Patrick T. Hoffman

May 20 2008

Dear Engaged Participants:

The conversation we’ve been having since we started to work on LEED 2009 has gone something like this:

Person A: “Global warming doesn’t give us much time.”
Person B: “But we can’t address much of anything, let alone global warming, if we’re only dealing with a small fraction of the entire built environment. We need to get everyone involved.”
Person A: “Yes, but why get them involved in a system that doesn’t take them far enough to save us from ourselves? We need our buildings to be restorative.”
Person B: “LEED can’t save us from ourselves. LEED, as a tool, can engage the market in transformation. That transformation is about people. It is not about LEED credits.”
Person A: “You’re missing the point. We have to be tougher. We have to go beyond.”
Person B: “No, you’re missing the point. We have to find ways to engage a market that has never thought about these issues before.”
Persons A and B: “Let’s find a way to do both.”

Intro to a Letter from Scot Horst, Chair of the LEED Steering Committee

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