Official source link unavailable.
The file was imported, but the current source metadata does not include a public document URL.
Generated summaryAI-assisted
The memorandum discusses the City Infrastructure Strategy Report, which aims to address the city's 2030 carbon mitigation goals, municipal permit requirements, water supply needs, and strategies for securing federal and state funding. It outlines the challenges faced by San José's infrastructure and presents a strategy with five objectives and sixteen workstreams to tackle these issues. The report emphasizes the need for investment and coordination among various city departments.
Key points
The report addresses the City Infrastructure Strategy related to carbon mitigation, permits, and water supply.
It outlines four challenges: rehabilitating aging infrastructure, accommodating population growth, mitigating climate change, and adapting to climate change.
The strategy includes five objectives: Disaster Ready & Climate Smart, Transportation & Aviation, Clean Energy Resilience, Water Resilience, and Natural Environment Restoration.
There are sixteen workstreams aligned with the objectives, requiring investment and coordination among city departments.
The proposed operating budget includes over $14 million in investments related to the strategy.
Limitations
The text contains unresolved placeholders such as specific dates and dollar amounts.
The attachment is referenced but not provided in full.
Generated for convenience from extracted text using AI. Review the official source document before relying on this summary.
Extracted text preview · 4,394 chars
T&E AGENDA: ITEM: TO: TRANSPORTATION AND ENVIRONMENT COMMITTEE 06/05/23 (d) 5 FROM: ERICA GARAFFO SUBJECT: SEE BELOW DATE: May 26, 2023 Approved Date 5/26/23 SUBJECT: CITY INFRASTRUCTURE STRATEGY REPORT RECOMMENDATION Accept a report on the City Infrastructure Strategy that addresses meeting our 2030 carbon mitigation goals, municipal regional permit requirements, water supply needs, and strategies to pursue federal and state funding for aligned programs. BACKGROUND As directed in the Mayor’s March Budget Message for Fiscal Year 2023-2024, the City’s Manager’s Office will report to the Transportation and Environment Committee on the plan and return as part of the budget process with recommendations for a Brilliant at the Basics Infrastructure Strategy that addresses meeting our 2030 carbon mitigation goals, municipal regional permit requirements, water supply needs, and strategies to pursue federal and state funding for aligned programs. The Analysis section below lays out the high-level approach. The comprehensive City Infrastructure Strategy can be found in Attachment A at the end of this report. ANALYSIS A great City has great infrastructure, the often-invisible networks of...
Official source link unavailable.
The file was imported, but the current source metadata does not include a public document URL.
Generated summaryAI-assisted
The document outlines the City Infrastructure Strategy for San José, focusing on addressing challenges related to aging infrastructure, population growth, climate change mitigation, and adaptation. It details five objectives and 16 workstreams aimed at improving infrastructure resilience and sustainability. The strategy emphasizes the need for equity, funding, and team building for successful implementation, with regular progress reporting to the Transportation and Environment Committee.
Key points
The strategy addresses four main challenges: rehabilitating aging infrastructure, accommodating population growth, mitigating climate change, and adapting to climate change.
Five objectives are outlined: Disaster Ready & Climate Smart, Transportation & Aviation, Clean Energy Resilience, Water Resilience, and Natural Environment Restoration.
The strategy includes 16 workstreams that represent significant change initiatives.
Implementation requires addressing inequity, identifying funding sources, and building a capable team.
Progress will be reported regularly to the Transportation and Environment Committee.
Limitations
The text does not provide specific dates, votes, or dollar amounts.
There are unresolved placeholders and blank fields affecting the summary.
Generated for convenience from extracted text using AI. Review the official source document before relying on this summary.
Extracted text preview · 80,504 chars
CITY INFRASTRUCTURE STRATEGY Brilliant At The Basics JUNE 2023 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY City Infrastructure Strategy A great City has great infrastructure, the often-invisible networks of pipes, conduits, wires, roads, facilities, and natural spaces that connect us and enables the daily utilities that make modern life possible. Every day this infrastructure quietly brings us water, electricity, broadband, and takes away our sewage, storm water, garbage, and recycling. In San José, our city’s infrastructure faces four simultaneous challenges, we must: 1. Rehabilitate our existing aging infrastructure to ensure we can continue to provide the backbone of day-to-day public services our community relies on. 2. Grow our infrastructure to accommodate more people as we welcome an additional 280,000 to San José by 2035. 3. Mitigate climate change and become more sustainable by reducing the carbon pollution we put into the atmosphere and powering our economy with carbon-free electrical energy. 4. Adapt to climate change and become more resilient in the face of deeper droughts, more frequent wildfires, changing weather, and sea level rise. Following the direction of the Mayor’s March Budget...