A Way to Protect Environmental Regulations From Trump 2.0 | Opinion

There's a scramble in President Joe Biden's administration to get out the door as much funding as possible for clean energy and environmental justice projects before it's too late. This is evident across the administration, but it's especially apparent at the Environmental Protection Agency and in the departments of Energy and Transportation, which are constantly cranking out green-oriented grants.

The goal is to move money fast, before the White House is up for grabs come Nov. 5. And depending on which poll you read—a recent one from Emerson College Polling has former President Donald Trump leading Biden 46 percent to 43 percent—it's anyone's guess who will get the U.S.'s top job.

There's another scramble that's less obvious, more interesting, internally facing, and potentially impactful. It's an effort by federal government staff to keep this work around even if the Republican Party, and notably with a second-term Trump, takes over the White House. The internal reframing is focused on making this stuff stick with the longer-serving civil service and non-political appointees.

Dirty Power
Emissions fume at the coal-fueled Oak Grove Power Plant on April 29, in Robertson County, Texas. Brandon Bell/Getty Images

This isn't just happening at the federal level though. Local governments across the United States are doing the same, as many recently elected mayors and city councils are all about traditional "public safety" priorities and are busy cutting budgets for climate, environment and sustainability programs and projects. (The irony in that approach, of course, is that much of the climate funding would make communities far more secure and resilient in the future.)

All this effort may seem pointless because a Trump presidency could still clean the house of any hint of sustainability-minded momentum. But it's a positive reinforcing mechanism because it's compelling climate leaders to think carefully about how the work is carried out and communicated. And as federal and local governments think about the staying power of this work, it's worth taking lessons from biomimicry for answers on how we should get sustainability to stick.

First, find your mockingbird. In other words, be verbally flexible. Much of our climate communications and messaging is monotonal. We tend to sing one song and one song only. And all that decarbonizing, carbon neutralizing, and net-zeroing is not very melodic. It's often used as shorthand by climate leaders, assuming everyone is already on board or should be on board. But that's not always the case.

That's true of legitimate and much-needed work in the many reparative spaces, too, which is why some government staff are using different language to describe the work. They're keen to mimic the worlds in which they're operating so that there's longer-term buy-in.

For example, with some of the environmental justice work, federal government staff are reframing the conversation with opportunity, prosperity, and fairness language in mind, knowing that'll make sense to more audiences. It's more palatable across the political spectrum. Similarly, city staff who are working on decarbonizing the built environment, for example, are rightly rerouting the work to track within the affordable housing crisis, something that's on many Americans' minds.

This is the necessary work, leaning into multilingual messaging that lands with all audiences. It's the more interesting work, too. A mockingbird is far more fun to listen to than a singular songbird on repeat.

Second, find your chameleon. In other words, be visually flexible. While chameleons primarily use color change to camouflage from predators, as their light tan color keeps them disguised during less dangerous times, there's a lesson here for climate leaders. When climate action and policy are in danger of landing on the budget chopping block thanks to a new administration, finding creative ways to camouflage the body of work to survive is essential. But even when it's not in danger, finding more clever ways of blending into the environment is helpful.

For example, several U.S. cities have embedded their sustainability programs and projects within their city's health department or within their office of economic development. Others have positioned their adaptation and resilience work with the public safety division. These are all ways of keeping the work alive and well within frameworks that often make more sense and are more palatable to the public. All while maintaining the integrity of the work.

Finding ways of fitting into other government environments to stay alive—that's the task. Transforming to fit into health and human services, housing, labor, education, economic development, security, parks and recreation, and more. Climate leaders have historically stuck out—often siloing themselves—but could easily fit into the whole of government. The "environment" is implicated in and impacted by every aspect of government work, so the potential for camouflaging is clear. And while this may sound transactional, remember that the predators are prowling. A little survivalist strategy is warranted.

Third, find your ecosystem. In other words, be structurally flexible. There are no separate, discreet, and siloed departments and agencies within a healthy ecosystem. As National Geographic describes an ecosystem, it's where "plants, animals, and other organisms, as well as weather and landscapes, work together to form a bubble of life." Perhaps, then, in an effort to get this sustainability stuff to stick irrespective of administrations, we need to let go of the "environment" or "energy" silos and lean into ecosystems instead.

When local governments lead with "Chief Heat Officers," for example, we're leaning into ecosystem thinking. With heat as the urban ecosystem, it brings many if not all local government's departments and agencies together to tackle the problem. A "Chief Flood Officer" could do the same, considering how many departments are involved. Finding ways to build an ecosystem internally within government—in a way that spans many disciplines—and then conveying that externally with the public is the way forward for a new way of governing.

Biomimicry is boundless in its lessons in getting sustainability to stick regardless of administrations.

Another one?

Find your nectar. This is a strategy bound to bear fruit. Attracting colleagues from across the ecosystem, with the sweet scent of how a sustainable life is better, is a tried-and-true approach. And then put them at the center of the work so that they get the prerequisite likes and loves necessary to continue the work. In short, biomimicry has it all.

The point is: mirror nature to protect it. By improving verbal, visual, and structural flexibility—as nature so deftly does—we might be able to get climate and sustainability to stick around and stay through the next administration locally and federally.

Michael Shank is director of engagement at the Carbon Neutral Cities Alliance and teaches sustainable development at New York University's Center for Global Affairs. He writes in his personal capacity.

The views expressed in this article are the writer's own.

Uncommon Knowledge

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