Yampa Valley group tilting emphasis somewhat in rebranding

 

Sustainability seems to be losing favor as the name for environmental-tilting groups. Witness the name change of the Steamboat Springs-based Yampa Valley Sustainability Council.

As of Thursday, it is named the Western Resilience Center. It has a revised logo and a new website.

Formed in 2009 as a non-profit, the organization has embraced sustainability with a Green Buildings Tour, a monthly speaker event, and sponsorship of community recycling events.

It has been an advocate in the water realm. It has retained Paul Bony, with a strong track record at Delta-Montrose Electric, to push for geothermal. in the Yampa Valley. Representatives show up at hearings and meetings to testify

In the last five years, the organization deepened its focus on climate action, including actions that reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increase resilience to the impacts of changing climate.

But aren’t sustainability and resilience more or less one and the same?

This U.S. Department of Interior posting — somewhat surprisingly, given the gutting of the Trump administration of any notion of climate change — parses the difference in this way:

“Resiliency is the ability to adapt to changing conditions and withstand, and rapidly recover from, disruptions due to emergencies. Sustainability is meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. Climate change, energy distribution, urban growth, and a myriad of other factors affect communities and must be accounted for in long-term recovery planning.”

Distinctions are further worked over in this essay posted during 2024 in The Conversation. This 2018 article in Science Direct examined both similarities and differences.

Michelle Stewart, the director of the Western Resilience Center since 2019, said she and colleagues are working with several Western Slope partners and governments to share knowledge and problem-solve. “Our goal moving forward is to compile data about our challenges to help the state understand and better serve the needs and realities of our rural western part of the state.”

Allen Best
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