Cleaning Up Our Air

During the summer of 2004, Environment California Research & Policy Center collected over 109,000 public comments to Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger showing support for strong implementation of California’s Greenhouse Gas Emissions Law.

The law, passed in 2002, requires the California Air Resources Board to develop the nation’s first requirements to restrict global warming emissions from cars. During his initial run for office, Governor Schwarzenegger promised to implement the law.

According to a July 2004 survey by the Public Policy Institute of California, 81 percent of California voters support the law. The 109,000 public comments collected in support of the law were more than had been previously submitted on any other environmental issue in recent memory.

Then-Secretary of the California Environmental Protection Agency, Terry Tamminen, accepted the public comments on behalf of Governor Schwarzenegger in a public ceremony on September 21, 2004.

Environment California Research & Policy Center Clean Air Advocate Sujatha Jahagirdar and a dozen small children delivered the comments in mailbags they pulled in small red wagons. Media outlets in attendance included the Los Angeles Times, the Sacramento Bee, the San Jose Mercury News and KCRA-TV 3 (Sacramento).

Two days later, Jahagirdar testified at the California Air Resources Board hearing regarding this enormous display of public support for curbing global warming emissions.

Later that day, the Air Resources Board adopted strong regulations that will fully implement California’s Greenhouse Gas Emissions law.

Finding solutions for reducing pollution
Throughout the fall of 2004, Environment California Research & Policy Center also used research to demonstrate concrete solutions that would allow Governor Schwarzenegger to keep his promise to cut air pollution 50 percent by 2010.

Our report, Clean Air for California: Reducing Air Pollution 50 Percent by 2010, explored the relative efficacy of a variety of initiatives that would help the state meet the governor’s clean air goals.