Planning
Technician Anna Tolle at the Sept. 26 city council meeting was joined
during a presentation about the prohibition of gasoline powered leaf
blower by two members of the city’s Environmental Task Force (ETF).
Along with Maria Gastelumendi and chairperson Nancy Hu, Tolle
introduced Ordinance 688, which would eliminate the use of the blowers
within city limits effective July 1, 2024.
“The three main hazards of gas powered leaf blowers are noise, dust,
and exhaust emissions,” Tolle said. “They pose health risks to both
operators and bystanders and disrupt daily life for Lafayette
residents.”
City law under the noise ordinance in the municipal code currently
prohibits use of leaf blowers between 10 p.m. and 7 a.m., but Tolle
noted that city staff, the ETF, and council members have received many
requests from residents to further limit or prohibit the use of gas
leaf blowers. In 2021, the state of California adopted AB 1346, which
prohibits the sale of new small off-road engines (SOREs), including
lawn equipment and certain commercial and industrial vehicles. Tolle
said the task force reviewed similar ordinances in other cities,
conducted field research in Piedmont for a demonstration of electric
leaf blowers, and during the last two years has worked with nearby city
departments to prepare the report for the council.
More than 40 cities in the state have adopted gas leaf blower
prohibition ordinances. The goal of California’s AB 1346, which goes
into effect in January 2024, is to move the state to zero-emission
equipment by 2035. Adoption by the city would bring Lafayette into
compliance with the state’s goal and be an early step toward achieving
zero-emission standards.
The task force report included fact-based information about the impacts
of gas powered leaf blowers and similar equipment. As stated in the
report: “The California Air Resources Board (CARB) has reported that
operating a gasoline powered two-stroke leaf blower for one hour emits
the same amount of pollution as driving a 2016 Toyota Camry for 1,110
miles. A landscape professional operating a gas powered leaf blower may
be exposed to noise levels exceeding OSHA standards.”
Tolle said the task force and city staff would work together to create
public education information and outreach related to rebates and other
resources for homeowners and landscapers transitioning from gas to
zero-emission equipment. The new ordinance would be enforced in ways
similar to other code enforcement policies. The noise disturbance
system is currently primarily complaint based, with residents reporting
violations by phone, email, or anonymously online and the code
enforcement officer conducting a site visit to verify the complaint
before issuing a code violation order. She said staff expects the
complaint numbers to rise after the ordinance goes into effect.
The new ordinance will also have a significant financial impact on
small, commercial landscape maintenance businesses, Tolle noted. “Use of gasoline powered leaf blowers is exempt from this section [of the ordinance] as follows: (a) When utilized by or at the direction of emergency responders for the purposes of responding to an emergency, or necessary to restore, preserve, protect, or save lives or property from imminent danger of loss or harm; or (b) When used to clear downed trees or vegetation in areas needing expedient clearance when necessary to protect public safety, as authorized by the City.” Gastelumendi said the task
force’s work will next be to make sure the community is aware of the
new ordinance.
Council Member Susan Candell asked for information about the landscape
maintenance equipment currently used by the city’s parks and recreation
departments. Tolle said three battery powered leaf blowers are used and
are identical to equipment available through a free lending program
that allows residents to check out and test a hand-held or backpack
blower for two weeks. The Public Works Department has six gas powered
leaf blowers in their inventory, but are phasing them out. They also
have three battery powered blowers.
Hu said a webpage (lovelafayette.org/leaf-blower-lending) explaining
the benefits of the commercial backpack leaf blowers and other
equipment has been developed. She tested the backpack model herself and
said it was fairly heavy, about 30 pounds, but it was extremely
powerful. “What was nice about using the electric, even though it was
30 pounds,” she said, “it was not vibrating and was completely silent.”
Alternatively, she compared gas blowers to being on a Disneyland
amusement park ride that sets a person’s entire body “rattling.”
Public comments from Bill Bucher asked that the council not adopt the
ordinance due to the state implementing a law prohibiting the
equipment. His vision is that manufactures of the equipment will make
improvements and offer cost reductions that allow more people to
purchase the new, zero-emission leaf blowers. Other residents
commenting online expressed mixed positions. Some spoke in protest,
highlighting the negative impact the ordinance would have on small
landscape maintenance companies, or disputing the facts and emphasis of
data about emissions and the environmental impact.
Other people supported the ordinance’s passage, offering additional
information about the environmental cost of gas powered leaf blowers
and the life-cycles of leaf blower batteries, emphasizing that the
state law restricts only the sale of new equipment and therefore would
mean gas powered blowers already owned will continue to be used until
they are no longer operable, and encouraging the council to therefore
adopt the faster-acting city ordinance as soon as possible. Several
people said they had concerns about neighbors reporting on other
neighbors and the effect that would have on community sentiment.
When asked by Council Member Wei-Tai Kwok about the rebate programs,
Tolle said funds previously available to property owners and commercial
landscapers were exhausted after overwhelming demand depleted the
programs.
Mayor Carl Anduri expressed concerns about the impact to staff hours
because the ordinance places increased demands associated with code
enforcement, as well as neighbors informing on each other. Hu said an
energetic outreach effort must accompany any ordinance adopted.
The council unanimously accepted the ordinance as presented and amended
and continued the matter to the Oct. 10 council meeting, which occurred
after press time, for a second reading and adoption.
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