Municipalities like Vancouver and Victoria made the declaration in recent months and several others on Vancouver Island alone are considering similar steps.

“It’s not alarmist, it’s being realist,” coun. Ben Geselbracht said. “Extreme weather events due to our CO2 emissions we are already experiencing here in Nanaimo are costing the City incredible amounts of money and disrupting the lives of our community members. It’s placing our children and grandchildren in danger.”

Coun. Don Bonner said he was proud to make the decision, saying it sets the tone for how this administration approaches decisions.

“If, in the event, we do go over this cliff, I don’t want anyone pointing a finger at Nanaimo and saying ‘we didn’t do our part,’” Bonner said.

While he supported the resolution, coun. Ian Thorpe said “not everybody accepts that science.”

“I have to remember my mandate at this table is to deal with issues we can directly affect for the citizens of Nanaimo. By that I mean keeping our streets clean and safe, providing basic services and amenities…Those are the sort of nuts and bolts issues I think this table has responsibility for.”

Thorpe’s comments echoed the most common criticism of resolutions like these passed at the municipal level.

Coun. Brown was asked what specifically could be accomplished by Nanaimo councillors declaring a climate emergency.

He told NanaimoNewsNOW it serves to create a standard in which decision making is now accountable to.

“Further, it gives staff a clear mandate to spend effort and energy on helping us confront climate change. The subsequent motions lay the groundwork for future action. We have existing but underutilized funding that we can tap into.”

Aside from the call on the RDN to increase transit hours, other pieces of Brown’s motion directed the City to update its sustainability action plan with a new goal for limiting global warming and asking the province to re-instate an emissions inventory report.

dom@nanaimonewsnow.com

On Twitter: @domabassi