VCU DECLARES CLIMATE EMERGENCY

VCU President Michael Rao, and Cabinet members Conrad, Davenport, Gray, Gunther, Sotiropoulos, Helderman, Heston, Kellermann, Klink, LeGrande, Lepley, McLaughlin, Melis, Nasim, Rao and Weiss

Dear VCU Community,

The climate crisis is upon us. Individually we can reduce our carbon footprint, but it will take a collective effort and institutional changes to limit the worst effects of global warming and its deeply disproportionate effects on vulnerable, frontline communities and communities of color, and achieve a just transition to a healthy society for all.

Last year, the Faculty Senate, Staff Senate, Student Government Association, and Graduate Student Association voted overwhelmingly to endorse the Climate Emergency Petition.

We invite you to join faculty, staff, and students by signing this petition.

Copies of the petition will continue to be forwarded to President Rao and the VCU Administration periodically as it accrues signatures.

Thank you!

Co-Authors: Michael Donnenberg, School of Medicine; Jesse Goldstein, Sociology Department; Carolyn Hindle, President, VCU Green Action!, Beth Kreydatus, Department of Focused Inquiry; Mason Manley, VCU Green Action Affiliate & Chesapeake Climate Action Network; Susan A. Miller MD, VCU Medical Faculty, Ret., Bill Muth, School of Education (emeritus); Barry O’Keefe, VCUArts; George Smith, VCU Alum, and Mark Wood, School of World Studies,

for: VCU Climate Justice Coalition
Petition by
Barry OΓÇÖKeefe
Richmond, United Kingdom

To: VCU President Michael Rao, and Cabinet members Conrad, Davenport, Gray, Gunther, Sotiropoulos, Helderman, Heston, Kellermann, Klink, LeGrande, Lepley, McLaughlin, Melis, Nasim, Rao and Weiss
From: [Your Name]

Virginia Commonwealth University Faculty Climate Emergency Declaration

WHEREAS, there is an overwhelming consensus among scientists, as described in the recent United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, that industrialized countries must reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 45 percent from 2010 levels by no later than 2030, and achieve zero carbon emissions by 2050, to prevent temperatures from rising above 1.5° C (2.4° F) and thereby avoid disastrous impacts at the global level that will dramatically affect the city’s local climate, ecosystem, and communities; and

WHEREAS, addressing the climate emergency is essential to all three of VCU's Strategic Research goals: enhancing the human experience, achieving a just and equitable society, optimizing health; and depend on addressing the climate emergency and responsibly restoring and protecting the natural world by supporting sustainable energy and environments; and

WHEREAS, in its 2010 Climate Action Plan, as part of the American Colleges and Universities Presidents’ Climate Commitment (ACUPCC), VCU committed to work toward the goals established by the Paris Accord; and

WHEREAS, VCU has abandoned its 2010 Climate Action Plan and, as of 2020, has reduced emissions from the 2008 baseline by approximately 10%, a rate of reduction that is far below the targets set in 2010 as well as the level required to achieve the IPCC targets; and

WHEREAS VCU is currently developing a new 10-year sustainability plan; and

WHEREAS IN 2022 VCU canceled its (approximately) $500,000 contract with a consulting firm that was contracted to create our plan without compensating for any additional resources to the in house sustainability planning effort; and

WHEREAS, vulnerable populations are already disproportionately impacted by climate change, and will increasingly bear an excess burden from warming temperatures, sea level rise, the spread of disease and the socioeconomic consequences of inaction on the climate crisis; and

WHEREAS, the City of Richmond declared a climate emergency on September 13, 2021, joining 2,045 other local governments and 23 national governments representing over 1 billion people; and

WHEREAS, VCU affirms its role as a major partner with the City of Richmond by galvanizing its considerable academic, research, and health promoting resources and personnel to partner with RVA to achieve its RVAGreen 2050 goal to ensure that historically underrepresented and economically disadvantaged communities are climate-ready and resilient; and

WHEREAS, VCU recognizes that environmental racism is a systemic structure that undermines the health and wellbeing of Black residents, low-income residents, and other residents of color in Richmond and is committed to dismantling this structure and empowering these residents; and

WHEREAS, over 2000 local governments representing over 1 billion people have already declared a state of climate emergency, including New York City, New York, Austin, Texas, Boulder, Colorado, San Francisco, California, Alexandria, Virginia, and 58 other localities within the United States, as well as 23 national governments, including those of the United Kingdom, Canada, France, Ireland and Argentina.

WHEREAS, on October 28, 2021, in advance of the 2021 COP26, over 1050 universities and colleges from 68 countries announced they have pledged to halve their emissions by 2030 and reach net-zero by 2050 at the very latest, impacting over 10 million students. This includes, at last count, 336 US Institutions of Higher Learning, including VCU.

THEREFORE, THE FACULTY, STAFF, STUDENTS AND ALUMNI OF VCU (1) CALL ON PRESIDENT RAO TO DECLARE A CLIMATE AND ECOLOGICAL EMERGENCY; (2) CALL ON THE VCU ADMINISTRATION TO WORK TOGETHER WITH US TO CREATIVELY AND UNCOMPROMISINGLY MEET THE CRISIS AND SERVE AS A MODEL FOR OUR CITY AND BEYOND; AND (3) AFFIRM THAT THE FOLLOWING SHOULD BE INCLUDED AS ESSENTIAL COMPONENTS OF THE ONE VCU SUSTAINABILITY MASTER PLAN:

1. Declare a climate and ecological emergency that threatens the health and wellbeing of VCU’s students, staff, and faculty; the residents of Richmond and the Commonwealth of Virginia; as well as our fellow global citizens and the natural world; and commit to pursuing the goals outlined in this resolution and its upcoming Sustainability Action Plan.

2. Reduce VCU’s greenhouse gas emissions 50% by 2030, as is commensurate with the percentage reduction specified by the 2018 IPCC Report to keep global temperatures from rising more than 1.5 degrees Celsius, and to achieve 100% renewable energy sources by 2050.

3. Commit to full transparency in reporting VCU and VCU Health Systems emissions on an annual basis on the GHG Emissions dashboard, and provide a comparison of these results to IPCC targets set in the 2018 Report and VCU’s own targets set in 2010.

4. Highlight the climate and ecological emergency in its Mission Statement and recalibrate Quest 2025 Strategic Plan to prioritize the importance of contributing to sustainability in every aspect of VCU’s operations as well as teaching, research, and service.

5. Affirm VCU’s role as a major partner with the City of Richmond by orienting/organizing its considerable academic, research, and health resources and personnel to partner with the City and RVA to achieve their goals of building an equitable, inclusive, and sustainable city.

6. Divest from financial instruments that invest in climate destabilization, including the military-industrial complex and fossil fuel companies, including those portfolios managed by VCU Investment Management Company (VCIMCO), and demand that the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America (TIAA) do so as well. Issue easy to understand investment reports on a regular basis that reflect changes in portfolios’ investments in climate destabilization, as well as new investments in renewable energy and environmental stewardship.

7. Use the Strategic Research Priorities Plan to incentivize timely and practical climate and environmental justice-centered research, similar to VCU’s model Covid-19 Rapid Research Funding Opportunity.

8. Monitor and report VCU’s compliance with Executive Order 77 calling for the total phasing out of non-medical single-use plastic items by 2025.

9. Begin immediately to implement best environmental protection practices that meet or exceed LEED silver standards, including but not limited to: building stormwater infrastructure (e.g., green roofs, rainwater harvesting, gray water recycling, bio-retention tree wells, etc.); increasing urban tree canopy; meeting high-performance building standards that will achieve Net Zero Energy construction on new campus buildings; electrification of VCU's fleet; utilizing organic pest mitigation methods and fertilizers in the maintenance of VCU properties; utilize non-toxic cleaning custodial materials; shift to local agriculture and plant-based food sources; support circular economics in all areas; maximize the installation of on-site renewable energy generators.

10. Ensure implementation rigor of the One VCU Sustainability Plan (now under development) by: (a) Recommitting funds at least commensurate with the funds initially allocated to hire a sustainability consulting firm and subsequently withdrawn in 2022, in line with the commitments made in the 2010 Climate Action Plan – i.e., assuring the Plan has sufficient resources and expertise to achieve full implementation and oversight, and successfully achieves interim (yearly) and outcome (2030 and 2050) emission targets. (b) Identify phase targets before the public comment period. (c) Include estimates of resources (fiscal, human, other) before the public comment period. (d) As much as possible build on specific 2010 Plan targets and strategies to ensure continuity and avoid replicating past efforts.