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Appendix F

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Council on Sustainable  Development
 
Table of Contents | Appendix G

Appendix F
Resources for Sustainable Communities


The add to the information presented in this appendix, please send them to the PCSD office, “re: resource additions,” preferably via email pcsd.comments@erols.com.

General Sustainable Communities Resources

Sustainable Communities Awards Programs

Resources for Community Capacity Building

Resources for Partnerships for Design

Resources for Economic Development and Jobs

Resources for Safe and Healthy Communities

General Sustainable Communities Resources

Center for Neighborhood Technology
2125 W. North Avenue
Chicago, IL 60647
312 278 4800
web www.cnt.org

Publishes The Neighborhood Works: Building Alternative Visions for the City, $30 for one year, bi-monthly subscription; and conducts policy analysis on a broad range of sustainable communities issues. 

Center for Policy Alternatives
1875 Connecticut Avenue
NW, Suite 710
Washington, DC 20009
202 387 6030
fx 202 986 2539
email info@cfpa.org
web .

Works with state legislators throughout the United States on a wide range of issues including campaigns on creating community capital and mobilizing participation for tomorrow's communities. 

Center of Excellence for Sustainable Development
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
Denver Regional Support Office
1617 Cole Blvd
Golden, CO 80401
800 357 7732
email sustainable.development@hq.doe.gov
web .

Communities by Choice: An Introduction to Sustainable Community Development, published by the 
Mountain Association for Community Economic Development
433 Chestnut Street
Berea, KY 40403
606 986 2373
web sitehttp://www.maced.org.

Community Sustainability Resource Institute
174 Weston Road
P.O. Box 981
Arden, NC 28704
704 681 1955
fx 704 687 0441
email sustain@primeline.com.

CONCERN, Inc.
1794 Columbia Road, NW
Washington, DC 20009
202 328 8160
fx 202 387 3378
email concern@igc.apc.org.

Context Institute
PO Box 946
Langley, WA 98260
360 221 6044
fx 360 221 6045
web .

EcoCity
Cleveland, 
2841 Scarborough Road
Cleveland Heights, OH 44118
216 932 3007 (fax same)
email ecocleveland@igc.apc.org

Publishers of the EcoCity Cleveland Journal, $20 for one year, monthly subscription. 

Friends of the Earth
U.S. Community Support Project
1025 Vermont Avenue, NW, Third Floor, 
Washington, DC 20005-6303
202 783 7400 x211
email foe@foe.org
web http://www.foe.org.

Global Environmental Options
900 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10021
212 439 6042
fx 212 794 4378, 
.

Greening Cities: Building Just and Sustainable Communities, by Joan Roelofs. 
The Bootstrap Press
777 United Nations Plaza, Suite 3C
New York, NY 10017
email cipany@igc.apc.org
800 316 2739.

International City/County Management Association
777 North Capitol Street, NE, Suite 500
Washington, DC 20002
202 962 3680
fx 202 962 3500
web 
For a publications and services catalog call 800 745 8780, or (if outside the United States) 301 498 1227.

International Council on Local Environmental Initiatives
U.S. Office
15 Shattuck Square
Suite 215
Berkeley, CA 94704
email iclei_usa@iclei.org

International headquarters
City Hall, East Tower, 8th Floor
Toronto, Ontario, M5H 2N2, Canada
416 392 1462
fx 416 392 1478

Publishers of The Local Agenda 21 Planning Guide, a guide that presents the planning elements, methods, and tools being used by local governments to implement sustainable development in their communities (send $35 plus $8 postage to the United States, in U.S. dollars); and Tools for a Sustainable Community: One-Stop Guide for Local Governments (send $5.00, payable to ICLEI-USA c/o Josh Wolfe to the U.S. office or by sending an email to jwolfe@iclei.org).

Joint Center for Sustainable Communities
a partnership between the National Association of Counties and the U.S. Conference of Mayors to promote the leadership of mayors, county commissioners, and their staff in pursuing sustainable development locally. Contacts: Nick Keller, Co-Director for the National Association of Counties, 440 First Street, NW,Washington, DC 20001, 202 942 4224, fx 202 737 0480, email nkeller@naco.org, web ; or Carol Everett, Co-Director for the U.S. Conference of Mayors, 1620 Eye Street, NW, Washington, DC, 20006, 202 293 7330, fx 202 429 0422, email cever78204@aol.com, web .

Making Cities Livable Conference
P.O. Box 7586
Carmel, CA 93921
408 626 9080
fx 408 624 5126
Publishes the Making Cities Livable Newsletter.

Millennium Communications Group, Inc.
1150 18th Street NW, 8th Floor
Washington, DC
20036
202 872 8800
fx 202 872 8845
email info@millencom.com
web site .

Minnesota Sustainable Communities Network email update on sustainability-related activities. The list is moderated by staff of the sustainable communities team at the Minnesota Office of Environmental Assistance (OEA). Join by sending an email message with your name, organizational affiliation (if any), address, phone (optional) and fax to. Let them know if you don't want your name listed in the MnSCN member directory.

National Association of Counties
440 First Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001
202 393 6226
fx 202 737 0480
http://www.naco.org.

National Association of Towns and Townships
444 North Capitol Street, Suite 294
Washington, DC 20001
202 624 3550.

National Conference of State Legislatures
1560 Broadway, Suite 700
Denver, CO 80202
303 830 2200
fx 303 863 8003
http://www.ncsl.org

Sustainable Communities Network
resources under the following issues areas: 

  • creating community 
  • $mart growth
  • growing a sustainable economy
  • protecting natural resources 
  • living sustainably
  • governing community 
.
For more information contact: CONCERN, Inc., 1794 Columbia Road, NW, Washington, DC 20009, 202 328 8160, fx 202 387 3378, email concern@igc.apc.org, or Community Sustainability Resource Institute, 174 Weston Road, P.O. Box 981, Arden, NC 28704, 704 681 1955, fx 704 687 0441, email sustain@primeline.com.

Sustainable Community Roundtable
2129 Bethel St. NW
Olympia, WA 98506
360 754 7842
email roundtable@olywa.net
web site .

Urban Ecology
405 14th Street, Suite 701
Oakland, CA 94612
510 251 6330
email uecommdes@igc.apc.org.

$30 membership for The Urban Ecologist newsletter; publications and books also available.

Worldwatch Institute
1776 Massachusetts Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20036
202 452 1999
fx 296 7365
email wwpub@worldwatch.org
web site 

Publishes the annual State of the World report, Vital Signs, the Environmental Alert Book Series, Worldwatch Paper Series ($5.00 each; any combination of 2-5 copies $4.00 each; 6-20 copies $3.00 each; 21+ copies: $2.00 each), and the bimonthly World Watch magazine (one year, $20). Many of the Paper Series topics address sustainable communities issues -- check the web site for a listing.

Yes! A Journal of Positive Futures
P.O. Box 10818
Bainbridge Island, WA 98110-0818
206 842 0216
fx 206 842 5208
$24 for one year, four issues.

Sustainable Communities Awards Programs

All-America City Award sponsored by the National Civic League with a $10,000 prize provided by the Allstate Foundation. Awards goes to vibrant, resourceful places where neighborhoods pitch in together; places with a diverse collection of talents and people who dwell not on problems of the past, but on opportunities of the present and possibilities of the future. National Civic League, 1445 Market Street, Suite 300, Denver, CO 80202-1728, 800 233 6004, 303 571 4343, fx 303 571 4404, email mailto:ncl@csn.net, web .

America's Most Livable Communities and Entrepreneurial American Leadership, presented once every decade to recognize exemplary achievements of public and private leaders that are responsible for improving the quality of life in communities across the country. Partners for Livable Communities, 1429 21st Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036, 202 887 5990, fx 202 466 4845.

Annual Engineering Excellence Awards Competition recognizes engineering achievements that reflect the highest degree of ingenuity, owner satisfaction, technological advancement, environmental enhancement, increased public safety, and other factors—state winners and national awards. American Consulting Engineers Council, 1015 Fifteenth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20005-2605, 202 347 7474, fx 202 898 0068.

Community Spotlight Award recognizing exemplary community achievement in natural catastrophe damage mitigation to protect people, homes, and businesses. Presented by the Insurance Institute for Property Loss Reduction and the International City/County Management Association. Contact the Insurance Institute at 73 Tremont Street, Suite 510, Boston, MA 02108-3910, Attn: James Russell, 617 722 0200 x 215, fx 617 722 0202.

Environmental Excellence Awards for projects, processes, and individuals in the following categories: non-motorized transportation, habitat, water quality and wetland preservation, historic and archaeological preservation, roadside vegetation management, air quality improvement, noise abatement, community cohesion, environmental leadership, environmental reserach, and environmental process. Contact James Shrouds, 202 366 2074, Federal Highway Administration, U.S. Department of Transportation.

Evergreen Award for Pollution Prevention, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 10. Award honors environmental leaders in the business community who have demonstrated that preventing pollution is a sound business practice. For more information, contact Carolyn Gangmark at 206 553 4072, email gangmark.carolyn@epamail.epa.gov, or John Palmer at 206 553 6521.

Great American Main Street Awards, a national competition that recognizes exceptional accomplishments in revitalizing America's historic and traditional downtowns and neighborhood commercial districts. Bill McCloud, National Main Street Center, National Trust for Historic Preservation, 1785 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20036, 202 588 6140, 1 800 944 6847, fx 202 588 6050.

National Awards Program for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, U.S. Department of Energy. Awards given in the following categories: building technology, energy and environmental sustainability, industrial technology, transportation technology, and utility technology. Project Descriptions available from the National Technical Information Service, 703 487 4650.

National Excellence Awards for the City Summit, 25 examples of excellence in building healthy communities prepared by the U.S. government as best practices for the Second United Nations Conference on Human Settlements, Habitat II. Descriptions available in Communities at Work: Addressing the Urban Challenge available from U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, HUD USER, P.O. Box 6091, Rockville, MD 20849.

National Preservation Honor Awards for projects, communities, businesses, and individuals contributing to the preservation of historic buildings and areas. $5,000 prize to each of five winners. National Trust for Historic Preservation, 1785 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20036, 202 588 6140, 1 800 944 6847, fx 202 588 6050.

National Wetlands Awards recognize outstanding individuals who have demonstrated an extraordinary commitment to the conservation and restoration of wetlands. Sponsored by the Environmental Law Institute and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 
Contact the Environmental Law Institute
1616 P St., NW
Suite 200, Washington, DC 20036
202 939 3800
web .

Phoenix Awards: National Awards of Distinction for Brownfield Redevelopment honors individuals or groups who have implemented innovative yet practical programs that remediated environmental contamination at brownfields, thereby stimulating economic development and job creation or retention. Awards given in two categories: public sector projects, and private sector projects. 
Engineers' Society of Western Pennsylvania
 337 Fourth Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15222
412 261 0710.

Renew America
1400 16th Street, NW
Suite 710
Washington, DC 20036
202 232 2252
fx 202 232 2617
email renewamerica@igc.org
web site 

Renew America is the premiere awards organization recognizing the best domestic sustainable development activities across a broad range of areas including many environmental protection and economic and human development categories.

The Business Enterprise Trust, founded by prominent members of American business, labor, academia, and the media recognizes business people of courage, integrity and social vision. Videos, cases and teaching materials are available through Harvard Business School publishing.
TBET
204 Junipero Serra Blvd.
Stanford, CA 94305
415 321 5100
fx 415 321 5774
email Bet@betrust.org,
web .

Resources for Community Capacity Building Resources on community-based public dialogue, planning, priority-setting, improved decisionmaking, access to information, and community cooperation.

Izaak Walton League of America
Carrying Capacity Project
707 Conservation Lane
Gaithersburg, MD 20878
301 548 0150

Monitoring Sustainability in Your Community1995, describes indicators for monitoring and evaluating community sustainability. Better Local Government: A Resource Guide, a one-stop source for the best books on local government operations. For a copy, call 301 490 2204.

Building a Sustainable Community: An Organizer's Handbook, published by the Task Force for Sustainable Community Development, Action Coalition for Global Change. To order, send $9.00 c/o Ruth Petersen, 177 Bovet Road, Suite 600, San Mateo, CA 94402, 415 341 1126, fx 415 341 1395.

Common Ground: Achieving Sustainable Communities in Minnesota, September 1995, a report of the Sustainable Economic Development and Environmental Protection Task Force to the Governor, the Minnesota Legislature, and the Minnesota Environmental Quality Board. Request a copy by contacting Susan Hass or Rolf Nordstrom at the Environmental Quality Board, MN Planning, 658 Cedar Street, St. Paul, MN 55155, 612 296 3985.

The Journal for Quality and Participation, $52 (seven issues per year) w/membership to the Association for Quality and Participation, Subscription Services, 801-B West 8th Street, Suite 501, Cincinnati, OH 45203-1607, 513 381 1959, fx 513 381 0070.

Local Sustainability: A One-Stop Guide to Resources for Local Governments, available for $5 (check made out to ICLEI to “One-Stop”) the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives, U.S. Projects Office, 15 Shattuck Square, Suite 215, Berkeley, CA 94709. email 75463.3516@compuserve.com.

National Civic League, 1445 Market Street, Suite 300, Denver, CO 80202-1728, 303 571 4343, fx 303 571 4404, email cgates@ncl.org, web site.

Not Just Prosperity: Achieving Sustainability with Environmental Justice by Benjamin A. Goldman, February 1994. National Wildlife Federation, 8925 Leesburg Pike, Vienna, VA 22184, 703 790 4100, web site .

National Environmental Justice Advisory Council (NEJAC)
U.S. EPA
Office of Environmental Justice
401 M Street
SW, Mail Code: 2201A
Washington, DC 20460
202 564 2515. 

Model Plan for Public Participation, prepared by representatives of the NEJAC Public Participation and Accountability Subcommittee. 

Signs of Progress, Signs of Caution: How to Prepare a Healthy Sustainable Community Progress Report/Card by Eric Hellman. Send $20 (U.S.) to Ontario Healthy Communities Coalition, 415 Yonge Street, Suite 1202, Toronto, Ontario M5B 2E7, 416 408 4841 x343, fx 416 408 4843. 

Strategic Directions for Community Sustainability published by the British Columbia Round Table on Environment and the Economy, Suite 229, 560 Johnson Street, Victoria, British Columbia V8W 3C6, Canada, 604 387 5422, fx 604 356 9276.

Study Circles Resource Center
 P.O. Box 203
Route 169
Pomfret, CT 06258
Publishes the free Focus on Study Circles newsletter.

Sun and Shadow, quarterly newsletter. 
Center for the Study of Community
4018 Old Santa Fe
Santa Fe, NM 87505
505 982 2752
fx 505 982 9201.

Sustainability and Justice: A Message to the President's Council on Sustainable Development, a collection of analytical pieces and reports gathered as a response to the Bay Area meeting of the PCSD. 44 pp., $5 from the Urban Habitat Program, Earth Island Institute, 300 Broadway, Suite 28, San Francisco, CA 94133, 415 788 3666, fx 415 788 7324.

Sustainable Community Checklist, a workbook designed for rural communities that want to put sustainable development into practice. $12.50 for first copy, $6 for each additional in the same order. Northwest Policy Center, University of Washington, Box 353060, Seattle, WA 98195-3060, make checks payable to University of Washington. Web site provides info on program areas, publications, and current projects at .

Resources for Partnerships for Design Resources on building design and rehabilitation, community design, sprawl, and smart growth.

Alternatives to Sprawl by Dwight Young $18, How Superstore Sprawl Can Harm Communities (and What Citizens Can Do About It), by Constance E. Beaumont, $19 to National Trust for Historic Preservation, Department of Public Policy, 1785 Massachusetts Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20036, 202 588 6140, 1 800 944 6847, fx 202 588 6050.

America WALKs, 156 Milk Street, Boston, MA 02109, 503 228 5441. A national coalition of walking advocacy groups dedicated to fostering real transportation choices through the creation of walkable, livable, sustainable local communities.

American Association of Retired Persons, Public Policy Institute, 601 E Street, NW,Washington, DC 20049, 202 434 2277. Provides information on the impacts of housing and transportation policy on aging America. Making Your Community Livable: Programs that Work, community programs helping older people remain in their homes. Free from AARP's Fulfillment Office. Publications lists are also available from that address, including one specifically focused on housing and transportation.

American Institute of Architects, 1735 New York Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20006-5292, 202 626 7300, 800 242 3837, fx 202 626 7518, web .

American Public Transit Association, web. Information on conferences, services, and events,Transit News available online, links to othe transit-oriented sites.

Center for Livable Communities, Local Government Commission, 1414 K Street, Suite 250, Sacramento, CA 95814, 916 448 1198, fx 916 448 8246, hotline 800 290 8208. Participation Tools for Better Land-Use Planning: Techniques and Case Studies, $10, an informative guidebook describing ways to improve the level and quality of public participation in land-use planning; publication order form available at its web site.

Center for Renewable Energy and Sustainable Technology, 1200 18th Street, NW, Suite 900, Washington, DC 20036, 202 530 2202, fx 202 887 0497, email info@crest.org, web . CREST operates their web site, Solstice, one of the leading internet resources on renewable energy, energy efficiency, and green technologies. They also design and maintain web sites for leaders in sustainable energy and development, and can work with organizations to establish online commerce and sales. 

Cities and Counties Resource Guide: Meeting Today's Energy Need Without Sacrificing Tomorrow's Resources, U.S. Department of Energy. To order call 303 275 4285.

Choices for Our Future: Finding Transportation Alternatives for An Aging Population, November 1995, a final report to the White House Conference on Aging prepared by the Alliance for Transportation Research, Pennsylvania State University, and the Surface Transportation Policy Project. To order contact the Alliance at 1001 University Blvd., SE, Suite 103, Albuquerque, NM 87106-4342, 505 246 6410, fx 505 246 6001, email statr@technet.nm.org.

Community Transportation Association of America, 1440 New York Avenue, NW, Suite 440, Washington, DC 20005, 202 628 1480, fx 202 737 9197, web site .

GreenClips, a summary of recent articles in the media on sustainable building design, green architecture, and related government and business issues. To request a free subscription, email GreenClips@aol.com. GreenClips archives for reference and research can be found on these web sites http://solstice.crest.org/sustainable/greenclips/info.html> and web site .

The Legislative Guidebook, available from the American Planning Association's Planner Book Service. 312 786 6344, fx 312 431 9985. Cost is $16.00. The Guidebook appears in a portable document format(PDF) at the project's web site and can be downloaded for free, using Adobe Acrobat reader software. Downloading instructions are available at the site.Also available at the site are summaries of the planning statutes for all 50 states, two annotated bibliographies on planning statue reform, and project newsletters. 

Lincoln Institute for Land Policy, 113 Brattle Street, Cambridge, MA 02138-3400, 617 661 3016.

Urban Land Institute, 625 Indiana Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20004-2930, 202 624 7000, web site . For a resources catalog call 1 800 321 5011. 

Rocky Mountain Institute, 1739 Snowmass Creek Road, Snowmass, CO, 81654, 303 927 3851, web .

$mart Growth Network, a network of companies and organizations working to promote metropolitan development that serves economy, community, and environment—an emerging trend in development across the country. For membership information, contact Noah Simon, ICMA-$mart Growth Network, 777 North Capitol Street, NE, Suite 500, Washington, DC 20002-4201, 202 962 3591, email nsimon@icma.org. For information on the $mart Growth Speaker Series held regularly in Washington, DC, contact the U.S. EPA, Urban and Economic Development Division, fx 202 260 0174, email hutch.dan@epamail.epa.gov.

Surface Transportation Policy Project, 1100 17th Street, NW, Tenth Floor, Washington, DC 20036, 202 466 2636, fx 466 2247, web site . Sprawl bibliography available from Don Chen at email dchen@transact.org. Getting a Fair Share: An Analysis of Federal Transportation Spending, July 1996. Transit-Oriented Communities Case Studies (available quarterly).

Sustainable Suburbs Study: Creating More Fiscally, Socially, and Environmentally Sustainable Communities published by the city of Calgary, Planning Information Centre, P.O. Box 2100, Station M, Calgary, Alberta T2P 2M5, Canada, 403 268 5333. Printed version available for $10, or download it for free at its web site .

Walkable Communities, Inc., 320 South Main Street, High Springs, FL 32643, 904 454 3304, emaildburden@aol.com. Helps neighborhoods, towns, and cities become more walkable, livable, and sustainable.

Resources for Economic Development and Jobs Resources on economic development, training and lifelong learning, and financing.

Aspen Institute, Rural Economic Policy Program, 1333 New Hampshire Avenue, NW, Suite 1070, Washington, DC 20036, 202 736 5804.

Corporation for Enterprise Development, National Office, 777 N. Capitol Street, NE, Suite 410, Washington, DC, 20002, 202 408 9788. CFED South, 1829 E. Franklin Street, Suite 1200-M, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, 919 967 5300. CFED West, 353 Folsom Street, San Francisco, CA 94105, 415 495 2333.

Federal Empowerment Zone/Enterprise Communities — Urban EZ/EC Task Force: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Room 7136, 451 Seventh Street, SW, Washington, DC 20410, 202 619 0314; Rural EZ/EC Task Force: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, DC, Norm Reid, Deputy Director, 202 260 6332, fx 202 401 7420.

Environmental Financial Advisory Board, United States Environmental Protection Agency, Office of the Comptroller/Environmental Finance Branch, 401 M Street, SW, Washington, DC 20460, contact George Ames at 202 260 1020. Provides the Environmental Protection Agency Administrator with analysis and advice regarding environmental finance issues at the federal, state, and local levels to assist EPA in carrying out its environmental mandates.

Heartland Center for Leadership Development, 941 O Street, Suite 920, Lincoln, NE 68508, 402 474 7667. Helps small towns and rural communities faced with challenges due to economic changes.

In Business magazine, 419 State Avenue, Emmaus, PA 18049, 610 967 4135. $23 one year subscription (six issues).

Institute for Local Self-Reliance, National Office, 2425 18th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20009-2096, 202 232 4108, fx 332 0463; Midwest Office, 1313 Fifth Street, SE, Minneapolis, MN 55414-1546, 612 379 3815, fx 612 379 3920, web site . Published Manufacturing from Recyclables: 24 Case Studies of Successful Recycling Enterprises, to order call the Institute at 202 232 4108. There is a $3.75 fee for shipping and handling.

Jobs and the Economy: A National Conference for Funders, February 21-23, 1996 conference report. Copies available from the Neighborhood Funders Group, 6862 Elm Street, Suite 320, McLean, VA 22101, 703 448 1777, fx 703 448 1780.

National Rural Development Partnership, 300 7th Street, SW, Suite 714, Washington, DC 20024-4703, 202 690 2394, fx 202 690 1262. Facilitates the collaboration of federal, state, local, and tribal governments, and the private sector in order to address complex and unique rural development needs.

The Nature Conservancy, Center for Compatible Economic Development, 7 East Market Street, Suite 210, Leesburg, VA 20176, 703 779 1728, fx 703 779 1746, email ecodev@cced.org.

National Community Education Association, Fairfax, VA , 703 359 8973. Publishes the Community Education Journal.

Lessons Without Borders, Contact: U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Bureau for Legislative and Public Affairs, Office of Public Affairs, Washington, DC 20523-0056, 202 647 1850. Facilitates information flow between poor communities in the United States and USAID's successful programs in lesser developed countries.

Resources for Safe and Healthy Communities Resources on public safety, brownfields, environmental protection, pollution prevention, and natural disaster prevention and mitigation

Brownfields Economic Redevelopment Initiative, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Outreach and Special Projects, 401 M Street, SW (Mail Code #5101), Washington, DC 20460, web . Provides states, cities, towns, counties, and tribes with funding to assess, safely clean up, and sustainably reuse brownfields or contaminated sites with potential for redevelopment.

Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Clearinghouse (EREC), P.O. Box 3048, Merrifield, VA 22116, 800 363 3732. Funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, free clearinghouse that responds to inquiries on energy efficiency and renewable energy technologies from simple requests to complex technical issues. 

Environmental Justice, Urban Revitalization, and Brownfields: The Search for Authentic Signs of Hope, December 1996, a report on the public dialogues on urban revitalization and brownfields conducted by the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council, Waste and Facility Siting Subcommittee. Report can be viewed on the brownfields web site under the section on “Recent Reports and Documents.” Contact Jim Maas at 202 260 8927.

Linking Sustainable Community Activities to Pollution Prevention: A Sourcebook, Beth E. Lachman, Critical Technologies Institute at RAND. Provides an introduction to sustainable community activities and ways in which supporters of pollution prevention can take advantage of such efforts. It includes an extensive annotated bibliography. Cost: $ 15.00. Order by phone 310 451 7002, fx 310 451 6915, email order@rand.org, or mail: RAND Distribution Services, P.O. Box 2138 Santa Monica, CA 90407-2138. When ordering please include the ISBN number: 0-8330-2500-7.

Making Mitigation Work: Recasting Natural Hazards Planning and Implementation, (David R. Godschalk et al., Center for Urban and Regional Studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1997). A limited number of copies will be available for $30, including postage, from the Center for Urban and Regional Studies, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3410. National Pollution Prevention Roundtable, 2000 P Street, NW, Suite 708, Washington, DC 20036, 202 466 7272, fx 202 466 7964.

President's Crime Prevention Council, 736 Jackson Place, NW, Washington, DC 20503, 202 395 5555, fx 202 395 395 5567. Preventing Pollution in Our Cities and Counties: A Compendium of Case Studies, Fall 1995. Published by the National Association of Counties, National Association of County and City Health Officials, National Pollution Planning Roundtable, Municipal Waste Management Association, and U.S. Conference of Mayors. National Pollution Prevention Roundtable, 202 466 7272.

Public Technology, Inc.
1301 Pennsylvania Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20004-17926
fx 202 626 2498, 
800 852 4934, 
.Right-to-Know Network, web 
. Free access to numerous databases, text files, and conference information.

Society for Prevention of Violence
3439 West Brainard, #102
Woodmere, OH 44122
216 591 1876
Dedicated to reducing the prevalence of violent acts and asocial behaviors in children and adults through education. Their mission includes integration of social and academic skills to encourage those who use them to reach their full potential and contribute to society by being able to make decisions and solve problems through effective and appropriate means.

Sustainable Ecosystems and Communities Clearinghouse
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, web site provides information on a broad range of community and ecosystem-related issues, tools, and other resources, fax on demand system 202 260 5339 allows callers to select documents from a menu and have them automatically faxed or mailed, bi-weekly newsletter available via email by sending a request to harris.lisa@epamail.epa.gov. For more information, contact Karen Metchis at 202 260 7069 or email metchis.karen@epamail.epa.gov, or Aurelia Pugh-Feaster at 202 260 3614 or email pugh-feaster.aurelia@epamail.epa.gov.

The Greening of Federal Disaster Relief Policies by Alliance to Save Energy, Seiben Energy Associates, Ltd., and Nancy Skinner. For information or copies of the report, contact the Alliance at 1725 K Street, NW, Suite 509, WDC 20006, 202 857 0666, fx 202 331 9588.

Urban Resources Partnership, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Under Secretary for Natural Resources and Environment, 14th and Independence Ave. SW, Rm. 217E, Washington, DC 20250. Provides technical and financial assistance for a collaboration between seven federal agencies, local and state governments, community organizations, and private and non-profit organizations to provide for natural resource and community enhancement. 



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PCSD - Sustainable Communitites - Index

Members

Preface

Executive Summary

Introduction

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Appendix A

Appendix B

Appendix D

Appendix E

Appendix F

Appendix G

Acknowledgements