Kansas City Adopts Strong Climate Protection & Resiliency Plan

Kansas City, MO - Today, the City Council in Kansas City, Missouri voted 11-1, with one absent, to pass Resolution 220596, formally adopting its Climate Protection & Resiliency Plan (CPRP) that establishes a roadmap to drastically cut greenhouse gas emissions while centering public health and climate considerations in City policy and operations. The vote took place after the City’s Transportation, Infrastructure, and Operations (TIO) Committee voted 5-1 to recommend the plan, drafted by City staff and the KC Climate Protection Steering Committee, over objections from representatives of investor-owned utilities Spire, Inc. and Evergy, Inc.

The CPRP was developed over the course of almost two years. The process included over a dozen steering committee meetings, six public stakeholder hearings, and a public input period that garnered over 700 comments to guide Kansas City in achieving goals set in Resolution 200005. Kansas City passed the resolution in 2020 and committed to achieve 100% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from electricity consumption citywide by 2030 and become “climate neutral” by 2040, and make climate protection and greenhouse gas reduction key factors in all city decisions.

The CPRP contains numerous short- and long-term goals affecting six sectors. Goals include:

  • Rapidly decarbonizing buildings citywide and electrifying city-owned buildings to improve reliability of energy supply, improve air quality, and help lower energy bills;

  • Establishing an environmental justice advisory committee; 

  • Intervening in state regulatory proceedings to advocate for the city’s electricity provider, Evergy, Inc., to retire its Hawthorn coal plant by 2025 and all its coal plants by 2030; and

  • Establishing a short-term implementation plan to help Kansas City take immediate steps to implement the CPRP.

The CPRP goes into effect immediately at a time when both Evergy and Spire are requesting permission from state regulators to increase customers’ gas and electric bills.

In response, community organizations released the following statements:

Kevin Grooms, Kansas City resident and Chair of the Sierra Club Missouri Chapter:

“This is a great day for Kansas City, MO and the region. This bold plan is the result of more than two years of community engagement and people-centered plan development, not to mention years of advocacy by residents and grassroots organizations calling for action to address the climate crisis. The plan commits Kansas City to being a leader in reducing harmful fossil fuel use while dismantling an unjust status quo that has caused the most vulnerable residents in our community to bear the brunt of these harmful burdens. All Kansas Citians, and those who work in city hall, should be proud. The community is behind the council and will continue to work with city leaders and our friends and neighbors to ensure that it is fully implemented to ensure better climate and environmental policies that will help all in our community thrive.”

Laela Zaidi, 22 year-old leader with Sunrise Movement Kansas City:

"The process of getting this plan over the finish line exposed on public record the lies, fear-mongering, and dirty tactics that Evergy and Spire executives are willing to use to split communities over climate action. They not only used our rate-payer money to try to get their way in the backrooms of Council, but they also attempted to disrupt public participation processes for this plan and divide workers and marginalized communities. However, today they did not win. Young people with Sunrise Movement KC organized a robust coalition of tenants, workers, parents, and other advocacy groups to overcome them and strip this plan of false solutions like relying on renewable natural gas and prioritize closing Evergy's dirty Hawthorn coal plant by no later than 2025. This plan is a non-binding framework, and we expect Evergy and Spire will continue to fight some of its most transformative parts. We will continue to organize for even bolder, intersectional climate action, including a Green New Deal. Today should send a message to this council: the people of Kansas City aren't going anywhere."

Ilyssa Block, Team Leader with Mothers Out Front Kansas City:

I am thankful for Mayor Lucas and the Council's leadership to get this adopted today. This is a huge win for our kids and gives me peace of mind as a parent that our leaders are taking bold action to protect our children. I'm especially glad the City set a goal for retiring the Hawthorn plant by 2025. I'm really proud of Kansas City today. 

Beto Lugo Martinez, Co-Director of CleanAirNow: 

Kansas City Missouri Climate Protection and Resiliency plan (CPRP) must prioritize and ensure that the most  overburdened communities do not continue to be sacrifice zones. “ CleanAirNow applaud all the efforts from the community who showed up to testify and are actively identifying what the implementation of this plan looks like.” CleanAirNow is an environmental justice organization in Kansas City who provided a 40 page environmental justice recommendations on the KCMO CPRP explicitly highlighting the need for applying a public health and environmental justice element in the implementation of the plan. Today, people are exposed to multiple environmental health hazards, while living in unhealthy housing conditions and/or experiencing poverty and other socioeconomic stressors that are associated with negative health outcomes. 

It is time for the utilities to plan for a “just transition.”  Meaning, those working in jobs that are exposed to harmful pollutants  are essential constituents in the movement for a just transition to a zero emission economy through training and workforce development. Many workers not only work in industries (such as the coal plant) that expose them to toxins and impact their health but also live in fenceline communities disproportionately bearing the burdens of pollution. We need a just transition to create healthy, quality jobs that can provide much needed relief to Black, low-income Americans facing the highest risk from power plant pollution. CleanAirNow is positioned to identify those funding opportunities without displacing the workforce, and are planning to meet with labor unions, utilities and the city. 

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About the Sierra Club Missouri Chapter: The Sierra Club Missouri Chapter is a Missouri non-profit affiliated with the Sierra Club, America’s largest and most influential grassroots environmental organization, with millions of members and supporters nationwide and over 20,000 in Missouri. In addition to protecting every person's right to get outdoors and access the healing power of nature, the Sierra Club works to promote clean energy, safeguard the health of our communities, protect wildlife, and preserve our remaining wild places through grassroots activism, public education, lobbying, and legal action. For more information, visit www.sierraclub.org.

About Sunrise Movement Kansas City: The Sunrise Movement is a youth movement to stop climate change and create millions of good jobs in the process. We’re building an army of young people to make climate change an urgent priority across America, end the corrupting influence of fossil fuel executives on our politics, and elect leaders who stand up for the health and wellbeing of all people. For more information, visit sunrisemovementkc.org.

About Mothers Out Front Kansas City: Mothers Out Front is a mom-led, ally supported, movement to tackle the climate crisis in communities across America. Our goal is to pressure political, business, and economic institutions to align their priorities and actions with the reality of climate change and its impacts. Because our children deserve a better future than climate change has to offer. For more information, visit https://www.mothersoutfront.org/team/our-work-in-other-states/kansas-city/.

About CleanAirNow: CleanAirNow (CAN) is a climate and environmental justice organization taking action to bring systemic change in industry and government policies and practices to protect health and dismantle environmental racism and inequities that perpetuates the unequal distribution of environmental hazards in fenceline communities. For more information, visit http://cankc.org/.