Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2010
Abstract
Local governments are beginning to require new, privately constructed and funded buildings to be “green” buildings. Instead of creating their own, locally-derived definitions of green buildings, many municipalities are adopting an existing private standard created by members of the building industry: LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design). This Article explains and assesses the privately promulgated LEED standards. It argues that the translation of LEED standards, which were intended to be voluntary, into law raises several theoretical and practical problems. Specifically, private green building ordinances that rely on LEED do not ensure a reduction in the negative local environmental impacts of buildings, nor do they provide any assurance that those standards were created through a legitimate process. The Article concludes by offering an alternative approach, suggesting that municipalities should instead enact green building ordinances that have been promulgated by public governmental bodies, rather than private, industry-based organizations, and done so locally, taking into account specific local building-related and environmental concerns.
Publication Title
Florida Law Review
Volume
62
Article Number
1015
First Page
285
Suggested Bluebook Citation
Sarah B. Schindler,
Following Industry's LEED : Municipal Adoption of Private Green Building Standards,
62
FLA. L. REV.
285
(2010).
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.mainelaw.maine.edu/faculty-publications/20
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