@article{2df2e76aa1b1414d920aab5c9c72a026,
title = "Green Infrastructure: Lessons in Governance and Collaboration From Tucson",
author = "Gerlak, {Andrea K.} and Alison Elder and Timothy Thomure and Catlow Shipek and Adriana Zuniga-Teran and Mitchell Pavao-Zuckerman and Neha Gupta and Marissa Matsler and Lena Berger and Henry, {Adam Douglas} and Bo Yang and Joaquin Murrieta-Saldivar and Thomas Meixner",
note = "Funding Information: As GI continued to spread to homes, small businesses, neighborhood groups, and schools through the grassroots work of local activists, it was also picked up in city practices and policies. In 2008, Tucson{\textquoteright}s City Council passed the commercial rainwater harvesting ordinance, requiring all new commercial properties to use rainwater harvesting for 50% of their landscape irrigation requirements. That same year, through the efforts of local environmental activists and an enthusiastic city staffer, the Tucson City Council approved the conservation fee, charging Tucson Water customers an additional few cents per hundred cubic feet of water used, to fund city water conservation programs. A key program funded by the conservation fee was the 2012 Residential Rainwater Harvesting Incentives Rebate Program. Managed by Tucson Water, the program offers rebates to homeowners for installing passive and active rainwater harvesting systems. ",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1080/00139157.2021.1898894",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "63",
pages = "15--24",
journal = "Environment",
issn = "0013-9157",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis Ltd.",
number = "3",
}