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Along the Mississippi: Tax thyselfGuess what happens when communities cough up cash?Posted by Katharine Wroth at 8:53 PM on 24 Oct 2007
As I thought about that tonight, I realized that Dubuque City Manager Mike Van Milligen had told me a similar thing: voters there passed a sales tax to support school funding. Some of that funding went into the district's first new school built in 30 years -- a school designed with sustainability in mind. Check this out, from the website of national architecture firm Durrant (we met the managing principal of their Dubuque office, Kevin Eipperle, yesterday): The building and entire site is designed with environmental sustainability as a goal. Some of the implemented procedures for the site included a storm water retention pond that doubles as a wetland with outdoor classroom opportunities, several acres of reintroduced natural prairie, use of local materials and locally manufactured equipment, maintaining natural contours of the site and matching the building to the slope, and construction waste recycling which diverted more than 50 percent of the waste generated during construction away from the landfill. Environmental considerations for the building involved a geothermal vertical closed-loop heating and cooling system, use of significant day lighting, installation of high-efficiency equipment, and integrating a recycling system for building operation. This environmentally conscious design approach reflects the stewardship philosophy of Durrant, the Dubuque Community School District, and the Dubuque community. There's a whole mish-mash of financing that goes into all these projects, of course, but one thing seems to be coming into focus: taxes aren't evil, and these forward-looking communities are well aware of that. As a result of coughing up a little more cash than they have to, they're seeing immeasurable health, social, environmental, and economic benefits. Just imagine.
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