Monthly newsletter from the City of Chula Vista

Office of Sustainability

Save The Date for South Bay Earth Day!


This year the event will take place on Saturday, April 13 from 11 A.M. – 3 P.M. at Chula Vista Bayfront Park (off J Street). Interested exhibitors and vendors can email environmentalservices@chulavistaca.gov.  More details to follow in our next newsletter and on social media. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram @sustainabilityCV and Twitter @sustainCV and visit our website chulavistaca.gov/southbayearthday

Nominations For Sustainability Champion Awards Now Open


Nominations for the Chula Vista Sustainability Champion Awards are now being accepted. Any person/group living or working in Chula Vista is eligible to be nominated for an award and potentially recognized for their local sustainability achievements. The Sustainability Champion Awards – an initiative of the City of Chula Vista’s Sustainability Commission and the Office of Sustainability – are designed to recognize individuals and groups who are helping to achieve clean air, clean water and clean land for future generations within Chula Vista.

 

Nomination forms can be completed and submitted from the City of Chula Vista’s website at www.chulavistaca.gov/departments/clean/clean-forms/sustainability-champion-awards-nomination-form. Nomination forms are due by 5:00 pm on Sunday, March 31, 2024. Award winners will be recognized at a City Council meeting in April and at South Bay Earth Day on Saturday April 13.

 

The Sustainability Commission hopes that the annual awards help celebrate local sustainability champions and inspire others to make eco-friendly choices in their everyday actions. More information on the City of Chula Vista’s environmental programs and services can be found at www.chulavistaca.gov/clean.

San Diego Community Advisory Committee Membership Vacancy 


San Diego Community Power (SDCP) is looking to fill the vacant Chula Vista seat on its Community Advisory Committee. SDCP is a Community Choice Aggregator (CCA) that buys electricity on behalf of its member agencies and partners with SDG&E to distribute that electricity to its residential and business customers. The purpose of the Community Advisory Committee is to advise the SDCP Board of Directors on its operations. Committee members are representatives of the diversity, cross-section interests and skill sets in SDCP’s seven member jurisdictions. The Community Advisory Committee is expected to meet in person at the City of San Diego Metropolitan Operations Complex Auditorium (9192 Topaz Way, San Diego, CA 92123) every second Thursday of the month at 5:30 p.m. The Committee is made up of two representatives from each member agency, for a total of fourteen members. Applicants must be residents (property owners and/or renters), business owners, employees or representatives of a community-based organization within the jurisdiction they are interested in representing. After an appointment is made by the City representative to the SDCP board and approved by the full SDCP Board of Directors, each member may serve up to two, three-year terms. 


For more information or to submit an application, please click here.

Kitchen Caddy Distribution


Kitchen caddies are available FREE for Chula Vista residents and they are a convenient way to transfer food waste from the kitchen to your green cart. Here’s where you can get yours: 



Chula Vista City Hall - 276 Fourth Ave, Building C, Chula Vista, CA 91910 

  • Monday - Thursday8:00 am - 4:00 pm 
  • Friday8:00 am - 12:00 pm 


Republic Services Customer Service Building - 891 Energy Way Chula Vista, CA 91911 

  • Monday - Friday 8:00 am – 5:00 pm 
  • Saturday 8:00 am – 12:00 pm 

 

The City also hosts distribution events at libraries and recreation centers. To sign up to receive notifications for future events, please visit the Chula Vista Sustainability website

Free Landscape Workshops Available 

  

Did you know free WaterSmart Landscape Makeover workshops are available, both online and in person?  These classes give you the skills and knowledge to create a yard that works with the San Diego climate.  Workshops are taught by local landscape design professionals and there are 10 different online sessions taking place between February and June.  Learn more at: www.sdcwa.org/your-water/conservation/classes/?q=/find-fall-landscaping-classes/ 

Free Compost


Did you miss last month’s free compost event? 


Mark your calendar now, the next one is scheduled for Saturday, March 30. 

You can find the remaining free compost events for 2024 on the city’s calendar (www.chulavistaca.gov) as well as the Office of Sustainability events calendar (www.chulavistaca.gov/departments/clean/clean-events). 

Master Composter


And don’t forget the City’s Master Composter Training course for spring 2024 begins April 2 and will meet every Tuesday through May 14. Classes are 6:00 pm – 8:30 pm at the Living Coast Discovery Center. 


Attending the seven-week course provides hands on experience in the multiple methods of composting and teaches the importance of building healthy soils to anyone interested in learning the ins and outs about composting and there is no experience required. 


For more information or to register for the course, email Katharine@thelivingcoast.org or call 619-409-5900. 

Show Your Building Some Love with Energy Efficiency Upgrades 


Show your building some love by taking advantage of existing rebates and incentives available for building energy efficiency upgrades. If you own a building 20K square feet or larger, you will be required to meet energy performance requirements by 2031, so take advantage of money available now for capital improvements. Visit our Building Energy Efficiency Resources page to learn more about the programs and resources available to you. 

Statewide Heat Pump Water Heater Incentives  


This is a great time for Californians to make the switch to a heat pump water heater! TECH Clean California is offering contractor incentives of $3,100 to $5,300 per unit for replacing existing single family and commercial water heaters with heat pumps statewide. Click here for more information about incentives. Equity incentives for single family projects and multifamily incentives for heat pump water heaters are coming soon! 



These incentives are only available to contractors enrolled in TECH Clean California - click here to find a contractor that works in your community. This is exciting news and officially replenishes the TECH Clean California heat pump water heater program. TECH Clean California is offering $80.2 million of additional funding to continue to meet California’s goal to help create a pathway to carbon-free homes by 2045 and install six million heat pumps by 2030. For more information on electrifying your home, please visit the Switch is On

Keep Chula Vista Clean by Recycling Your Used Motor Oil - It’s Free and Easy 

 

Do you change your own motor oil? If so, did you know that you can take it to a used oil collection center for recycling? Many of these centers will accept used oil filters, as well. Yes, used metal oil filters are recyclable! Recycling your used motor oil and filters is FREE. In fact, used oil collection centers will even pay you for recycling your used motor oil. You can request a $0.40 per gallon incentive payment for up to five (5) gallons of your used motor oil. Used oil collection centers also provide free drain pans. Please note that used motor oil cannot be accepted at used oil collection centers if it is contaminated with water or other automotive fluids. For a list of used oil collection centers near you, or to find out how to dispose of contaminated used oil, visit www.wastefreesd.org or call 1-800-237-2583. 

Indoor Air Pollution in Your Kitchen

 

Disproportionate Impact of Indoor Air Pollution on Women & Children 

Gas-powered appliances, such as furnaces, water heaters and stoves emit toxic chemicals associated with lung and respiratory damage directly into the air, including carbon monoxide (CO), formaldehyde (HCHO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2). There are many studies on the negative health impacts of toxic fuels and chemicals on pregnant women and developing children. According to the World Health Organization, women and children disproportionately bear the greatest health burden from polluting fuels and technologies in homes as they often spend more time exposed to harmful smoke from stoves and fuels. 

 

How can Induction Cooktops Reduce Indoor Air Pollution? 

The elimination of gas appliances reduces exposure to GHG emissions. Induction cooktops are a favorable alternative as they can operate from clean, renewable resources. An induction cooktop is a cooking surface that heats by transferring currents from an electromagnetic field located below the glass surface directly to the magnetic induction cookware placed above. Unlike thermal conduction, it heats this cookware directly without the need for a flame or burner. Because there is no heating of a separate element, an induction cooktop can heat cookware faster than any other medium without releasing harmful fuels into the air. The new technology of induction cooktops contributes to more affordable, energy-efficiency and safer home environments. 


Try an Induction Cooktop in your Household  

To learn more about the benefits of the induction cooktops and how you can borrow one for free through the Electric Home Cooktop Program, please visit www.ehomecooktops.com/. 

The Benefits of Diverting Organic Waste from Landfills      


Diverting waste from landfill can sometimes feel like a chore, but the benefits far outweigh the temporary annoyance of getting your hands dirty. This is especially true of organic waste. Yes, it may occasionally be sticky or smelly, but it’s not hard to properly sort and divert these compostable materials away from our landfills – and doing so brings some enormous benefits.  


Here are just a few of the ways diverting your organic waste from landfill can benefit society and the planet: 


Composting feeds us all 

Plenty of us have a compost bin in the garden. If you do, you’ll know the principle. Organic waste like vegetable peelings and grass cuttings can be transformed into a nutritious amendment that plants and soil adore. Mix it into your flower beds and smile as the roses bloom. However, there’s more to composting than making your front garden look pretty! Composting organic waste on an industrial scale provides a tremendous natural resource. All the organic waste you don’t want, or need can, if properly separated, be recycled back into the soil and used to feed crops of every kind and size. Compost can be used by farmers and growers as a ‘soil conditioner’ and can feed the spuds you cook for your dinner, or the flowers in the vase on your windowsill. It helps to grow the crops that feed the livestock that give us meat, eggs, milk and cheese. Everything that comes from the earth can go back to the earth, where it will help to grow more of the food and flowers we love. However, it can only do this if it’s separated from the rest of your waste and recycling. Otherwise, it will rot (literally) in a landfill – which causes a lot of problems for the environment. 


It reduces landfill problems  

There are a lot of issues with landfill. For a start, the amount of waste we send to landfill takes up an enormous amount of space. According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), about 32% of the trash is recycled or composted, 12% is burned and 50% is buried in landfills. We literally have no more space left for waste. Because of this, areas are being issued with heavy fines if they go over their landfill quota. That’s one reason why states are so eager to get everyone recycling and sorting properly. There’s a good reason why we can’t just find some disused quarries and declare them landfill sites: the reason the country is ‘at capacity’ for landfill is that landfills pose a very serious threat to the environment. Making more landfill sites isn’t a solution, it will just make the problem worse. Organic waste plays a big part in this toxic problem. As it rots down and mingles with other landfill chemicals, organic waste produces methane and other harmful greenhouse gases.  


Separating organic waste from landfill can prevent both of these problems  

What’s more, separated organic waste can rot down in a safe, controlled way – a way that, as we have seen, produces valuable, fertilizing compost. 


It can generate electricity 

Processing organic waste can even put all that harmful greenhouse gas to good use, like biogas produced by organic waste that can be converted into renewable electricity and heat. The by-products are turned into fertilizer, which is used to grow crops. This is done in anaerobic digestion plants, which are an increasingly common sight all over the country. The process is called anaerobic digestion and is a popular way of dealing with organic waste from farms. However, any properly sorted organic waste can contribute to this clean, green and renewable source of energy. 


Feed the nation and save the planet by separating your organic waste 

Separating organic waste may feel like an unnecessary hassle. However, by doing this one simple thing you could help to grow crops, conserve electricity, generate natural gas and reduce the impacts of global warming. Ready to get started? Find a container to store your organic materials (a kitchen caddy works great), grab some labels and set yourself up to sort for success! 

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