Climate Mayors Open Letter to President-elect Donald J. Trump on Climate Action

November 22, 2016

Dear President-elect Trump,

As Mayors, we have taken it upon ourselves to take bold action within our cities to tackle the climate crisis head-on. We write today to ask for your partnership in our work to clean our air, strengthen our economy, and ensure that our children inherit a nation healthier and better prepared for the future than it is today.

We lead 71 small and large American cities, comprising over 38 million Americans in both blue and red states. We have joined together in the Mayors’ National Climate Action Agenda (MNCAA), or the #ClimateMayors, in addressing the greatest challenge of our time, climate change. Each of our cities is committing to ambitious targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, set climate action, regularly report on our progress, share lessons and hold each other accountable.

Around the globe, cities are working together through organizations like C40 as well.The effects of climate change – extreme storms, wildfires and drought; sea level rise and storm surge; choking air pollution in cities; disruption of agricultural supply chains and jobs in rural heartlands; and coastal erosion, to name a few – are a clear and present danger to American interests at home and abroad. This is why the U.S. Department of Defense stated in 2015 “that climate change is an urgent and growing threat to our national security”.

Furthermore, estimates have shown these impacts from climate change could cost the American economy $500 billion annually by 2050, and that figure will only rise unless we work together to stem, and ultimately reverse, the amount of greenhouse gases entering our atmosphere. The cost of prevention pales in comparison to cost of inaction, in terms of dollars, property and human life.

As our incoming President, as a businessman, and as a parent, we believe we can find common ground when it comes to addressing an issue not rooted in politics or philosophy, but in science and hard economic data. Simply put, we can all agree that fires, flooding and financial losses are bad for our country, that we need to protect our communities’ most vulnerable residents who suffer the most from the impacts of climate change, and that we all need healthier air to breathe and a stronger economy–rural and urban, Republican and Democrat–and in terms of our domestic quality of life and our standing abroad.

On November 8, American voters approved more than $200 billion in local measures, funded by their own local tax dollars, to improve quality of life and reduce carbon pollution. Seventy percent of voters in Los Angeles County, the car capital of the world, approved a $120 billion, multi-decade commitment to public transit. Seattle voters approved transit investments totaling $54 billion; Austin voters approved a record-setting $720 million mobility bond; Boston voters approved investment in affordable housing, parks, historic preservation and more.

As President, you will have the power to expand and accelerate these local initiatives which the people resoundingly supported. We call upon you and the federal government you will lead to help cities leverage funds for the hundreds of billions of dollars in transit, energy, infrastructure and real estate development necessary to upgrade our infrastructure for the 21st century. We ask that you lead us in expanding the renewable energy sources we need to achieve energy security, address climate change and spark a new manufacturing, energy and construction boom in America. We ask that you help provide American businesses the certainty to invest through continued tax credits for electric vehicles, solar power, renewables and other clean technologies. And we ask that you shift to embrace the Paris Climate Agreement and make U.S. cities your partner in doing so.

While we are prepared to forge ahead even in the absence of federal support, we know that if we stand united on this issue, we can make change that will resonate for generations. We have no choice and no room to doubt our resolve. The time for bold leadership and action is now.

Signed,

Mayor Eric Garcetti, City of Los Angeles, CA / Mayor Martin J. Walsh, City of Boston, MA / Mayor Bill de Blasio, New York City, NY / Mayor Edward B Murray, City of Seattle, WA / Mayor Stephen K. Benjamin, City of Columbia, SC / Mayor Jennifer W. Roberts, City of Charlotte, NC / Mayor Rahm Emanuel, City of Chicago, IL / Mayor Greg Stanton, City of Phoenix, AZ / Mayor Jim Kenney, City of Philadelphia, PA / Mayor Buddy Dyer, City of Orlando, FL / Mayor Roy D. Buol, City of Dubuque, IA / Mayor Charlie Hales, City of Portland, OR / Mayor Jackie Biskupski, Salt Lake City, UT / Mayor Libby Schaaf, City of Oakland, CA / Mayor Sam Liccardo, City of San Jose, CA / Mayor Muriel Bowser, Washington, DC / Mayor Christopher B. Coleman, City of Saint Paul, MN / Mayor Kasim Reed, City of Atlanta, GA / Mayor Sly James, City of Kansas City, MO / Mayor Michael B. Hancock, City and County of Denver, CO / Mayor Steve Adler, City of Austin, TX / Mayor Ed Lee, City of San Francisco, CA / Mayor Bill Peduto, City of Pittsburgh, PA / Mayor Kitty Piercy, City of Eugene, OR / Mayor Tom Bates, City of Berkeley, CA / Mayor Tony Vasquez, City of Santa Monica, CA / Mayor Joseph A. Curtatone, City of Somerville, MA / Mayor Steve Skadron, City of Aspen, CO / Mayor Suzanne Jones, City of Boulder, CO / Mayor Jack Thomas, Park City, UT / Mayor Mary Casillas Salas, City of Chula Vista, CA / Mayor Elizabeth B. Tisdahl, City of Evanston, IL / Mayor-elect Darrell Steinberg, City of Sacramento, CA / Mayor Sylvester Turner, City of Houston, TX / Mayor Patrick Burt, City of Palo Alto, CA / Mayor Mitchell J. Landrieu, City of New Orleans, LA / Mayor Philip Levine, City of Miami Beach, FL / Mayor Lioneld Jordan, City of Fayetteville, AR / Mayor Betsy Hodges, City of Minneapolis, MN / Mayor Karen Freeman-Wilson, City of Gary, IN / Mayor Ashley Swearengin, City of Fresno, CA / Mayor John Hamilton, City of Bloomington, IN / Mayor-elect Michael Tubbs, City of Stockton, CA / Mayor John J. Tecklenburg, City of Charleston, SC / Mayor Miro Weinberger, City of Burlington, VT / Mayor Dennis Coombs, City of Longmont, CO / Mayor John P “Jack” Seiler, City of Fort Lauderdale, FL / Mayor Christopher Cabaldon, City of West Sacramento, CA / Mayor Jake Mackenzie, City of Rohnert Park, CA / Mayor Allan Ekberg, City of Tukwila, WA / Mayor Hillary Schieve, City of Reno, NV / Mayor Allen Joines, City of Winston Salem, NC / Mayor Mark Stodola, City of Little Rock, AR / Mayor Jonathan Rothschild, City of Tucson, AZ / Mayor Edward O’Brien, City of West Haven, CT / Mayor William “Bill” V. Bell, City of Durham, NC / Mayor Jon Mitchell, City of New Bedford, MA / Mayor Patrick Wojahn, City of College Park, MD / Mayor Jim B. Clarke, Culver City, CA / Mayor Jeffrey Z. Slavin, Town of Somerset, MD / Mayor Christopher Taylor, City of Ann Arbor, MI / Mayor Kathy Sheehan, City of Albany, NY / Mayor Matt Larson, City of Snoqualmie, WA / Mayor Madeline Rogero, City of Knoxville, TN / Mayor David Kaptain, City of Elgin, IL / Mayor Wade Troxell, City of Fort Collins, CO / Mayor Helene Schneider, City of Santa Barbara, CA / Mayor Robert Garcia, City of Long Beach, CA / Mayor Smith Joseph, City of North Miami, FL / Mayor Lou La Monte, City of Malibu, CA / Mayor Jim Cason, City of Coral Gables, FL

Last updated 7am PT on February 14,  2017.

If you would like to sign this open letter, or require further information about the MNCAA and its activities please email info@climate-mayors.org

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Climate Mayors Letter to President Barack Obama