Chicago Reader

Thursday, September 3, 2009

The Green Mayor's Green Policy Maker Leaves for Vancouver

Posted by Mick Dumke on Thu, Sep 3, 2009 at 5:34 PM

Mayor Daley has been saying for years that he wants to make Chicago the greenest city in the country, but his environmental record is decidedly mixed.

After the mayor, no one has been as deeply involved in the administration's successes and as evasive about its shortfalls as Sadhu Johnston, Daley's chief environmental officer, deputy chief of staff, and frequent cheerleader.

But Johnston won't be on hand to offer justifications or lead the applause for Mayor Daley much longer: he's leaving at the end of this month to become the deputy city manager of Vancouver.

sadhu.jpg

Under Daley the city has embarked on aggressive tree planting, installed a green roof atop City Hall, and mapped out an ambitious plan to slash greenhouse gas emissions—but failed to ensure basic recycling services, force dirty power plants to clean up, or confront the city's traffic and transit problems.

This being Chicago, the news about Johnston hasn't officially been announced here, even though Johnston was just profiled in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer as the guy tapped to carry out "Mayor Gregor Robertson's 'Greenest City' initiative aimed at turning Vancouver into North America's pacesetter on clean energy."

When I called the mayor's press office, a Daley spokeswoman confirmed that Johnston is leaving on September 30 but didn't know why he'd taken the new job. She said the mayor hasn't decided whether to pick a new chief environmental officer, a post Daley created for Johnston two years ago. Before that Johnston had served as the commissioner of the Department of Environment. His successor in that job, Suzanne Malec-McKenna, is the mayor's next highest green policy maker.

Johnston has been widely viewed as an innovative thinker and advocate for environmentally friendly issues such as developing green jobs and cutting energy waste by making buildings more efficient. I also give him props for riding the CTA when he wasn't driving his hybrid—I've even seen him on the bus.

Yet he also serves under Mayor Daley, which has meant that he's repeatedly had to try to explain why it's taken 20 years—and counting—for the administration to develop a comprehensive recycling and waste-reduction strategy, or why it did nothing to force the coal-fired power plants on the southwest side to cut emissions. In 2005, for example, I asked him about a proposed ordinance that would impose tougher standards on the plants. He said the administration was of course interested in improving the region's air quality but wasn't sure it had the legal standing to do anything about the coal-burning facilities. "We at this point don't have a position on the ordinance," he said. He didn't sound to me like he believed it himself.

This summer, four years later, environmental advocates were still wondering why the city hadn't done a thing about the plants—couldn't it at least have pressured the state and federal governments to act? Local clean-air groups got fed up and announced plans to sue the plants themselves—and a few weeks later the federal government responded with its own lawsuit.

It sounds like Johnston may have a much different sort of boss in Vancouver. As the Post-Intelligencer described him: "Mayor Robertson is a biker, hiker and founder of a successful company called Happy Planet that produces organic juices, preaches nutrition and fitness, and supports family farms."

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This city is still too obsessed with the eye-candy projects and not doing enough on the rubber-meets-the-road front, ie, diverting from landfills.

look at San Francisco, why can't we do this? Chicago's rate is abysmal, are we even at 20%?

http://www.wasterecyclingnews.com/email.ht…

San Francisco achieves 72% recycling rate in 2007

May 13 -- San Francisco achieved the nationīs highest recycling rate at 72% in 2007, according to Mayor Gavin Newsom.

The city has a goal of 75% landfill diversion by 2010 and said a construction and demolition debris recycling ordinance passed in 2006 is helping push the percentages higher each year, the city said.

Posted by Carter O'Brien on September 4, 2009 at 1:14 PM | Report this comment

"the news hasn't officially been announced here"???? I'm no sleuth, but I read about this in the Trib and Sun-Times and someone forwarded the press release to me early this week. Nice try trying to sound like you're reporting something underhanded and shady (and new!), when it's been out and, actually, it's kind of boring.

Posted by Rudolph on September 4, 2009 at 5:16 PM | Report this comment

Daley is inept and corrupt. He is dysfunctional and maintains a dysfunctional city apparatus. Chicago is third rate for a World Class city. The details matter. Daley can't get basic services right. Right on to the post about the Mayor ONLY interested in eye candy. Da Mayor has to hide is total ineptness, the list: meter debacle, education debacle, bad investment of city money, TIF debacle and more... Da mayor's response to his wreck as a leader is to privatize.

Posted by vinicius on September 5, 2009 at 3:54 PM | Report this comment

I knew Sadhu in Cleveland where he started the Cleveland Green Building Coalition. If you think Chicago is behind in environmentalism check out Cleveland and see who rates worse.

Lee Batdorff

Posted by Batdorff on October 8, 2009 at 12:31 PM | Report this comment

Interesting - if Cleveland sucks more than Chicago, why does Johnston get to move along and keep getting promoted? Is it that he is a city politician and good at covering his ass without accomplishing really anything? I don't know if it comes clear from the article that Chicago has been all talk and very very little action. Especially compared to other cities!

Posted by Jose2010 on November 2, 2009 at 11:14 AM | Report this comment

That's it?
Chicago's top green dog is moving on and this is all we get?
A blog entry?

Come on, Reader, we expect more from you.
Thanks for not making us wait for the next Green Issue next year to find out, at least.

What are the real reasons for Johnston's departure?
Why has it been so difficult for him to get things done?
What about his new post is truly more progressive, other than a mayor who makes juice?

Are there environmental issues other than the ones you list above?
Surely, there are an awful lot of issues that fall along many different scales between a green roof and confronting the city's traffic and transit problems, but the Reader, of late, has done a poor job of keeping us informed.

If the Reader had half the reporting devoted to environmental issues that have been devoted to, say, Olympics- or TIF-bashing (much of that is, admittedly, justified), maybe the citizens of Chicago would be better informed and have more of an idea of how and when to step up, step in, and help advocate for better environmental policies if our elected officials can't follow through on their own.

Or at least, be able to argue for bringing in some folks in who have a proven track record of getting 'green' stuff done...
... and letting others go who can't.

Focus on better reporting on the many facets of environmental issues.
The rest risks lining our compost bins.

Dave Hampton
President, Urban Habitat Chicago
Principal, Hampton Avery Architects

Posted by Dave Hampton on November 4, 2009 at 12:34 PM | Report this comment

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