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Jennifer Thompson SSV Executive Director
Chairman John L. Varela, District 1, SCVWD
Gary Kremen, Director, District Seven, SCVWD
Councilmember Pat Showalter, City of Mountain View
Councilmember Mark Millan, City of Windsor
Elected Officials
Special Thank You
Gold Sponsors
Silver & Bronze Sponsors
SSV Board of Directors & Volunteers
SSV Board of Directors
Drew Clark - Board Chair
Elan Scheinman - Vice Chair
Larry Smith - Treasurer
Russ Drinker
Olivia Teter
Jennifer Thompson
Ty Walrod
Brad Rock - Counsel
SSV Volunteers
Brianna Beck
Mary Biswal
Laia Brugarolas Macia
Laura Maria Ciravolo
Andrea Fuchilieri
Greg Larkins
Kerry Lindholm
Ryan Moin
Bruce Naegel
Phu Nguyen
Janna Sorjonen
Vijayalakshml
Sundararaman
Annee Tousseau
Sabine Touze
Cara Wynn
SSV Members
Over 200 people in the audience – event is sold out!
• 7 Cities -- City of Menlo Park, City of Morgan Hill, City of Palo
Alto, City of Mountain View, City of San Jose, City of Brisbane,
City of Hayward, City of Windsor
• 2 Counties -- County of Santa Clara, County of San Mateo
• 9 Agencies
• 8 Leading Tech Companies
• 20 Water Technology Companies
• 22 Engineering Firms & Design Groups
• 15 NGO's, Non-profits, Education, and Research institutions
In Attendance
Sustainable Silicon Valley (SSV) is a nonprofit organization
dedicated to creating collaborative solutions to the toughest
sustainability challenges in the Bay Area.
Mission
SSV envisions a Net Positive Bay Area by 2050 where we:
• Produce more renewable energy than we consume
• Capture more carbon than we emit
• Optimize water resources to ensure water resilience
Net Positive 2050 Goals
Energy Upgrade Services in San José Multifamily Housing
SSV partnered with the City of San José
Environmental Services Department on the local
City Energy Project to increase multifamily housing use of energy upgrade resources.
LIWP in San José With Build It Green (BIG), SSV working to bring
energy efficiency to residents in San Jose through
the State Low Income Weatherization Program
(LIWP).
Net Positive Communities With support from BAAQMD, continuing to work with residents
in East Palo Alto on energy efficiency • Solar brought the Ecumenical Hunger Program into the 21st century.
- Kurt Taylor, Board Chair of Ecumenical Hunger Program
• SSV has cracked the code on community outreach in East Palo Alto.
- Michelle Daher, City of East Palo Alto
The ultimate goal of the SmartTA project is to enhance the quality of life in the community and improve respiratory health associated with transportation emissions through emissions reduction.
- Kamal Fallaha, P.E. Public Works Director,
City of East Palo Alto
SmartTA (Traffic Analytics)
101
84
84
109
commercialarea
Parkingdemand
BayRd
PulgasAve
UniversityAve
DonohoeStr
UniversityAve
Fremont
EastPaloAlto
Redwood
PaloAlto
MenloPark
MountainView
SantaClara
Cubertino
SanJose
DumbartonBridge
WillowRd
BayfrontExpy
NewbridgeStr
Cindy Clark SSV Water Director
Intelligent Water REuse
Promoting Fit for Purpose Water
• Three Main Drivers
• Brief History
• Current Work
• Future
0
500 000
1 000 000
1 500 000
2 000 000
2 500 000
Santa Clara County
San Mateo County
Contra Costa County
2015 Population
2040 Population Projection
1. Projected Population Growth
25% 16% 29%
0
1000000
2000000
3000000
4000000
5000000
6000000
7000000
8000000
9000000
10000000
Bay Area: 24% Growth
2015 Population
2040 Population Projection
Projected Population Growth
Source: Department of Finance, State of CA
2. Climate Change
Bay Area is dependent on Imported water Santa Clara County: 55% and San Mateo: 92%
3. Imported Water
Wastewater: 433 million gallons per day released into the bay Only 3 to 5% of our water is recycled
An Under Utilized Asset
March 2015: Kick Off Meeting
Waste
water from
toilets and
kitchens
Wastewater from washers, showers, tubs and bathroom sinks
Plus condensate
Precipitation collected on roofs
Precipitation on the ground
Nuisance water from dewatering
A mindset change: Augmenting our aging
centralized water infrastructure with
distributed water treatment, enabling
communities to take an active role in
preserving and protecting our water
supplies
1. Advocate for policy change to enable the adoption of onsite reuse
2. Educate leaders about the benefits of onsite reuse
Reducing the friction for our members who are early adopters
• Meetings with regulators
• Tours for stakeholders
• Speaking at city council meetings
• Model Ordinance: New Development Task Forc
Education and Policy
Connection & Collaboration
Dec 2016
Resilience & Reuse May 2016
Water Symposium
October 2015
Plus many small meetings
Education: Large Event
Event Slides
Education: Panels
Advocate
Policy
• SB740 2.0
• Model Ordinance Adoption
Educate
Onsite systems will normalize recycling
Next Steps
Back by Popular Demand:
– Table seating
– Reception
– Guided Table Activity
– Interesting Speakers
• Microsoft’s Campus Redevelopment: Katie
• Centralized Water Systems
• Three Emcees
• Schedule Change
• Technology Checklist
• New
•