energy Markets & Policy, Enerlly Markets 8. Policy. h1tps.:0ern)_1W.9oke1publication enc°hmarkin€J-krtilityF le -per I Depar-rient of Chemical and Biocnemi:cal Engineering Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering Questions? Grace Dillingh2M Gd-IIIInqharn@u-IOwa-adu Adam Swartzendruber Aswartzendruber@uiowa.edu EDUCATION ACTION ITEMS TE-1: SIGNIFICANT TRANSPORTATION EDUCATION AND OUTREACH CAMPAIGNS STATUS: LONG TERM/ONGOING 20201: Launched Climate Ambassador program, which includes segments related to transportation. 2021: Held the first EV Car Show as part of Climate Fest. Bus wraps for new electric buses were designed to include climate action promotion component. 2022: "Speaking of... Electric Vehicles" webinar held in March. Electric Bus Bash held May. 2023: "Walk and Roll Weekly" campaign launched. Book Bike purchased in collaboration with the library. Collaboration on a Bike to Work Week event at Big Grove. Climate Fest events include decorated bus stops, live music and engagement activities at transit hub. EV car show featuring both the electric bus and electric cargo "Book Bike" at the Farmers Market. 2024: "Bus Buddy" video series launched followed by March "Route Madness" campaign. First Bus Buddy engagement training offered to Wonderful Westside girls group. Iowa City hosted Bike to Work Week breakfast at Swan Ramp, serving 100+ residents. Practice bus bike ramp installed at Swan Ramp. Climate Fest included a Transit Trivia night and largest attended EV car show to date (17 different EV models, 1670+ attendees). "Fear Free" Fare Free campaign launched with Halloween Fare Free booth in Downtown District pop up retail space encouraging families to try downtown shuttle while exploring downtown. 2025: Summer marketing campaign promoting extension of Fare Free service highlights accomplishments to date, including Vehicle Miles Travelled (VMT) reduction. Second March "Route Madness" campaign to engage transit ridership. Bike to Work Week breakfast at Swan park serves 165+ residents. Collaboration with MPO transportation planners on August citizen science Bike/Ped data collection event. EV car show and "Walk and Roll Weekly" promotional item planned for Climate Fest. Throughout this report, "2020" is used to indicate new efforts initiated in 2020, while "2020 baseline" indicates relevant ongoing efforts that were continued into 2020. TE-2: LAUNCH AN ECO-DRIVING CAMPAIGN ALONGSIDE EMPLOYERS STATUS: UNDERWAY 2021: Discussions with ACT about a carpooling campaign to incorporate into workforce return to campus (ACT ultimately decides to continue remote work and sell campus). 2022: MPO transportation planners hosted "Easy on the Gas" Lunch and Learn highlighting carpool, vanpool, rideshare, express bus, and dial -a -ride options for area commuters. 2024: Employers identified for planned outreach to encourage use of Fare Free service by employees. Outreach to northside employers with limited response. Ongoing collaboration with Downtown District to promote Fare Free services to and through downtown employers. 2025: Outreach effort planned for firm moving into former Pearson campus INCENTIVE ACTION ITEMS TI-1: INCENTIVIZE PUBLIC TRANSIT OPTIONS STATUS: LONG TERM/ONGOING 2021: Implemented Transit Study fare and transfer policy changes. Both the ICPL and Recreation Division offer a "ride home" pass valid for Iowa City Transit in summer. 2022: ICPL/Recreation Department offer "ride home" pass again. 2023: Launch of Fare Free pilot in August results in 53% increase in ridership over August 2022; ongoing marketing/engagement to encourage transit usage planned (see TE-1) 2024: City Council raises downtown parking fees to support ongoing Fare Free transit service; anticipated $1.5M revenue annually to support fare free service (see also TR-1). First year of Fare Free initiative show sustained ridership growth (450K additional rides), including increase over previous August; 1.8 million VMT reduction within city limits recorded between 2023 and 2024. 2025: City Councilvotes to extend Fare Free service for an additional year, with annual review of the program to determine future extensions. National Parking Day "Pop Up Pocket Park" planned as part of Climate Fest to highlight role parking fees play in incentivizing/paying for Fare Free service. TI-2: EXPLORE ELECTRIC VEHICLE (EV) INCENTIVES BASED ON THE READINESS PLAN STATUS: LONG-TERM/ONGOING 2021: EV Readiness Plan completed. 2022: Multi -family grant program launched to assist with electrical panel upgrades and equipment installation costs of EV charging units at apartment buildings. 2023: Level 1 charging project completed for Peninsula Condo HOA. EV charging grant program for condos and HOAs adjusted to cover half the cost of equipment and installation (formerly covered installation only) following end of MidAmerican EVSE rebates. 2024: Ongoing promotion of EV incentives for new and used vehicles in the IRA. 2025: Targeted outreach to landlords and condo HOAs throughout summer to promote EV charging grant. REGULATION ACTION ITEMS TR-1: REVIEW PARKING REGULATIONS AND CONSIDER INNOVATIVE WAYS TO ENCOURAGE ALTERNATIVE MODES OF TRAVEL STATUS: LONG-TERM/ONGOING 2022: City enacted ordinance allowing parking enforcement staff to issue warnings/ticket vehicles blocking bike lanes. 2024: Demonstration bus bike rack installed on Chauncey Swan Ramp; new informational video on how to use the rack produced. New parking rates paired with refreshed marketing of Fare Free transit service (see also TI-1). ICDD and city staff collaborate on use of "Hello Lamppost" service for messaging on parking and transit service downtown. 2025: Parking study planned to begin late 2025 with an aim of reducing minimum parking requirements. TR-2: REQUIRE CLIMATE CHANGE ANALYSIS FOR NEW SUBDIVISIONS AND REZONINGS STATUS: IN DEVELOPMENT 2024: CAO staff representative included in steering committee for comprehensive land use plan ("comp plan") update to ensure incorporation of climate change considerations. 2025: Comp plan presentation to Climate Action Commission; ongoing discussion with Neighborhood Development Services staff about inclusion of climate action priorities. CITY POLICY ACTION ITEMS TCP-1: ESTABLISH AN ELECTRIC AND FUEL -EFFICIENT VEHICLE PURCHASING POLICY STATUS: COMPLETED 2020: Written policy completed which includes preferences for EVs; describes process by which vehicle options are to be evaluated 2022: Zero Emissions Fleet Transition Plan for future transit purchases, including EV and hydrogen cell buses, completed. Climate Action and Fleet Service staff collaborated on installation of additional charging stations to support two new EVs added to City fleet. RFP released to contract for a Zero Emissions Fleet Transition Study for all city vehicles. 2023: UI engineering students complete benefit -cost analysis of hydrogen vs electric "fuel" for city fleet vehicles; firm selected to conduct fleet transition plan. Fleet review and vehicle recommendations completed as part of Fleet Transition plan; related infrastructure analysis commences. Iowa City Transit featured on national transit panel as a model of how to collaborate with utility on fleet electrification efforts. 2024: Fleet Transition Study completed; staff memo and study shared with Council; staff in conversation with Johnson County about initiation of their study and potential areas of overlap. Level 2 charging station installed to support acquisition of electric vehicles for police department. Separate fleet analysis for Fire Department completed. 2025: City continues to pilot EVs in different parts of the fleet, purchasing Two Ford Lightnings as community outreach vehicles for PD and AmeriCorps team and a Chevy Blazer EV patrol vehicle for PD. TCP-2: TRACK ADHERENCE TO CITY IDLING POLICY STATUS: LONG TERM/ONGOING 2020: 30 City vehicles equipped with AVL technology to provide digital idling data. 2021: 60 additional vehicles equipped with AVL. Division managers (Water Treatment, Resource Management, Streets, etc.) begin receiving weekly reports on idling data for their vehicles. Equipment superintendent reviews reports monthly for entire fleet. Efforts made to increase compliance within individual divisions. 2022: 19 additional vehicles equipped with AVL. Ongoing monitoring with weekly reports to division managers and month review by Equipment superintendent. Significant reduction of idling confirmed across all divisions. 2023: 3 new vehicles equipped with AVL. Ongoing monitoring. Idling reduction levels maintained. 2024: Ongoing monitoring. Idling reduction levels maintained. 2025: Ongoing monitoring. Data errors detected with some AVL units. Equipment superintendent in communication with AVL to resolve issue/replace malfunctioning units. Idling reduction levels maintained. TCP-3: REVIEW TRANSPORTATION SUBSIDIES, WORK SCHEDULES AND TELE-WORK POLICIES FOR CITY EMPLOYEES STATUS: COMPLETED 2020 baseline: Discounted transit passes offered to all city employees opting out of parking passes. 2021: Following COVID-19 pandemic, conversations on flex/tele-work policy initiated within city management. 2022: New tele-work and flexible work options offered to City employees, to be implemented on a departmental basis. Six month review of program showed ongoing support among employees and managers. 2024: Discounted EV charging incentive for city employees proposed to replace discounted transit passes following adoption of Fare Free transit service. PUBLIC PROJECTS TPP-1: COMPLETE THE TRANSIT STUDY AND IMPLEMENT RECOMMENDATIONS TO BOLSTER SERVICE AND INCREASE RIDERSHIP STATUS: LONG TERM/ONGOING 2020: Oct. 2020: Completed Transit Study presented to City Council. 2021: New route, fare, stop changes implemented as recommended by the study. Adjustments made to four transit routes (2, 10, 12, 13) based on driver and rider feedback to better accommodate route transfers. 2022: Transit approved to hire 4 additional bus drivers to help cover new routes and services in support of Transit Study recommendations 2023: Transit system upgrades implemented: buses on Court and Towncrest routes begin running 20-minute service; expanded service on N. Dodge route up to Highlander; 8 routes implement earlier start times. In Sept., procurement authorized for a Bus Rapid Transit Feasibility Study. 2024: Annual ridership objectives and measures developed in collaboration with Harvard Bloomberg program, with a target metric established to grow to 1.9 million rides per year by 2030. 2025: Updates to some routes planned to continue implementation of Transit Study TPP-2: COMPLETE ELECTRIC VEHICLE (EV) READINESS PLAN AND IMPLEMENT RECOMMENDATIONS STATUS: LONG TERM/ONGOING 2021: EV Readiness Plan completed. High priority actions: Pursue grant program prioritizing DC fast chargers; amend code to require EV charging as a permitted accessory use, and to include requirements or incentives (i.e. density bonus) for the installation of charging infrastructure in new construction or major renovations; Identify locations for publicly -owned EV chargers; connect income -qualified and disadvantaged communities with low -interest EV loan programs; explore partnership with dealers to facilitate point -of -sale rebates for EVs; develop comprehensive EV resources website for Eastern Iowa audience 2022: EV charging rebate for apartment and condo buildings launched in March (see TI-1); Secured VW settlement funds to add EVSE to Chauncey Swan and Dubuque Street parking ramps. 2023: Parking staff implemented EV tax at public charging stations as required by state law. 2024: Two dual -port level two chargers added to public ramps at Chauncey Swan and Dubuque Street. CAMBUS and Coralville funding request for electric buses included in MPO Transportation Improvement Plan (TIP); Cedar Rapids submits for EECGB funding for 4 light duty EVs. Iowa City Climate Action rep added to steering committee to find new host organization for Clean Cities Coalition after state terminates contract with the DOE 2025: EV information page in development for Iowa City website. TPP-3: ACHIEVE GOLD BICYCLE FRIENDLY COMMUNITY STATUS AND BEGIN WORK TOWARD PLATINUM STATUS STATUS: LONG TERM/ONGOING 2021: City applied for Gold -level Bicycle Friendly Community designation. 2022: City received Silver -level designation, but has submitted documentation showing peer cities with lower scores receiving Gold and Platinum designations in hopes of a revised rating. 2024: Application submitted for Gold -level designation. Received Silver -level designation. Planning staff review designation criteria with League of American Bicyclists. CLIMATE ACTION COMMISSIONER SCORING INDICATORS (USE WHOLE NUMBERS ONLY) 1 = Monitor and explore opportunities as they arise 3 = Maintain current efforts and have strategies in place to react to new opportunities 5 = Top priority: Grow efforts in this area and actively seek new opportunities ACTION ITEMS Number Item Notes• TE-1 Significant transportation education and outreach campaigns TE-2 Launch an eco-driving campaign alongside employers TI-1 Incentivize public transit options TI-2 Explore electric vehicle (EV) incentives based on readiness plan TR-1 Review parking regulations and consider innovative ways to encourage alternative modes of travel TR-2 Require climate change analysis for new subdivisions and rezonings TCP-1 Establish an electric and fuel - efficient vehicle purchasing policy TCP-2 Track adherence to city idling policy TCP-3 Review transportation subsidies, work schedules, and telework policy for city employees TPP-1 Complete the transit student and implement recommendations to bolster service and increase ridership TPP-2 Complete EV Readiness Plan and implement recommendations BPP-3 Achieve Gold Bicycle Friendly Community status and begin work toward Platinum status BE = Education, BI = Incentives, BR = Regulation, BCP = City Policy, BPP = Public Projects Tier 1 Priorities: Grow Efforts in this area and actively seek new opportunities BE-2 Parter with stakeholders to promote green building construction and rehabilitation 13I-4 Offer TIF-funded climate action incentives aimed at reducing industrial and commercial energy consumption BPP-3 Increase energy efficiency and pursue electrification of municipal buildings 13I-1 Offer free home energy assessments and basic weatherization services to Iowa City households BPP-2 Partner on a net zero affordable housing project Tier 2 Priorities: Maintain current efforts and have strategies in place to react to new opportunities BI-6 Continue to offer financial incentives for enhanced energy standards based on a home energy rating program BI-9 Launch an electrification incentive program 13PP-1 Pursue solar or battery storage partnership with MidAmerican Energy BPP-4 Advocate for state legislative changes to enable subscription -based community solar BE-1 Promote energy efficiency and performance tips to the public BR-3 Incorporate strict energy standards into height and density bonuses 13I-2 Enhance energy standards for city rehabilitation projects BR-5 Develop Climate Action requirements for all existing and future rental permits 13I-5 Develop or partner with local stakeholders on a comprehensive climate action rehabilitation program BE-5 Incorporate an education component into future solar installations on city properties or facilities BR-2 Incorporate stricter energy standards into TIF financing policies BE-3 Continue to collaborate with the local realtor communityto promote home energy performance to buyers through MILS inventory, HERS ratings, and other mechanisms BR-1 Create a more robust energy code inspection program BCP-1 Advocate for state adoption of advanced energy codes BCP-2 Advocate for aggressive energy code development and adoption Tier 3 Priorities: Monitor and Explore opportunities as they arise Action Item BE-4 Strategy Educate the community on energy usage for water treatment and delivery BI-3 Coordinate neighborhood energy blitz events BI-10 Incentivize energy enhancements and building re -and retro-commissioning for participants in the energy benchmarking program BR-4 Incorporate energy benchmarking requirements into financial incentive agreements such as TIF funding and Climate Action Grants BI-8 Complete a net -zero demonstration rehabilitation project BI-7 Initiate a net -zero house design competition BR-6 Continue periodic reviews of city zoning codes related to solar readiness/friendliness and make timely updates BE = EDUCATION, BI = INCENTIVES, BR = REGULATION, BCP = CITY POLICY, BPP = PUBLIC PROJECTS ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. Tier 1 Priorities BE-2: Partner with stakeholders to promote green building construction and rehabilitation . Buildings •: Time Period Recurrence CAAP Section CAAP Subsection CY 2026 Annual Buildings -Education BE-2 Objective Action Subject Sector Adoption Date Partner with stakeholders to Homebuilders Jan. 1, 2026 promote green building Remodelers construction and Realtors rehabilitation Appraisers TargetAction SubjectQuantity Metric Achieve percentage of new 20% Number of HERS homes receiving HERS rated homes built in rating 2026 relative to total number of new homes built Engage Realtors and/or 40 Participants in the appraisers with green certified training designations training Initiate program for remodelers 1 new program similar to HERS program researched, designed, for new construction and proposed Other possibilities 13I-4: Offer TIF-funded climate action incentives aimed at reducing industrial and commercial energy consumption Potential O&T: • Number (or percent) of TIF-awarded properties incorporating climate action projects o Easy data to gather, feasible to set targets • Percent reduction of energy use for TIF-awarded properties o Potentially challenging data to gather, tricky to set targets (each project differs) BPP-3: Increase energy efficiency and pursue electrification of municipal buildings Potential metrics: • kWh saved in municipal buildings following energy efficiency intervention o Easy data to gather, tricky to set targets due to unique nature of each building and intervention BI-1: Offer free home energy assessments and basic weatherization service to Iowa City households Potential metrics: • Audits performed annually o Easy data to gather, feasible to set targets, may not change much year to year BPP-2: Partner on a net zero affordable housing project Potential metrics: • Still be in exploratory phase; may be difficult to set a target until the first project is constructed