* The start of the webcast of the meeting with Cllr Brian Jones, left, and Cllr Graham Timms.
Over 60 people attended a public meeting
held at County Hall, Ruthin on Tuesday evening and 104 people watched online as
Denbighshire County Council talked through its plans to become a net carbon
zero and ecologically positive Council by 2030.
In July 2019, the council declared a
climate and ecological emergency and has called on the Welsh and UK governments
to provide assistance and resources to enable the Council to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions.
The public meeting was the latest step in
the process of engaging and consulting with residents and those interested in environmental
issues.
The meeting was also broadcast live on the council’s website.
The meeting discussed two key themes, the
first being carbon reduction, the second being around biodiversity and carbon
capture.
Issues raised at the meeting varied from trees being built on school
grounds to the Local Development Plan, council houses, grass verges, reducing
carbon emissions through greater use of public transport, tackling river
pollution, as well as the need for regular engagement with the public on how the council is progressing with its proposals.
The council outlined what it was already
doing to respond to climate change, including the introduction of electric
vehicles, reduction of carbon in our own buildings, encouraging more staff to
work from home, planting trees and encouraging biodiversity through the
creation of wildflower meadows.
The environment is a priority in the council’s Corporate Plan which was launched in 2017 and so far more than 9,000
additional trees have been planted while the council has undertaken work to
reduce its carbon emissions.
The council now only uses renewable
electricity for its own buildings after switching to a renewable only energy
provider for its schools, leisure centres, libraries, council offices and
depots.
The council has also secured Bee Friendly
status from the Welsh Government for its work to protect pollinators and to
increase biodiversity in the county while the 35-acre Morfa wetland in
Prestatyn has been saved for community use for generations to come after the council secured Welsh Government funding to purchase the site to protect its
status as a natural wetland resource.
The council has also agreed proposals to
reduce the use of plastics within its offices, following a Notice of Motion
last year.
Councillor Brian Jones, the council’s
lead member for Waste, Transport and the Environment, said: “We wanted to hear
what people thought about our plans as a council to reduce carbon, increase
carbon capture and improve biodiversity.
“We reiterated the fact that the
environment is one of the key priorities of our Corporate Plan and that the council has achieved a lot over recent years in making our county cleaner,
greener and more environmentally friendly.
"It was great to
hear some feedback from the audience, but also ideas and initiatives that the
Council could possibly take forward over the coming years."
Councillor Tony Thomas, Cabinet Lead
Member for Housing and Communities, said: “We were very pleased with the level
of engagement.
"Fifty-seven questions were sent in to the council in advance,
with plenty of issues and questions being raised by the audience on the
evening, as well as some submitted via Twitter and Facebook. It was very clear
from the meeting that people are very concerned about the state of environment."
Llangollen councillor Graham Timms, chair of the
Climate and Ecological Emergency Working Group, said: “This was a good
opportunity for people to have their say and there was plenty of debate and
suggestions put forward.
"There were representatives from all corners of
Denbighshire and it was clear that there’s plenty of passion around the need to
play our part in trying to halt the climate emergency.
"Some of the ideas
put forward were already consideration by the council, others were more
challenging and would need more detail and serious thinking."