
MANSFIELD — The Town of Mansfield is pushing for a higher level of sustainability that will provide the town with environmental benefits, according to Mayor Antonia Moran.
One way Mansfield is currently working toward becoming more sustainable is by planning to add EV charging stations to every public parking lot in town, according to Moran.
Additionally, the town built a new net-zero energy elementary school, meaning the school uses as much electricity as it produces.
These two projects can be linked to what Mayor Moran described as Mansfield’s continuous efforts to limit waste and create its own electricity to help reduce the town’s carbon footprint.
These improvements will also help Mansfield’s efforts earn “gold certification” from Sustainable CT, a voluntary certification program that evaluates the town’s sustainability. Currently, there are 131 registered communities in this program, according to Sustainable CT.
Towns that work towards and achieve Sustainable CT’s gold standard should reap both environmental and economic benefits, according to Sustainable CT.
The town of Mansfield first became certified by Sustainable CT in 2019, earning the silver certification. They renewed in 2022, making silver again, which at the time was the highest possible certification a town could receive.
Virginia Walton, a staff member for Mansfield’s sustainability committee and the evaluator of Mansfield for Sustainable CT, says certification is vital to the town because “It’s about reputation.”
“There is a little bit of peer pressure. We want to be one of the towns that is part of Sustainable CT. It is like a little feather in the town’s cap to be considered a silver town,” Walton said.
According to Sustainable CT, Mansfield is one of 26 silver-certified communities across the state.
Now, though, the town wants to upgrade from the silver certification to the new highest standard, the gold certification, says Walton.
Mansfield will apply for this certification when their current one expires in 2025—giving the town two more years to prepare, in which they need to make significant improvements to achieve their goal, according to Walton.
Sustainable CT grades each town using a point system. In 2022, Mansfield earned a total of 500 points, which was at the time 100 points clear of the silver threshold. However, the gold certification’s current threshold is 750 points, according to Sustainable CT.
According to Walton, if the town can get to more than five locations with EV charging stations by 2025, that will earn the town ten additional points.
“It’s a really high bar, the gold certification,” said Walton. “We need to be Climate Leaders. This means that our infrastructure needs to take into account energy use.”
In simpler terms, “Climate Leaders” is a designation given to municipalities that are reducing harmful greenhouse gas emissions while also preparing their community for the impacts of climate change, all while saving money, improving public health, and building community, according to Sustainable CT.
Walton explained that achieving this designation is an extremely hard challenge for the town because “Everything plays into greenhouse gas emissions, even how we live our lives,” which makes reducing the town’s usage challenging.
The Town of Mansfield is also part of C‑PACE. This financing program helps commercial, industrial, non-profit, and multi-family property owners get affordable, long-term financing for green energy upgrades to their buildings, according to the Town of Mansfield.
Despite all this, Walton mentioned that the town needs help finding ways to reach its goal of gold certification.
“We are talking to various committees and boards now to say, “Is there anything within the sustainable CT menu of options that you are currently working on that you could consider doing a write-up about for the gold certification in two years,” Walton said.
Walton also mentioned that one of the benefits of being a member of the Sustainable CT community is learning and sharing information with other towns.
“If a town wants to find out about school composting, there is information on [Sustainable CT] about [our] town’s school composting,” Walton said, “It’s pure learning and pure sharing, which is a real bonus.”