ALBANY, N.Y. (Legal Newsline) – A new $1.8 million program has been created in New York to fund the development of climate-change responses on a local level, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman announced this week.
The attorney general unveiled the program, the Community Climate Initiative, Tuesday.
Schneiderman said the program will offer competitive grants to local organizations around the state to help fund their responses to climate change in their own communities.
Schneiderman
Initiatives can be anything from promoting energy efficiency and renewable energy to encouraging the fight against air pollution, Schneiderman said.
The $1.8 million in funding came from a 2007 settlement with American Electric Power, he noted.
“The unprecedented risk posed by climate change demands a transformation not only in how we view this threat, but also in how we respond to it,” the attorney general said. “This grant program recognizes that New York’s communities are on the front lines of climate change, so they must also be our first line of defense against it.
“With this funding, we hope to empower local organizations to develop innovative responses to climate change, tailored specifically to their communities.”
Schneiderman said he plans to solicit a “wide range of proposals” from organizations in order to promote climate-change responses in communities around the state. The program will look to fund the best proposals from organizations, but also to diversify geographically to serve communities that have seen the most environmental-impact damage.
