As a municipality embarks on a range of programs that have many overlapping goals, activities and procedures, the lines between each will necessarily become blurred. This is to be celebrated rather than avoided as long as the existence of these overlaps does not lead to the duplication of effort and resources.
With this in mind, it is fair to ask to what degree the Kamloops CEP was a success.
In the sense that many action items are still providing inspiration, that there is an umbrella view of energy use, and that City energy use will be monitored against an established baseline, Kamloops can clearly be said to be undertaking "community energy planning".
However, it cannot be claimed that the actions that contribute to the goals of the CEP are necessarily undertaken in the name of the plan, or necessarily mindful of it.
For CEP designers and advocates, this raises the question of how to define a living, working CEP that exists as part of a proactive municipality's portfolio of programs aimed at energy, environmental and sustainable objectives.
The culture of the City of Kamloops is clearly one in which energy-efficiency and sound energy management assume a central position. Indeed, it was this very culture that in 1996 drove the development of one of Canada's first comprehensive community energy plans.
However, the changing needs of the city, both in terms of shifting community priorities and commitments to a range of social and environmental programs, underlines the fact that to be in any way relevant, CEPs must be flexible, realistic and held dear by those who are responsible for them. As Kamloops shows, a commitment to the environment does not necessarily lead to a commitment to a CEP.
As Special Projects Communicator Marni Gillis put it, "everyone you work with has a different methodological approach, be they MELP or First Nations or whoever. But when it comes down to it, we're all interested in the same objectives. It's all about health -- health of the environment, well-being of people, health of the economy. We just try to find ways to work with these objectives in mind".
Perhaps the key lessons learned by the Kamloops CEP Implementation are:
That being said, there are certain aspects of a CEP that may require real institutional adaptations. A CEP particularly needs some form of functional commitment to an overarching or "umbrella" view of local energy use to pick up the synergies and opportunities that arise from different departments' activities.
How could this be achieved?
One way of achieving this, as well as promoting turnover protection, could be to integrate the measures identified for tracking in the CEP into the City's regularly reported key performance measures.