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#436 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Mon Jun 6, 2011 5:17 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News – June 5, 2011
regionswork
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1. Lisa Vorderbrueggen: One Bay Area workshop takes one on the chin - Inside Bay Area

THE BAY AREA'S premier regional planning agencies suffered a largely deserved beating in Contra Costa County.

The Metropolitan Transportation Com. and Assn. of Bay Area Govts brought to Concord its traveling roadshow designed to measure public opinion as it begins the two-year process of writing a blueprint for housing, jobs and transportation, called One Bay Area or Plan Bay Area.

Vocal critics brought the May event to its knees, prompting one ABAG staffer to mutter, "This is falling apart."

Granted, the outspoken voices came from the conservative East Bay Tea Party, which views the sustainable development movement as an assault on private property rights born out of false assumptions about mankind's impact on the global climate.

Under SB375 ... California's metropolitan areas must adopt by 2013 a sustainable communities strategy that outlines how they will cut greenhouse gases.

But setting aside disparate philosophies, MTC and ABAG need to get out of their offices more often. ...

2. Is there a hidden agenda? | yuba, city, people - Appeal-Democrat

Is the long reach of the United Nations about to control land-use planning in Yuba and Sutter counties? ...

Those are all good questions. Strange, but good.

A few people in Yuba-Sutter are thinking about those and other as the sustainable communities regional planning effort makes its way across the six-county Sacramento region. A federal grant is supporting it. All cities and counties in the region are being asked to join.
...
A Yuba City resident tried to warn the Yuba City City Council about all of this last month, to no avail.

"Yuba City residents need to be informed of Agenda 21 and any potential connection with this grant. ....

Agenda 21?

Well, there really is an Agenda 21, and it's not very secret. You can Google it.

It was adopted in 1992 by the U.N.'s member nations during a conference in Rio de Janeiro.

Locally, the goal is to create the region's first "sustainable communities strategy," which state law requires.

Most of the work will involve updating the Metropolitan Transportation Plan ... strategies for economic development 

Will the U.N. succeed in ripping freedom from your grasp through this planning effort? It doesn't seem likely, but you never know


3. Governor Drops in on SGC Discussion of 2011 Agenda | California Planning & Development Report



Being governor of a state that includes Hollywood requires mastering the art of the cameo.

Governor Brown demonstrated his skill at the craft when he arrived, unstaffed, at the Strategic Growth Council (SGC) meeting blocks away from his capital office, saying that he just stopped by to see what exactly the Council had in mind regarding strategic growth--and to get a handle on what, exactly, the SGC does.

The Council members were, at that moment, considering the Health in All Policies (HiAP) priority actions. HiAP includes supporting implementation of "complete streets" policies, using SB 375 to promote active transportation, and promoting sustainable development for smart housing siting.

Council Chair and newly installed OPR Director Ken Alex--a longtime colleague of Brown's--brought the governor up to speed, describing that the goal was to consider how all state policies affect human health. The governor recast it toungue-in-cheek as one policy objective "colonizing" all the other policy areas.

In the end, the governor expressed his general support for the the HiAP concept, but not before he raised warned of potential resistance from those who might find even more strings attached to California's growth policies--actually citing tea party opposition to overly intrusive government. 
...

4.  Arnold and Stefi Harris: Dissolve regional planning panel and turn duties over to Dane County

In the three years since the Capital Area Regional Planning Commission was painstakingly negotiated by former Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk with the help of many local governments and interested citizens, results never came close to expectations. ...

The Western Dane Coalition for Smart Growth and Environment has tracked CARPC's handiwork for its brief, expensive and destructive life. We concur that CARPC should be put to sleep, ...

Dane County and other urbanizing counties need tools in addition to water quality protection plans. First, DNR's administrative rules should be amended so that urban service area extensions would be approvable only in full concordance with the county's comprehensive planning. Second, towns adopting village powers should be able to stop annexations of their farmlands by neighboring communities. Third, counties with more than 50,000 people should be granted power to stop municipal annexations found incompatible with their countywide comprehensive planning.

...

5. Coalition's call for regional growth - Local News - News - General - The Courier

VICTORIA'S state government has called on regional communities to accommodate further growth as the state's population continues to rise.

The message came from acting Minister for Rural and Regional Development Peter Walsh as he addressed Friday's Committee for Economic Development of Australia conference in Creswick.

Mr Walsh said the regions had greater capacity for growth than Melbourne.

"Regional Victoria's population has been growing by more than 1.2 per cent each year in the past decade — from 1.3 million in 2000 to 1.47 million in 2010.
...

Cr Fletcher said the conference would lead to solutions for the challenges of growth in the region.

... member for Ballarat Catherine King hit back at claims the Gillard Government had neglected regional centres.

"Presumably the (Grattan) Institute thinks that investing $42 million in the Ballarat Regional Integrated Cancer Centre or $20 million for an upgraded dental clinic will make little difference to the city and region," Ms King said.

6. Opinion Joyce: Water is wealth - Weekly Times Now

Canberra - as I have said before - is an example of an effective policy of regional development.

What makes the city possible is it relies on many ingredients, two of the most important being employment and water.

Canberra has an obvious source of jobs and the third-longest river in the Murray-Darling basin, the Murrumbidgee, cuts through it.

This makes it possible for Canberra to invest in an 87-gigalitre dam on the Cotter River.

Recently I visited the Gulf in northern Queensland.

This area provides immense opportunity for further development in our agricultural sector.

Georgetown sees at least 4000 gigalitres go down the Gilbert River every year.
...

There are no large storages to harness this water and use it to produce more food.

That is not the fault of the locals, many of whom want to encourage economic development and build the infrastructure to do so.
...

What Australia has lacked is the vision to develop our water resources for the benefit of the people who live here, ...

7. Sacramento Kings arena funding plans a fit for Placer County? - Auburn Journal

Sacramento's vision of regional cooperation – and financing – for a new arena is going to be a tough sell in Placer County, some elected officials are saying.

While California's capital city is reaching out through regionalism to help pay for a new home for the Sacramento Kings that would keep owners the Maloof family from moving the team to Anaheim or another community, the idea of Placer County taxpayers partnering in the financing is being met with resistance.
...

Joaquin McPeek, the Sacramento mayor's press secretary, said the task force's 60 members would be named by the beginning of the week. The region takes in 22 cities and six counties – Placer, Yolo, San Joaquin, Sutter, Yuba and El Dorado – as well as Sacramento, he said.

Also included in the task force will be labor, community and grassroots leaders, he said.
The task force is being asked to come up with a financing plan for the new entertainment and sports complex within the next 100 days, McPeek said.

8. Editorial: Economic development begins at home | The Detroit News

It's hard to find much fault with a plan to invest $3 billion in Michigan businesses when most of the money will be generated privately. The plan ... is more of the "economic gardening" Gov. Rick Snyder has promised to foster.
...

The governor's strategy is based on a belief that lower state taxes on all businesses, fiscally sound governance and a healthy business climate — besides being beneficial in and of themselves — will make Michigan attractive to CEOs and entrepreneurs looking for a likely place to expand or launch new enterprises.

The old philosophy said Michigan must continue to aggressively offer millions of dollars in tax write-offs if it wants to induce companies to locate new plants here, because that's what other states are doing.

Groups such as the Mackinac Center for Public Policy have argued that the tax inducements are unfair to in-state firms ...

And experts ... have warned that the tax incentives arms race among states is counterproductive. Fisher claims 90 percent of the tax breaks go to companies that would have made the same decision without the inducement — a waste of the state's money. If public services, such as education or infrastructure, have to be sacrificed to help pay for the tax breaks, their effectiveness is even more questionable, he argues.

...

9. Strengthening Southeast Michigan though Collaboration - Mackinac 2011 — MiVote

The 2011 Mackinac Policy Conference included a Friday, June 3 panel with a group dubbed the "Fab Five" – on the topic of regional collaboration in Southeast Michigan. A video of this panel is at MiVote along with other coverage.

10. Tourism seeks more PPP opportunities - Sri Lanka Business News

The local tourism industry seeks more Public and Private Partnership (PPP) opportunities to eliminate budgetary restrictions and inefficiencies in investments. ... time for the industry to adopt an intra regional development plan to sustain the industry while overcoming high carbon emission and increasing oil prices issues which are considered as main barriers for industry prosperity.

"In addition the government needs to offer attractive prices when it comes to leasing out land for tourism sector investments. At the moment, basic investments of local tourism projects are very high and preferred investors have to pay Rs 20 million for an acre land in some areas where there is a high demand for tourism. In addition, existing local hotel schools also need to be developed in a franchising model.

When it comes PPP in tourism, private sector has to play a pivotal role in professionalism improvement programmes, ecological sustainability and efficient management of investments.
...

11. Stock road safety program to close - State News - Agribusiness and General - Finance - Stock & Land

After a highly successful 11 years, and with a total of $11.5 million being made available through Regional Development Victoria, the Stock Overpass/Underpass Road Safety program is coming to a close.

VFF president Andrew Broad said the SOURS program had provided grants of up to $33,000 to farmers who built an overpass or underpass road crossing to separate stock from road traffic.

"Since 2000, construction of 460 underpasses has been completed providing significant improvements in road safety," he said.

"The vast majority of these grants have been made to dairy farmers as they are more frequent users of road crossings.

"The VFF has played a critical role in the administration and implementation of the program through a long and successful partnership with RDV.
...


More bookmarks:  http://www.delicious.com/I.see.regions.work

Regional Communities - "Think Local Planet, Act Regionally." 

#437 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Tue Jun 7, 2011 5:44 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - June 6, 2011
regionswork
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1.
 An obituary for Florida Growth Management - St. Petersburg Times


Growth management, an imperfect but noble effort to protect Florida from selfishness and greed, died Thursday (June 2, 2011). The cause of death was legislation passed by a Legislature lacking perspective and signed into law by Rick Scott, a new governor ignorant of the state's history and indifferent about its future.

Growth Management was 26 years old. The agency that oversaw it, the now-vanquished Department of Community Affairs, is survived by a handful of relatives not up to carrying on the mission: water management districts decimated by spending cuts; regional planning councils and similar agencies with little authority; and county commissions with neither the will nor the vision to stand up to developers.

Born in 1985, Growth Management was supported in its youth by governors and legislators from both political parties who looked beyond the next election and were determined to keep Florida from strangling itself. ...

Growth Management died quietly. There were no bill-signing ceremonies or front-page headlines to mark its passing. But for Floridians who care about the future of their state, the loss is devastating.

2. State budget cuts could mean problems for Treasure Coast Regional Planning Council - TCPalm.com

The Treasure Coast Regional Planning Council expects to lose 10 percent of its budget and could cut staff, salaries or benefits next year, after Gov. Rick Scott vetoed $2.5 million from Florida's regional planning councils for 2011-12.

Scaling back the councils, which deal with development planning issues that affect multiple counties, continues a trend of growth management-related cuts by Scott and the Legislature this year aimed to give local governments more planning power.

But with less regional or state oversight, local governments could start quickly approving developments that become out of control once the economy bounces back, said Charles Pattison, president of growth management advocacy group 1000 Friends of Florida.

"What we do worry about is that as Floridians recover, we're going to have lax oversight and more approvals that will just put our quality of life at risk," Pattison said.
...

3. There's more than one way to join forces - The Sydney Morning Herald

A report on council consolidation warns against fixed thinking, writes Harvey Grennan.

A NEW report calls for council amalgamations and more resource sharing, particularly in metropolitan areas.

The report, Consolidation in Local Government: A Fresh Look, was the result of a joint effort by the new Australian Centre of Excellence for Local Government and the local government associations of South Australia and New Zealand taking a fresh and objective look at amalgamations, boundary changes, shared services and regional collaboration.

The centre's director, Professor Graham Sansom, said the report highlighted the need for local government to embrace further change if it was to be sustainable.

'Councils should work with their communities and regional partners to determine which option will deliver the best outcome,'' he said. ''In some cases, this may lead to amalgamations or boundary changes; in others, to more regional collaboration and shared services.
...

4. Alleged open meeting law violations at center of lawsuit | Eastern Iowa News Now

POSTVILLE — A lawsuit alleging open meetings law violations by Upper Explorerland Regional Planning Commission pits the city of Postville against an agency that recently moved its headquarters from Postville to Decorah.
But that move, which has understandably rankled Postville residents, has little to do with the lawsuit, according to Postville Mayor Leigh Rekow.

"It is simply to bring to their attention that they are a public, tax-supported institution, subject to open meeting laws, and meetings need to be conducted according to these rules," Rekow said.
Upper Explorerland Executive Director Aaron Burkes said the lawsuit has everything to do with the relocation of the agency's headquarters.

"There is no doubt" that the lawsuit is a sour grapes response to the move, said Burkes, who called the lawsuit "nonsense" and its claims "baseless."

The lawsuit alleges more than 50 open-meeting law violations dating back more than 10 years. Most of them involve what the plaintiffs — the city of Postville and Jason Meyer, the publisher of the Postville Herald newspaper and a member of the Postville City Council — describe as inadequate notification of commission meetings.

... 

5. Regional Prosperity: How the Region's Plan Can Impact the Region's Bottom Line - TECHburgher :: Putting some sizzle in the Pittsburgh technology sector.

The region's metropolitan planning organization (MPO), the Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission, is now accepting public input on the draft 2040 Transportation and Development Plan for Southwestern Pennsylvania.
...
Business leaders in America are increasingly focused on rationalizing regional patterns of development to more successfully spur economic prosperity and extend livability to more persons. The bottom line business case of smart growth is increasingly apparent.

Come be part of the conversation about how the region's plan and you can help to:
- channel the pattern and character of growth and development to hasten regional sustainability that protects and enhances investments
- ensure economic growth occurs without the impacts and inefficiencies of unchecked sprawl
- promote sustainable communities
- level the field for development and redevelopment to revitalize our older urban centers
- focus on the new economic nexus of land use, transportation, housing, and transit ...

6. Transit: The 4 Percent Solution | Newgeography.com

A new Brookings Institution report provides an unprecedented glimpse into the lack of potential for transit to make a more meaningful contribution to mobility in the nation's metropolitan areas. The report, entitled Missed Opportunity: Transit and Jobs in Metropolitan America, provides estimates of the percentage of jobs that can be accessed by transit in 45, 60 or 90 minutes, one-way, by residents of the 100 largest US metropolitan areas. The report is unusual in not evaluating the performance of metropolitan transit systems, but rather, as co-author Alan Berube put it, "what they are capable of." Moreover, the Brookings access indicators go well beyond analyses that presume having a bus or rail stop nearby is enough, missing the point the availability of transit does not mean that it can take you where you need to go in a reasonable period of time.
...

7. Proposal of turning Route 422 into toll road | 6abc.com

The Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission proposed taking 25 miles of Route 422 in Montgomery County, between King of Prussia and Pottstown, and making it into a toll road.

The proposal would charge drivers 11 cents per mile, or $2.75 each way.
...
Some 65,000 commuters drive on 422 between King of Prussia and Pottstown every day. Widening the road would relieve rush-hour traffic jams, but would cost millions of dollars.
...
The toll plan won't be happening any time soon; it would have to be approved by the commissioners in Berks, Chester and Montgomery counties, the state and federal transportation departments and the Pennsylvania General Assembly.


The Planning Commission has set up a website with answers to frequently asked questions: http://www.422plus.com/422Corridor/

8. Chiefs tell Alberta Government: "Fix Lower Athabasca Regional Plan"

Chief Roxanne Marcel of the Mikisew Cree First Nation (MCFN) and Chief Allan Adam of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nations (ACFN) met with Alberta Government Ministers today, and told them they need to fix the draft Lower Athabasca Regional Plan.

The Alberta Government has been under criticism over oil sands development in the Lower Athabasca region. Since 2005, both ACFN and MCFN have made numerous submissions on how to improve land use planning where it affects their traditional territory. They have consistently put forward recommendations for policies and protected areas while offering to work with Government to undertake traditional resource use planning that would help set meaningful safeguards and thresholds for ecological disturbance such as for land, air and water - and help ensure Treaty and Aboriginal rights are protected for current and future generations. ...

 "There is no legal impediment to the Government of Alberta to involving First Nations more meaningfully ...

9. A Tea Party Plan to Put `Big Government' on a Diet

HOPKINS COUNTY, KY - "No government ever voluntarily reduces itself in size," said President Ronald Reagan.

And taxpayers in Kenton County in Northern Kentucky are about to find out: no bloated government agency goes down without a fight, either.

But if the Northern Kentucky Tea Party prevails, the Northern Kentucky Area Planning Commission faces significant weight loss.

Tea partiers want to gather 18,000 signatures needed to allow voters to determine whether to shrink a planning commission three times the size — and cost — of other county planning commissions in the region.

I'm betting that when voters find out that the Boone County Planning Commission staff of 15 handles 300 percent more work than the area planning staff of 42 strong – with their Cadillac benefit packages – the votes will be there.

...


10. TIF District Proposal Would Cross Municipal Lines - WBAY-TV Green Bay-Fox Cities-Northeast Wisconsin News

The Green Bay Area Chamber of Commerce, along with local and state officials, unveil a legislative proposal they hope will help grow communities.

It involves creating tax increment financing districts across municipal lines.

City officials hope the creation of these TIF districts will make funding regional development projects easier, particularly in the titletown district.


"Basically, it's a full blown inter governmental agreement that's going to allow us to do different things to promote the gateways to our community, especially Green Bay, De Pere and Ashwaubenon," says Ashwaubenon Village President Mike Aubinger.

For example, officials say it would allow the creation of a corridor along Ashland Avenue to attract development that would benefit the entire area.

"It's going to allow the municipalities to get together and say, this is the type of business we want on this corridor, this is the type of infrastructure and create an overall vision or plan for that corridor ..

... 

11. EPA Committed $7M To Help Restore Contaminated Land - News Story - WFTV Orlando

ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. -- On Monday, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) committed $7 million to help restore contaminated land throughout Florida, officials said.
...

According to officials, $1 million will go to the Central Florida regional planning council to pay for several brown-field sites. Orange County is getting $400,000 and Daytona Beach will get $200,000.

WFTV learned that some of the most polluted sites may not get cleaned up for years. Officials said a little beige building was once the office of Spellman Engineering, a NASA contractor that dumped cleaning chemicals and contaminated the land with water beneath it ...



12. EPA Awards New Hampshire $1.8 Million to Restore Brownfields - NHPR.org


The Environmental Protection Agency has awarded New Hampshire $1.8 million dollars to restore contaminated sites..


Capital Regional Development Council, the city of Concord and the Town of Bristol are receiving the money to clean up sites contaminated by hazardous substances.


These sites, called Brownfields, will let municipalities clean up these properties and put them back on the tax rolls.


Capital Regional Development Council received the largest portion of the money – one million dollars- to create a revolving loan fund for businesses, nonprofits and state agencies.


Executive Director Stephen Heavener.


"The goal is to bring either underutilized or environmentally tainted properties back to resuse, that's the ultimate, because our mission at CRDC is job creation and tax based enhancements."
 ...


13. BusinessDay - Region falls behind in research


SOUTHERN Africa's lack of investment in higher education is failing to meet the needs of the economy, and regional collaboration in scientific research is essential if we are to innovate and grow.


This is the view of the Southern African Regional Universities Association (Sarua).


In a report submitted to the biennial conference of the Association of African Universities in Stellenbosch on Thursday, Sarua called for a $100m five-year fund to increase academic collaboration between universities in the region. According to the report, Southern African universities were functioning far below optimal performance in human capital development and research output.


Piyushi Kotecha, a researcher and CEO of Sarua, said universities in Southern Africa have been weakened by poor political management, insufficient public investment and the haemorrhaging of talent to developed countries.
...


14. Ancient Silk Road, modern economic corridor


KUNMING, June 6 (Xinhua) -- More than six centuries after the southern Silk Road fell into disuse, China and South Asian countries hope to revive the ancient route and forge it into a robust economic corridor for trade and investment.


Chinese and South Asian traders crossed daunting mountains more than 2,000 years ago to exchange commodities such as silk, tea, ironware, jewelry and horses along the southern Silk Road from southwest China's Yunnan to Myanmar, India, Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The route, though less well-known than the northern Silk Road, used to be an important link for trade and cultural exchanges between China and South Asia. It faded into history with the rise of maritime trade in the 15th century.
However, as trade and ties in the region continue to prosper, the ancient trade route has regained some of its former prominence.

"I'm a great supporter for the creation of a modern version of the southern Silk Road as it will create a 'win-win' economic situation," ...


More bookmarks:  http://www.delicious.com/I.see.regions.work

Regional Communities - "Think Local Planet, Act Regionally."

#438 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Wed Jun 8, 2011 6:36 pm
Subject: Regional Community Development News - June 7, 2011
regionswork
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1. TRPA withdrawal bill heads to governor | TahoeDailyTribune.com

 

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. — At Lake Tahoe, sometimes it takes three to tango.

 

And, with the passage of a Nevada bill to withdrawal the state from the Tahoe Regional Agency one step from passing, it could soon be up to California and the federal government to decide if they want to dance.

 

The Nevada Assembly approved Senate Bill 271 by a 28-14 vote ...

 

The measure by Sen. John Lee, D-North Las Vegas, threatens withdrawal from the Tahoe Regional Compact by 2015 unless California and the U.S. Congress agree to changes including 

ending the requirement that projects and other major decisions be approved by a majority of members from both states.

 

The bill also would require the agency's governing board to pass a regional plan update and consider economic conditions in the Tahoe Basin when amending the plan.

 

The legislation is before Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval, who can sign or veto the bill. If he does nothing, the bill becomes law in ten days.

 

2. Event hopes to put Hampton Roads on the national map | WVEC.com Norfolk - Hampton Roads

 

NORFOLK -- If you were to ask people from out of state, what is Hampton Roads, how well could they answer?

 

There is new effort to better define and promote this area to help make its mark on the national map.

 

More than 50 local businesses and organizations are coming together to push regionalism. Supporters will attend the inaugural Hampton Roads Gala on Tuesday, June 14th at Chrysler Hall.

 

The idea is the brainchild of Hampton Roads Live Network President Chance Wilson, who thought the region needed to better brand itself in order to attract new businesses and tourists, plus give it national recognition.

 

"I noticed with Hampton Roads, we have tons of great events, great festivals but we don't have that series of signature events for the purpose of celebrating the region," says Wilson.

...

 

To learn more about the gala click here www.hamptonroadsgala.com.

 

 

3. Merging Montgomery County jurisdictions topic at local leaders' summit

 

DAYTON — The concept of merging Montgomery County's 29 government jurisdictions into one, consolidated region is raising curiosity among elected officials and community leaders who are taking part in a meeting Wednesday on regionalism.

 

The Dayton Daily News spoke with local leaders ...

 

Michael Shea, a lead strategist of the "Vote for Unity" referendum campaign that won the historic merger of Louisville and Jefferson County governments will be the keynote speaker at today's sold-out summit at the University of Dayton's Life Long Learning Institute.

 

Montgomery County Commissioner Dan Foley, who invited Shea to speak, said the summit gives the Dayton region a chance to learn the benefits and challenges of a merger by looking  

through Louisville's rear view mirror.

 

Foley believes the Louisville government structure — strong mayor, 26-member metro council, with suburban communities retaining some autonomy — could work here.

...

 

4. CCRPC marks 40th anniversary

 

This year marks the 40th anniversary of the creation of the Clinton County Regional Planning Commission, which was created by joint resolution of the Board of Clinton County Commissioners, City of Wilmington and each village in early 1971.

...

 

To commemorate the anniversary, the county commissioners presented a special resolution at the commission's regularly scheduled monthly meeting. In attendance were past members and leaders to honor 40 years of regional cooperation, planning and development in Clinton County, including Ken and Cindy Schaublin — who served as the Commission's first staff; John Blake — who served as the chair during much of the '90s; Bob Johnson — who has been a planning commissioner every year since 1971; and Bruce Beam — a current planning commissioner whose  father served as the commission's first chair.

...

 

 

5. Polk Vision Inc. Shared An Updated 20-Year-Plan With Auburndale Commission | TheLedger.com

 

AUBURNDALE | Officials with Polk Vision Inc. on Monday updated Auburndale city commissioners on a new 20-year plan and invited the city's participation.

 

The commission heard from Greg Littleton, Polk Vision chairman and CEO of Citizens Bank &amp; Trust in Lake Wales, and Colleen Burton, on the organization's revised strategic plan.

 

Polk Vision, a 20-year planning group organized in 2003 by local business leaders, issued its first report in 2004. ...

 

An update for 2030 released in November retained those goals with some additional strategies, such as adequate funding for education, expanding tourism and regionalism, making intelligent growth-related decisions, broadening citizen engagement in local government, encouraging diverse revenue streams to pay for government and promoting healthy families and public safety. 

 

The new effort is called "Polk Vision Refreshed."

...

 

6. 42th Annual meeting of the Mid-Continent Regional Science Association - Detroit, Michigan

 

Editor's Report: Here in Detroit – in the SEMCOG region - Southeast Michigan Council of Governments.  SEMCOG has been an outstanding regional council for decades. http://www.semcog.org/  

 

I'm attending this meeting to present: "The Sub-State District/Regional Council as a Geospatial Unit of Analytical Geography for the United States."

 

This is a primary goal of the Regions-Work Initiative begun in 1998.

 

Key points and map links follow: 

 

State Maps with Regional Councils and Alternatives by Census Regions and Divisions

 

 

More bookmarks:  http://www.delicious.com/I.see.regions.work

 

 

Regional Communities - "Think Local Planet, Act Regionally." 

 


#439 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Fri Jun 10, 2011 6:08 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - June 8 & 9, 2011
regionswork
Send Email Send Email
 

1. Sanders: With cooperation and collaboration, region's economy moving ahead - Independence, MO - The Examiner

... Our goal was to inform and help build consensus around the many exciting initiatives that are currently ongoing in Jackson County. ...

Equally important during our time spent together was the need to convey a message of regional collaboration. Whether it is in my office in Jackson County, the mayor's office in one of our local communities or the statehouse in Jefferson City, solutions to our economic problems must come with a multipronged approach. In the new world economy, regional collaboration is more essential than ever.

We all must realize that what is good for one city is equally fruitful for a neighboring community. What is good for a host of cities is good for an entire county, and what is good for a county is good for both sides of the state line. Competition is healthy, but consensus is necessary if we are going to be able to compete regionally in the future.
In Jackson County, we have ushered in a new era of collaboration that will continue to work for all of our citizens. ...

2. Editorial: County's municipalities should focus on regional cooperation - St. Louis Today

...

Perhaps Kinloch could be the first domino to fall that would help break down the parochial walls that have been dividing the St. Louis region for decades. The question to ask now is: Would St. Louis County be better off with one fewer municipality? Or two? Or three? Or 50?

The fact that there is a stand-alone city of 319,294 people next door to the county's patchwork of 91 municipalities is the No. 1 obstacle to regional growth. With each city fighting for its own interests, ..., the overall region loses even as one municipality or another wins here and there.

Yet another example of that division happened during the most recent Missouri legislative session. The mall-rich cities of Fenton and Chesterfield sought unsuccessfully to change the system by which city governments share St. Louis County's 1 cent sales tax.
...
Getting rid of the sales tax sharing pool isn't the answer. But using it to make governments more efficient could be a step to smarter regional governance.

3. Hosting mega sporting-events speeds up regional economic development: PwC – Daily Commercial News

According to a new report from PwC, investing in infrastructure required for mega-events like the Olympics or the FIFA World Cup™ can accelerate economic development in some host countries and regions by as much as three decades.

An economic and social impact report by PwC a year after the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, showed Games-related venue construction estimated at more than $1.22 billion, not including the new Vancouver Convention Centre, Canada Line rapid transit project, or the Sea-to-Sky Highway expansion between Vancouver and Whistler. Incremental employment from Games-related activities was estimated at 45,500 person years of employment in BC and Canada. As Toronto gears up to host the Pan Am Games in 2015, some are wondering if these games will result in similar benefits in Ontario.
...

According to the report, success in hosting a mega-event is partly determined by the supporting infrastructure required for both athletes and spectators.
...

4. Project Milwaukee: How Land Use is Planned - WUWM: News


This week on WUWM, we're exploring the development of a regional corridor from Milwaukee to Chicago. Economic developers insist that regions will be the major player in the new global marketplace, and that ours, around the southern part of Lake Michigan, could be part of that elite group.
...
Ken Yunker is the executive director of SEWRPC, the Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission. It works with communities on land preservation and development, attempting to balance competing interests.
...
Every community's goal in the corridor should be to create an influential region, according to Milwaukee County Supervisor Pat Jursik.


Jursik has organized a group of local planners that meets four times a year to discuss land use and other issues impacting the region. Ideally, she hopes communities in southeastern Wisconsin develop common goals for preserving the region's farmland and natural resources, while also accommodating its economic growth.
...


5. Vereb decries 'Hoeffel Tolling Plan' for Route 422; legislators weigh in - timesherald.com


Against the backdrop of the bustling Route 422, a handful of legislators voiced opposition to what they called the "Hoeffel Tolling Plan," a proposal to implement tolls along the highway corridor, ...


State Rep. Mike Vereb (R-150th of Montgomery County), joined by a number of fellow lawmakers, chided the plan to levy tolls on a 25-mile stretch of Route 422, from King of Prussia to Pottstown. The proposal was unveiled Monday before the governor's Transportation Funding Advisory Commission and presented to Montgomery County Commissioners Wednesday by representatives of the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission (DVRPC).
...

Tom Quigley (R-146th of Montgomery County) ... "One of the most concerning things to me is that the DVRPC is asking the (transportation) commission to recommend to the legislature enabling legislation that would allow Montgomery, Chester and Berks counties to form authority to oversee this tolling project," ...


6. Fairgrounds a cut above - Estes Park Trail-Gazette

The Town of Estes Park ... celebration for the new park-n-ride at the Fairgrounds at Stanley Park ...

Town administrator Jacquie Halburnt noted the convenience of the lot for visitors.

"Signage along U.S. 36 will encourage visitors to park at the Fairgrounds park-n-ride and hop on a shuttle connecting to more than 40 stops around Estes Park and Rocky Mountain National Park," said Halburnt.

She explained that while the town expects the lot to take a few years to gain popularity, there should be some reduction in traffic congestion right away. The parking lot consists of 408 paved parking spaces ...

The town received three grants totaling $1,158,750 for the project. Matching the grant funding, the town invested $250,000 toward the project from the community reinvestment fund. The Upper Front Range Regional Planning Commission awarded the town two Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality (CMAQ) improvement program grants totaling $913,000. ...

7. Leaders discuss regionalism - WDTN - DAYTON, Ohio

Talk of combining 26 communities into one metro-government took another step forward as the University of Dayton hosted a daylong discussion on regionalism ... Montgomery County Commissioner and regional advocate, Dan Foley.

"We're well intentioned people," Foley said. "But we tend to fight against each other because of the very nature and the very structure of our government."

Former Ohio governor Bob Taft told the group that changes would have to come from Columbus.

"It's not that tough to go to Columbus and get a law changed," he said. "But there can't be disagreement. Everybody's got to be on board."

Keynote speaker Mike Shea ... said it transformed Lousville and helped that region weather this latest economic downturn.

Sheas said, "our economic development profile has been raised. We went from being something like the 56th largest city to the 16th largest city in the country."

Shea believes the same thing could happen in Dayton.
...

8. Representative Becker's regionalism bill passes legislature - MyWestHartfordLIFE.com

The State Senate has unanimously passed a bill, authored by State Representative Brian Becker (D-19th District), which makes it easier for cities and towns to collaborate on municipal functions to save money. The bill has garnered widespread appeal from state and municipal officials and now heads to the desk of Governor Dannel P. Malloy for his signature.

The bill gives towns more flexibility in negotiating interlocal agreements and eliminates certain procedural hurdles that municipalities have to meet before entering into those agreements. The bill also allows the legislative bodies of such municipalities to delegate their authority to approve an interlocal agreement to the board of selectmen.

Once the bill is signed into law by the Governor, it will become effective October 1, 2011, with the exception that the repeal of required provisions in interlocal agreements is effective upon passage.

9. Bay of Plenty Regional Council Considers Annual Plan Projects (New Zealand) - Dredging Today

Bay of Plenty Regional Council has included a number of funding requests to its Annual Plan budget and referred others to its Ten Year Plan process for further consideration following public deliberations this week.

The Council has agreed to fund a one-off $600,000 amount from reserves to cover the additional cost of local authority insurance premiums as a result of the Christchurch earthquakes and following flood damage to the region's river schemes during the past year. The funding will relieve the rates burden on flood scheme targeted rates and the general rate.

An additional $2.3 million loan for capital works on the region's major river schemes was agreed to cover additional works as a result of flooding. ...

10. Transit tax lacks Orange board's support | plan, county, commissioners - Burlington Times News

The Orange County Board of Commissioners put the brakes on a plan to participate in the building of a regional light rail system, increase bus service and make street changes for bus rapid transit.

The commissioners voted ... against putting a half-cent sales tax on the November ballot to fund a portion of the transportation plan that would include increasing bus routes in rural areas of Orange County, installing a light rail system that would run from Chapel Hill to Durham and putting in bus lanes on Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. in Chapel Hill.

They also declined to vote on or "approve in principle" a multimillion-dollar financial plan to fund the projects because some of the commissioners said they don't know enough about the financial plan to make a decision.

Commissioner Alice Gordon, who has been a member of the Metropolitan Planning Organization and the Triangle Transit Authority, ... wasn't about to give up on the plan. ...

11. Higher Administrative Court (VGH): wind-energy company may contest determination of priority area - Lexology

The Hessian Higher Administrative Court ("VGH") strengthened the rights of wind-energy companies ... awarded them a right of their own to contest determinations of priority areas in regional plans themselves subject to certain requirements.

...a company had applied for the permit under immission-control law for the construction and operation of wind-energy power plants. No priority area had been designated in the Regional Plan of North Hesse 2009 in the area of the proposal. The Regional Plan stipulated that the planning and construction of wind-energy power plants relevant to regional planning was not permissible outside of priority areas for wind-energy use. ...

The Higher Administrative Court stated ... A Regional Plan determining priority areas for wind-energy use with a preclusive effect for another place within the planning area was required to be based on a conclusive planning concept for the entire region which was sufficiently comprehensible and documented. ...

12. Mega-project proposed for Hobe Sound promises jobs, tax income - TCPalm.com

... developer Otto "Buzz" DiVosta's proposed 4,000-home community, envisioned as a high tech hub west of Hobe Sound, is being sold as a 20-year job and revenue creator that will employ 3,240 by 2018.

The application for the Harmony Development of Regional Impact, proposed for 2,700 acres of agricultural land west of Florida's Turnpike along Bridge Road, was filed June 3 with the Treasure Coast Regional Planning Council.

Michael Busha, executive director of the council, said his staff will make a presentation about the Harmony application on June 17 to give council members — comprised of government officials from Lake Worth to Sebastian — a chance to talk about the project.

The council staff has a month to determine whether the application ... meet state requirements ...

Once ... met, the planning council has about two months to present recommendations to Martin County, which has primary responsibility for holding public hearings and deciding whether to approve the project.

13. Certified Homes Outperform Non-Certified Homes for Fourth Year in Portland Metro Region - PR Newswire - sacbee.com

Earth Advantage Institute, a nonprofit green building resource, announced the results of its annual certified home analysis in the Portland metropolitan region for the 2010 to 2011 year. The study is part of the organization's research efforts that include gathering data on green building valuation.

Existing homes with a sustainable certification sold for 30 percent more than homes without such a designation, according to sales data provided by the Portland Regional Multiple Listing Service (RMLS) to Earth Advantage Institute. This finding is based on the sale of existing homes between May 1, 2010 and April 30, 2011 in Multnomah, Clackamas, Columbia, and Washington Counties in Oregon, and Clark County in Washington.
...

This result continues a four-year trend in which new homes with a third-party certification for sustainable construction and energy performance have consistently sold for more than newly constructed homes that had not been certified.
...

14. Organization links -Mid-Continent Regional Science Association presentations - Detroit

Data Driven Detroit - Kurt Metzger, Director

The Center for Community Progress - Dan Kildee, Founder & President

Greening Michigan Institute, Michigan State University - Rick Foster, Director


More bookmarks:  http://www.delicious.com/I.see.regions.work

Regional Communities - "Think Local Planet, Act Regionally."

#440 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Sun Jun 12, 2011 4:27 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - June 10 & 11, 2011
regionswork
Send Email Send Email
 
1. Don't follow Detroit's route, region urged - Edmonton Journal - Alberta

A new economic road map for the Edmonton region will help the area avoid the wrong 
turns that drove Detroit's economy from 1970s Motor City superpower to financial 
ruin, ... 

The chairman of the committee that developed the 300-page document released Thursday said bad decisions contributed to Detroit's current economic woes. The city went from being one of the most important manufacturing centres in the world to the municipality it is 
today, "run down, hollowed out, fighting for its life," Jackson von der Ohe told civic 
politicians from 24 Edmonton-area communities at a Capital Region Board meeting.

The average sale price of a house in the debt-ridden American city is now $13,000, 
von der Ohe said.

"So what happened? It's a good cautionary tale for all of us to acknowledge just how 
difficult a situation can become, even for a worldleading city region, once things get off 
course. Outcomes are the results of decisions that were made. Things don't just 
happen." 

Detroit bickered with its suburban neighbours, relied on the auto industry without a backup plan, failed to capitalize on innovation, technology and entrepreneurship, and was too complacent as schools and neighbourhoods deteriorated and residents moved out, he said.


Detroit's rival city, Chicago, took a different path that has made it the fourth-largest urban economy in the world and an educational, financial and cultural centre of excellence, von der Ohe said.

...


Note: Following is the link to the Capital Region Board - Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
where the full report and Executive Summary can be downloaded. My search of the Report PDF and the site found no reference to Detroit or Chicago. "The Capital Region Growth Plan: Growing Forward" is a substantial document and worth a review. 

2.  Charlottesville Tomorrow News Center: Supervisors drop ICLEI membership but 
renew grant commitment

After a lengthy public hearing, a divided Albemarle Board of Supervisors voted ...to 
end the county's membership in a nonprofit organization that provides software and 
technical advice to communities seeking to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The vote came immediately after a unanimous vote to continue the county's 
participation in a $1 million regional sustainability planning grant being administered 
by the Thomas Jefferson Planning District Commission.

Eighty-three people spoke at the public hearing, ...

The county joined ICLEI in late 2007 after the board adopted a resolution to join the 
Cool Counties initiative to pursue reduction of greenhouse gas emissions in the county 
as a whole. ...

Supervisor Duane Snow said he believes ICLEI is an international organization that 
seeks to control the behavior of Albemarle citizens.
...
Supervisor Dennis S. Rooker said the $1,200 annual membership in ICLEI provided 
the county with a lot of benefits and came without any strings attached.
...

On the subject of the regional planning grant, Rooker quoted from the staff report that recommended continued participation in the three-year joint effort with the city of Charlottesville and the University of Virginia.

"The grant funds additional staff support for updating the county Comprehensive Plan without [the need for] additional county resources, provides for expanded public outreach … and the project heightens the area's ongoing collaborative and cooperative planning efforts," Rooker said.

Rooker said pulling out of the grant would be a "slap in the face" to the city, UVa and the TJPDC.

However, Boyd said he continued to be concerned about the grant because he never saw the details in the grant application before it was submitted. He said he would only support signing the contract if the board could control which subject areas staff would study as part of the work.
...

3. RTM Hears Pitch to Convert SWRPA to a Council - WestportNow.com - Westport, 
Connecticut

Westport's Representative Town Meeting (RTM) barely blinked tonight as it voted 
unanimously on the first six agenda items.

But the final item not even scheduled for a vote—converting the South Western 
Regional Planning Agency (SWRPA), of which Westport is one of eight members, to a 
Council of Governments (COG)—had many members of the legislative body rushing to 
the podium to question First Selectman Gordon Joseloff. 

Joseloff addressed the RTM in a first reading of a proposed ordinance which would 
approve creation of the COG and authorize Westport's participation in it along with the 
other SWRPA municipalities of Darien, Greenwich, New Canaan, Norwalk, Stamford, 
Weston, and Wilton.

"We looked at the other regions in the state and saw there was a movement to this 
form of government," said Joseloff. He noted that 10 of the 15 regional planning 
agencies statewide have already switched to a COG or similar system known as a 
Council of Elected Officials.
...

4. Kent State study lists 240 ideas for regional collaboration | cleveland.com

From joint fire dispatching to shared accounting departments, Northeast Ohio governments have dreamed up more than 240 ideas to share services and save money, a Kent State University study has found.

The university's Center for Public Administration and Public Policy has compiled a (PDF)  list of 105 ideas to share with local leaders and inspire them to think creatively. A separate list of ideas being implemented is coming soon.

The goal: to get more local governments to pool resources.

"There's a lot of discussion happening in this area right now," said John Hoornbeek, the center's director. "For the most part, it's productive discussion that could give rise to positive changes if local governments can find ways to make some of these ideas work."

The ideas are culled from 16 Northeast Ohio counties, home to 868 separate government entities that spend $20 billion annually to run themselves, according to The Fund for the Economic Future, which worked with Kent on the list.

...

Research Overview -The Innovator's Collaborative Series

For more than thirty years, the Center for Public Administration and Public Policy at 
Kent State University (the KSU Center) has conducted research and provided 
assistance to improve the capacities and performance of Ohio local governments. Of all 
of the subjects addressed by the Center, however, intergovernmental collaboration is 
one of the most relevant to current challenges facing Ohio.

5. Regional fire service plan going nowhere - Port Orchard Independent

Ever since the idea for consolidating South Kitsap Fire and Rescue with its 
counterparts in Bremerton and possibly Central Kitsap was first broached several 
years ago, its proponents have insisted the reorganized entity could offer economies of 
scale that would make it cheaper to operate while keeping service levels at their 
current levels or better.

The draft plan currently on the table, however, offers neither. ... fatal flaw in the plan 
is that the city of Bremerton currently spends about $2.4 million more on its fire 
department than the regional authority could collect in taxes.

The regional fire service plan being considered now fails to address how that gap would 
be filled. ... But of course we all know the answer to that question. Once up and 
running, the consolidated fire district would be our only protection against disaster, 
and we could hardly turn down the request for a tax increase to fund it if the 
alternative was chaos or drastically reduced service levels.
...

6. Panhandle counties prepare for disasters : News : ConnectAmarillo.com

Wildfires have been the big topic for emergency officials ... not 
only the dry conditions but other disaster situations.

It's all part of the Panhandle Regional Planning Commission's Emergency 
Preparedness Committee designed to bring everyone up to date and form bonds 
between responders, which Roberts county Judge Vernon Cook said was vitally 
important during wildfires there a few years ago.

"We had 22 fire departments in Roberts county and Miami area and we were able to 
communicate with 4 of them directly by radio. Any emergency management operation 
can't take place effectively without effective communication," says Judge Cook.


Situations like this are why the Panhandle Regional Planning Commission's Emergency 
Preparedness Advisory Committee began holding conferences three years ago, ... 


"It doesn't matter what type of disaster we're talking about, our emergency managers 
have to be prepared to respond to any type situation," ...
...


7. SPC talking smart growth for region - Staff Blogs - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Spent the lunch hour on the 31st floor of the Regional Enterprise Tower trying not to 
think about whether I could make it down so many steps in case of a fire, but the wonk 
in me succumbed to the topic at hand ...

The topic was sustainability. It shouldn't be a wonky topic. It is juicy, sexy, lush green 
and exciting. Its problem is six syllables. Smart growth has two and that's the same 
thing, so let's talk smart.

The Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission, that august regional planning body that 
sometimes gets a bad rap for such things as the Mon-Fayette Expressway, is talking 
smart. ... 

It appears that SPC has been planning smart, ... 


Court Gould, the executive director of Sustainable Pittsburgh, is trying to encourage 
more business people to get involved because, as bottom-line folks, they're driving the 
sustainability bus and can help push for smart planning. In today's session, the focus 
was on transit-oriented development, which means "put stuff where the buses stop."
...


8. Work Hard – Work Smart Receives $241,000 Wagner - Peyser Grant | PRLog


Work Hard – Work Smart, a certifying work-readiness initiative of the Wichita Falls 
Chamber of Commerce and Industry, ... $241,000 Wagner-Peyser Grant ...Texas 
Governor's office and distributed by the Texas Workforce Commission. 

Work Hard – Work Smart is collaboration between the Wichita Falls Chamber of 
Commerce, Workforce Solutions – North Texas, NORTEX Regional Planning 
Commission,   ...

"Being located in rural Texas and trying to bring jobs to our area, the Wichita Falls 
region competes with the larger metropolitan areas such as Dallas, ..  How do we make 
ourselves different?  What distinguishes us from Longview, Midland, Odessa, Abilene, 
Lawton (OK) or Ardmore (OK)?  How do we make ourselves different?   We have the 
opportunity to differentiate ourselves in the way we promote our workforce. These 
areas produce very similar workforce statistics. Our goal is to promote 10% of our 
current labor force in Wichita County as possessing the National Career Readiness 
Certificate, " ...


9. Virginia looking to capitalize on Civil War tourism | Nelson County Times


When West Virginia sells its Civil War tourism, it's also selling Virginia. Ditto for 
Maryland, North Carolina and Tennessee.

All five states participate in Civil War Trails, a $7 million operation that's run out of the 
Richmond Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau.

So when they advertise their Civil War sites, they're also linking to Virginia's, said Jack 
Berry, president of the Richmond visitors bureau, in a presentation to the Richmond 
Regional Planning District Commission ......

"We are history, like it or not," Berry said, "and most known for the Civil War. We're 
not the Big Easy, not the Big Apple. We've got to market history because that's who we 
are."

The city also is fortunate to have more than history. ...Museum of Fine Arts... 
hundreds of other things to do in the region.


"The secret is, there's so much going on. … The Civil War is great. But there's so much 
more."


The diversity has helped the city tourism industry withstand the economic downturn, 
he said.
... 


10. Team chosen for LA Regional Connector - RailwayAge Magazine

Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (LACMTA) has selected a joint venture of AECOM and Parsons Brinckerhoff (PB) to provide conceptual planning and preliminary design for the $1.4 billion Metro Regional Connector Transit Corridor Project, ...

Construction on the connector could begin in 2013 and be completed by 2019, depending on the availability of federal funding. 

The project envisions uniting disparate segments of Los Angeles' rapidly growing light rail transit (LRT) network, as well as tying LRT in more completely with Union Station, served by Amtrak and Metrolink trains. (See map below.) The 1.9-mile-long underground rail connection will link ... 

The Regional Connector will receive partial funding from Measure R, the half-cent sales tax increase approved by the voters of Los Angeles County in November 2008 as part of the Measure R program, funding transportation improvements totaling $40 billion over a 30-year period.

11.  Call for Papers for the American Association of Geographers (AAG) 2012 Annual Meeting

The Call for Papers for the AAG 2012 Annual Meeting in New York, February 24-28, 2012 is underway.  Individuals may present in only one of the four categories: Paper Presentation Illustrated Paper Presentation Poster Presentation Interactive Short Paper Presentation  The Abstract Guidelines provides useful information on how to format the abstract, select keywords, and several other important tips. 

More bookmarks:  http://www.delicious.com/I.see.regions.work

Regional Communities - "Think Local Planet, Act Regionally." 

#441 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Tue Jun 14, 2011 5:45 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - June 12 & 13, 2011
regionswork
Send Email Send Email
 

1. Slow down, partner up - Tbnewswatch


Patience and partnerships are the key to regional economic development says Stuart Trundle.


And he should know.


The CEO of Venture Taranaki Trust saw his region in western New Zealand go from having the lowest socio-economic indicators in the country to the highest in one decade. Like Northwestern Ontario, Trundle said his region had high unemployment rates and high out-migration to places like Australia before regional economic development started to increase growth rates, salaries and create over 15,000 new jobs in a region of 109,000 people.


The road to economic development had disasters and tribulations, ... key to its success was partnerships between the public and private sectors.


"A new model a new paradigm between the private sector the public sector, that's both local and central governments, but more importantly the community," Trundle said Monday at Fort William Historical Park, a key-note speaker at the province's Think North II conference.



"I think it's actually engaging every single element of your community in the governance process, in the long term planning, that you can really achieve your true aspirations as a province or a region."


One danger is moving a regional economic development plan too quickly Trundle said.


Communities are often tempted to move into strategy before even identifying what a region wants and where the decision-making will come from. What needs to be fixed, what needs to be achieved and finding the proper talent are all necessary questions that need to be answered.


"If there's a piece of learning I think it's learning to have run very slowly in these processes. It is a 25 and 50 year horizon for communities to really make significant turns, " he said.


"Sometimes there's a danger of dumbing down your aspirations and perhaps also thinking too short term around political life cycles rather than intergenerationally," he said. 

...


2. GUEST COLUMN: Time to open dialogue between California, Nevada | Tahoe Daily Tribune


In the final hours of the 2011 Nevada State Legislative Session, the bill known as SB 271 passed, bringing with it opportunities for the two states that bound Lake Tahoe to reinvigorate the spirit of compromise that created the Tahoe Regional Planning Compact more than 40 years ago. The bi-state consensus that brought about that original agreement was no doubt hard-fought, and when Lake Tahoe's future is in the balance, the spirit of compromise has succeeded in bringing the two states together in a significant way.


SB 271 is the latest signal sounding that Lake Tahoe's future is currently in the balance. Discussing bi-state consensus is again in order, but the pressing issues are different. Forty years ago, the problems were rampant growth and a lack of environmental controls on new development. Change was needed.


Today, Lake Tahoe faces an outmoded economic base, aging infrastructure, and the need for a stormwater control program to restore lake clarity that could cost up to $1.5 billion over the next 20 years. Throughout the proceedings on SB 271, the Nevada legislators and stakeholders who worked on this bill showed clearly that they want to protect Lake Tahoe. But they also want TRPA to again be the solution, not the roadblock, to needed changes at Lake Tahoe.


Rather than look at this legislation as a negative, the better view is for the community to see the encouraging possibilities for reasonable reforms it opens up for us.
...

— Joanne S. Marchetta is the executive director of the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency.



3. County decides to move forward on forensic center | center, county, forensic - Odessa American Online


Ector County Commissioners approved moving ahead with taking over the Permian Basin Forensic Center and operating it as regional consortium ...
County Judge Susan Redford said the offer by the center's parent company to donate $665,000 to Ector County in building, furniture, supplies and equipment would have expired ...


"It's not a good deal for us alone," Redford said.


The Permian Basin Regional Planning Commission has been working with the county to set up this regional group. The PB Regional Planning Commission is a forum for promoting intergovernmental cooperation, coordination and regional planning to address area-wide problems.


Under the plan, Ector County would be the host county and other counties would buy in by paying an annual fee and the cost of the autopsies. Redford said she would form a committee with the regional planning commission to develop a regional model for venture. Twenty-nine counties used the forensic center when it was open. ...
...


4. Lowry welcomes 'fantastic' boost for region - The Irish Times


The €460 million casino and leisure development proposed for Two-Mile-Borris will provide a huge economic fillip to Tipperary and the wider region, ...


"It's fantastic news," ... decision to grant permission to the Tipperary Venue, albeit without the 15,000-capacity indoor entertainment venue and against the recommendation of the board's inspector.


An Taisce, which led opposition to the Tipperary Venue, said that the "split decision" of the board in granting permission to some elements of the project contravened the National Spatial Strategy policy of locating new development in existing designated regional centres, and national climate and transport policy in curtailing car-based development.


... the country has over-capacity of 15,000 hotel bedrooms. "The decision exacerbates the spectre of ghost developments. Once more this is evidence of short-term expediency and developer-led planning overriding national spatial plan and regional planning guidelines,"
...


5. Stegmaier aims to improve life in county, region | Richmond Times-Dispatch


Chesterfield County Administrator James J.L. "Jay" Stegmaier is a passionate man.
...
Ask him about regionalism, which tops his current list of pet projects, and he ... delivers a reasoned explanation for how and why he's able to work, mostly behind the scenes, on quality-of-life issues in Chesterfield and surrounding localities.


... Stegmaier has been a visible and vocal presence on a wide variety of regional issues, commissions and groups.


... Greater Richmond Chamber, the Capital Region Collaborative and Leadership Metro Richmond, among other groups that have worked in recent years to solve regional problems and to improve the quality of life in the area.
...
He says the Board of Supervisors, ... has made regionalism a priority, too. And the leadership in neighboring localities, he said, is amenable to open, honest and occasionally tough conversations about what the area needs.


Some of that, he said, has come about because of a consistency in county leadership.
...


6. Regional habitat plan moving forward - San Antonio Express-News


The Southern Edwards Plateau Habitat Conservation Plan ... has been on residents' radar all year, beginning with a standing-room-only crowd that filled the Kendall County Commissioners courtroom on Feb. 14 to warn that San Antonio shouldn't look to Kendall County's private property resources to offset damage to the habitat of endangered species.


At issue is the plan's vision to voluntarily set aside some acreage for endangered species to mitigate, or offset, development in northern Bexar County.


The city of San Antonio and Bexar County are seeking an Incidental Take Permit from the U.S. Department of the Interior's Fish & Wildlife Service. An incidental take permit is the agency's stamp of approval for development to proceed despite damage to endangered species and/or their habitats.


As part of the permit process, land would have to be purchased and set aside elsewhere in the region to offset the potential damage of development.
...


7. DuPage County Airport a model for regional airport excellence - Welcome to the FastLane: The Official Blog of the U.S. Secretary of Transportation


Last month, I spoke with members of the Regional Airline Association about the important role regional airports play in American aviation and in our economy.


Regional airports operate more than 13,000 flights a day, which amounts to more than half of all commercial flights nationwide. These airports are also home to the regional airlines that allow Americans to fly where national carriers cannot afford to serve. They connect millions of us to family and friends; they connect local businesses to national markets. They also provide a base for many corporate aircraft fleets and serve as vital reliever hubs for our metropolitan 
airports.


Yesterday, I visited the DuPage County Airport, one of America's busiest general aviation airports and a terrific example of the benefits regional airports provide their communities.
...


8. TIS Committee Focuses on Regional Collaboration, Transportation Reauthorization | National League of Cities


NLC's Transportation Infrastructure and Services (TIS) Steering Committee met last week in Kansas City, Mo., to work on authorization, transportation finance, regulatory streamlining and goods movement and to discuss the importance of regional collaboration and cooperation.


... discussions on alternatives to the federal fuel tax, strengthening metropolitan planning organizations (MPOs) and proposals to change the threshold for becoming and remaining an MPO.


...TIS also held a joint session with the Information Technology and Communications Steering Committee on Kansas City initiatives that use information technology for improving transportation programs. Operation Greenlight coordinates traffic across the region to reduce fuel consumption and accidents and emissions.


... successes and challenges faced by the region's coordinating body, the Mid America Regional Council (MARC), which seeks to improve connectivity and fill the gaps in transportation in the region.
...


9. Shining Light award an honor for regional leaders | Detroit Free Press | freep.com


Spotlighting exceptional people doing outstanding work that uplifts the region is what the Shining Light Awards are all about, and the nomination process is currently under way.
...


The Free Press and the Metropolitan Affairs Coalition, a group of business, government and labor leaders, cosponsor the annual awards.
...
Inspired by longtime Free Press editor and publisher Neal Shine, the Shining Light Awards are presented in his memory and honor individuals who make important contributions to regional cooperation, progress and understanding in metro Detroit.


...


10. Guest voice: Why Erie needs to ramp up historic preservation - Local Columns - Erie Times-News


Many in Erie believe that demolition and more parking lots represent the best way to foster redevelopment of our urban core. ... Six years ago, regional leaders claimed the EMI demolition would attract a taxpaying manufacturer and good jobs. Instead, we have a nice football field in the heart of Erie's historic industrial corridor, with few jobs, and zero tax dollars.
...
The demolition-as-jobs strategy ignores the well-documented fact that across the country, preservation-restoration projects generate many more local jobs than new construction projects. If Erie's political and economic development leaders are seeking to create jobs, they should do what so many other cities have done so effectively: Formulate a policy-driven and multifaceted strategy to adaptively reuse the industrial, commercial, civic, sacred and residential buildings that have been part of our city and this region for generations.
...


11.  New report outlines potential for lakeside areas - Post-Tribune


Identifying projects with the most potential to rejuvenate an industrial corridor of Southeast Chicago and Northwest Indiana is the aim of a report released Monday.


The Urban Land Institute and the Northwest Indiana Regional Development Authority prioritized projects extending from the former U.S. Steel South Works site in Chicago to the company's plant in Gary. ...


"We spent time looking at projects already on the drawing board," said Paul Shadle, co-chair of Urban Land Institute Chicago's infrastructure committee.


The architects of the plan held onto the idea that future success of the corridor is dependent on Illinois and Indiana working together.
...


"The big recognition that we have today is we are on the same team," RDA Executive Director Bill Hanna said. "At the end of the day the bottom line is we are on the same page, pushing in the same direction and asking the right questions."
...




12. Regional transportation plan is still too vague for citizens | The Tennessean


A "Long Range Transportation Plan" has been adopted by those with a vested interest in transit and growth ( "Music jams, traffic jams: Consider mass transit," June 7). Attendance at public meetings revealed little if any interest, by John and Jane Citizen, homeowners and neighborhood associations, etc. Why? It's too long-range for them — 25 years!


As for the "free" Music City Circuit — it is free at the fare box, for the rider. To be complete and objective, tell us what it is costing per rider.


Current planning merely takes us to the lifestyles of other mega-metropolitan areas that don't have the appeal of the Nashville of today. Let's take advantage of their mistakes, instead of repeating them.


Some cities such as Atlanta have state-of-the-art transit and still have traffic congestion — an end product of growth. A challenge to our political leaders and media: Tell us the complete intent of the plan. Tell us what will happen if the plan isn't executed.
...


13. Watershed planning can prove rewarding | The Columbus Dispatch


More than 1,500 square miles of central Ohio are a blank slate, waiting for locals to decide what land they'd like to preserve, cultivate or develop.


The Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission has asked local officials, residents and business owners to create maps in five watersheds, identifying areas for priority development, conservation and agriculture - a process called "balanced growth planning."


With central Ohio expected to gain population, making a plan now can help in the future, MORPC associate planner Erin Grushon said.
...


Balanced growth was launched in 2005 by the Ohio Lake Erie Commission in four northeastern Ohio watersheds. The plans were endorsed by the state two years ago, meaning that communities are eligible for state incentives if they follow the maps' plans.
...


14. Are Businesses Fleeing the Suburbs? -  INFRASTRUCTURIST


Crain's is predicting the fall of the "the suburban corporate headquarters campus." At least that appears to be the case in the metropolitan Chicago region. A number of big companies — including Sears, AT&T, Motorola, and Sara Lee — are eyeing a return from their suburban compounds to the Windy City. The trend reflects a new "corporate mindset," writes Crain's in a special report:


As the 21st century enters its second decade, many companies are discovering the drawbacks of the isolation they sought. Hard-to-get-to headquarters limit the talent pool a company can draw on and feed a "not-invented-here" insularity that ignores major shifts in industries and markets.


The reason for such moves, writes Christopher Leinberger at The Avenue, is that the "millennial generation" insists on living and working in walkable cities:
...


15. North Eastern Council prepares tourism roadmap - The Assam Tribune Online


Regional planning body North Eastern Council (NEC) has prepared a master plan for the development of tourism in India's northeastern region, an official said here on Monday.


"The draft master plan will be discussed in the NEC meeting in New Delhi later this week," NEC director (human resource development) Sherry Lalthangzo said in a statement. "The master plan was prepared as per the 'NER Vision 2020' by the Tata Consultancy Services (TCS)," she added.


The 'NER Vision 2020' document, announced by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in July 2009, sought to spur investment, reduce poverty, enhance connectivity and bring the backward northeastern region on par with the rest of the country by 2020. A total of Rs 14 trillion will be required to implement the project.
...


16. Dump the Pump Day to promote public transportation | Pensacola News Journal


In light of high gas prices, Escambia County Area Transit will join other public transportation systems nationwide to participate in the sixth annual National Dump the Pump Day on Thursday.


This year's slogan is "Dump the Pump. Save Money. Ride Transit."


...


ECAT's general manager and a representative from the West Florida Regional Planning Council will speak about the importance of public transportation and a proclamation will be presented.


... Dump the Pump is sponsored by the American Public Transportation Association (APTA). The 2011 National Dump the Pump Day encourages people to ride public transportation and save money, instead of driving a car.


Started in June 2006, when gas prices were $3 per gallon, this national day emphasizes that public transportation is a great travel option that also helps people save money.
...


17. Group hopes to find keys to regional growth - pottsmerc.com


Are you unemployed? Underemployed? Have your buying habits changed? ...


... president of the Chesapeake Group, the consulting firm hired by the Pottstown Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Committee to help figure out how to make the most of this sluggish economy.
...
The idea is to get a picture of the market in the eight municipalities that comprise the group, as well as the surrounding area, to help determine what kind of businesses should be encouraged, and what kind don't stand a change or are already amply represented.


And to get that information, they need your help. The study will be based on a survey that is online ...
...
"This information is extremely important for our fiscal impact strategy,"..."and we hope to use this information to help figure out how many businesses this region a can really support."
"the world has changed very rapidly and there is no good data out there to understand how this economy has put stress on families."
...


18.  8th Annual Conference of Technipolicy Network - Open Innovation for Regional Development  - 26-28 September 2011, Tampere, Finland




Financial Crisis 
19.  Stephen Zarlenga: How the Economists Facilitated the Crisis and Must Now Be Held Accountable - Huffington Post

The ongoing financial crisis presents a rare opportunity for monetary and banking reform. There's no denying that the present "Economics Regime" has been a key cause of the pain, suffering, illness and even death inflicted on America's less affluent; and of the worldwide economic destruction. It's important that the economics profession be held to account for its part in this crisis. This was well expressed by economist James K. Galbraith in his testimony to the Senate Crime Subcommittee on May 4th, 2010:  


"I write to you from a disgraced profession. Economic theory, as widely taught since the 1980s, failed miserably to understand the forces behind the financial crisis." With rare exceptions, those in control of the world's monetary/economic agenda and the theories supporting it have helped bring the world to its knees. Shouldn't they and their theories be held accountable?
... 


Which particular monetary error is most responsible for the tragedies? In our view, the most glaring error is that economists have not understood or appreciated the difference between money and credit.
... 


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Regional Communities - "Think Local Planet, Act Regionally." 

#442 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Wed Jun 15, 2011 5:51 pm
Subject: Regional Community Development News - June 14, 2011
regionswork
Send Email Send Email
 
1. Visiting business leaders preach the gospel of regionalism - St. Louis Beacon


If St. Louis area business and government leaders needed any more reasons to embrace the gospel of regional cooperation to boost economic development, they got a powerful sermon on Tuesday: Other regions already are way out front.


Economic development experts from other regions met with St. Louis region business and government leaders to stress the importances of working together.


That was the lesson taught by economic development experts from Kansas City, Nashville and Oklahoma City. ... hammered home the point that intramural turf battles can't do anything but hurt a metropolitan area's efforts to attract businesses from an outside world that is focused on a much larger picture.


... chief economic development and marketing officer for the Nashville area chamber of commerce, put it: "Fighting is nothing but risk, and risk is the enemy of economic development."


... Kansas City Area Development Council: "We have to approach what we do as a region. We can't do it any other way."


...


2. Amazon's goal to eclipse 2,000 jobs - Business - The Sun News


Online retailer Amazon is looking to bring more jobs than the initial payroll of 2,000 to a distribution center it is opening this fall ...


..."We have a history of growing in states that welcome us. We want to grow here."


That goal was announced near the conclusion of a daylong celebration of Amazon's arrival in the Midlands, a gathering that seemed unlikely after a legislative setback in late April.


... credited the determination of area business and political leaders to revive a tax break for the $125 million project as a turning point in the conflict.
...
Lexington County leaders say the resurrection of the project taught them ways to better work together. 


It broke longtime barriers to regional cooperation, County Councilman Johnny Jeffcoat of Irmo said.


"This is the catalyst that brought it all together," Setzler said. Those ties will be useful in the future,


"This is the issue of today," he said. "Tomorrow, there will be another."


3. EDITORIAL: Regional economic development the right path to growth | The Jackson Sun


When it comes to economic development, bigger is better. That is why metropolitan areas such as Memphis, Nashville and Chattanooga manage to attract big corporate investments, expansions and economic growth. These are tough business environments for smaller communities to compete against. That's why the regional approach to economic development involving Jackson-Madison County and several other West Tennessee cities and counties make sense.


Jackson has long been the economic hub of West Tennessee outside of Memphis-Shelby County. Even a community the size of Jackson-Madison County is hard pressed to compete with large urban areas. But when you begin to think regionally, rural West Tennessee becomes a more attractive potential business environment.


Non-urban areas can have advantages over large urban areas. ...


Gov. Bill Haslam has placed great emphasis on regional economic development by establishing nine regional centers to promote economic growth. ...
...


4. Region strives to be wind energy hub | The Columbian


A wind energy supply chain is emerging in the Portland-Vancouver region as manufacturers and economic development agencies step up efforts to win a growing piece of the global wind energy market.


..., regional economic development agencies, including the Columbia River Economic Development Council and the Portland Development Commission, are offering companies renewable energy training programs and are talking up the region at global wind power trade shows.
...


Most of the wind turbines in the U.S. are imported from foreign manufacturers, largely in China and Europe. Yet, regional wind energy boosters hope to make the Portland-Vancouver region a hub for the manufacture, installation, repair and maintenance of wind energy components.


The work to get there is under way. ...


5. Plans envision Pittsburgh airport of future | Pittsburgh Business Times


A pedestrian-friendly world trade center on Pittsburgh International Airport grounds. The green redevelopment of University Boulevard in Moon Township. The creation of a new high-tech town at the now-rural corner of Routes 22/30 and the Findlay Connector. These are some of the plans that could jump from the drawing board to reality in and around Pittsburgh International Airport within the next three or four decades.


... The idea is to create a Pittsburgh Aerotropolis, an economic region centered around an airport that combines the best of industrial, commercial, educational and residential development. The term was coined by John Kasarda, of the Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise at the University of North Carolina, who addressed the conference Monday at Robert Morris University.


There are already Aerotropolises in Dallas, Dubai, Hong Kong and, most notably, Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
...


6. Bernard Ginns: Teamwork the key to delivering the goods in business - Business News - Yorkshire Post


THE Yorkshire International Business Convention is supposed to be about inspirational speakers inspiring an audience of Yorkshire business leaders.


But it was difficult to feel inspired about the local enterprise partnerships, whose chairmen took part in a debate at the conference.


... it is about the distinct lack of regional coherency in the whole set-up.


Mike Firth, the YIBC organiser, summed up the problem in his opening remarks.


"We have a real issue in Yorkshire with the demise of the regional development agency. I think we have lost our voice.


"Whatever you thought of Yorkshire Forward, it was connected to London. I'm really concerned that control is being moved back to London."


Mr Firth added: "We need business to stand up and shout for Yorkshire."


He's right. Someone or something has to step into the void and promote the many interests of this unique region.


...


7. The Daily Home - Population rise draws talks of redistricting


PELL CITY — The City Council began formal talks about redistricting for next year's election after the 2010 census showed a substantial increase in the city's population.


Brett Isom, a geographic information systems administrator for the Regional Planning Commission of Greater Birmingham, told the council Monday night that the city saw 33-34 percent growth since the last census, which will require a new form of government after the 2012 election.


"There's no reason to think we can't keep five districts," Isom said.


The Regional Planning Commission helped the city re-establish voting districts after the 2000 census came out.


"We were able to maintain a minority district," Isom said.
...


8. Council delays funding of Charlotte Regional Visitors Authority | The Charlotte Observer Newspaper


The Charlotte City Council passed its $1.6 billion budget Monday night, but voted to withhold $10 million slated for the Charlotte Regional Visitors Authority because of concerns with oversight at the city's tourism arm.
...
The CRVA board in April had voted to hire a consultant to review its operations after the Observer reported a staff member had been given $115,000 in bonus payments from the CIAA basketball tournament. In addition, the consultant, PricewaterhouseCoopers, was to review the authority's spending. The Observer reported that the CRVA spends money on local business leaders and public officials for dinners, drinks, sports and concert tickets as "thank you" gifts.


But after paying PricewaterhouseCoopers $25,000 plus expenses, the CRVA said it had no written report from the firm. Instead, it released to the media a 21/2-page summary of the consultant's findings, written by board members. 


The summary had few details.
...


9. Regional Group Greenlights Three Major Transportation Studies in Jersey City | The Jersey City Independent


Bus Rapid Transit to Journal Square, a bikeway along the Morris Canal and permanent mass transit into the heart Liberty State Park — these are the major transportation issues soon to be examined in Jersey City, now that the North Jersey Transportation Planning Authority (NJTPA) has authorized three new local studies as part of its Fiscal Year 2010-11 work program.
...
The studies are part of the NJTPA's Subregional Studies Program, a competitive grant program designed to help counties and cities develop transportation improvement strategies rooted in the NJTPA's Regional Transportation Plan. The Liberty State Park and Morris Canal studies are estimated to cost $220,000 each, and the BRT study is estimated to cost $250,000, with funding beginning on July 1 and stretching over two years. All three studies will be paid for primarily with federal funds.
...


10. Area seeing more transit than road projects for first time - Post-Tribune


For the first time, local transit projects outnumber road projects in the 2012 to 2015 Transportation Implementation Program, Northwestern Indiana Regional Planning Commission directors said Tuesday.


"When people say transit is dying, we're increasing it," NIRPC director of planning Steve Strains said. "One hundred ninety-three is a significant number of transit projects."


The 2012-2015 transportation improvement plan includes 193 transit projects, 161 local projects and 93 Indiana Department of Transportation highway projects.


While there are a greater number of transit projects, more funds are going to local and INDOT highway projects. ...




Iowa Workforce Development is shutting down 37 field offices statewide, despite top legislators from both political parties saying they oppose the plan.

The plan is expected to affect rural parts of the state the most. Lawmakers say it would cause some unemployed Iowans to have to drive up to 80 miles to one of 16 regional workforce development offices, rather than having a satellite 
office that's closer to home.
...
Iowa Workforce Development Communications Coordinator Katie Hommer on Thursday told IowaPolitics.com that the budget plan calls for shutting 37 offices statewide, or two fewer than the original plan of closing 39 offices. A February news release from the department described it as a "reformed and enhanced delivery system" that would turn 55 field offices into "16 regional integrated one-stop offices and over 500 locally enhanced access points.
...



12. USL outlook on administration and regional development includes three stages till 2016 - Romanian News Agency


The outlook of the opposition Social Liberal Union (USL) on the public administration and regional development will be implemented in three stages, till 2016, but only after a referendum is held and the Constitution is amended, ...


In 2012 they should start transferring tasks from the central government to the regions and the Ministry of Regional Development is dissolved. In 2014 the local authorities will elect a regional council, headed by a regional chairman, and there will be a transition period till 2016 in order to take over the funds control.


In the USL outlook the central government retains regulating and controlling tasks and everything pertaining to development must devolve on the provinces.


Every region must have a big university, a big hospital, an airport, a business centre and a cultural centre, suggests USL.
...






The Parties to the Nauru Agreement (PNA) has once again shown that regionalism is very much alive and can work well for the benefit of the people of nations that choose to co-operate in the true spirit of the norms agreed upon by concerned signatories.
...
Last month, the Solomon Islands decided to close its territorial waters to international purse seiner vessels fishing in them. Observers are hailing this decision as one of the toughest stands taken by a Pacific Islands nation in favour of sustainable fisheries and in co-operating with other signatory member nations of the Parties of the Nauru Agreement.
...



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Regional Communities - "Think Local Planet, Act Regionally." 

#443 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Thu Jun 16, 2011 8:39 pm
Subject: Regional Community Development News - June 15, 2011
regionswork
Send Email Send Email
 

1. Regionalism Run Rampant - Madison Magazine


My team and I are privileged to work with cities and companies across North America that are bent on staying—or becoming—magnets for great talent. We've worked in large cities like Nashville and small towns like Johnstown, Pennsylvania. No matter the size of the community, I've noticed a trend that's both promising and problematic: regionalism.


Regionalism occurs when two or more cities, towns,villages, counties and so forth, decide to work together, usually on economic development. The rationale seems so simple, so intuitive: together, we can do more. There are also financial incentives: many federal and state grants require cities and counties to work together to apply for or receive funds. But like all good ideas, execution is what matters most, and I see some communities suffering from Regionalism Run Rampant. It is a precursor to the epidemic of Diluted Strategy and its even more deadly cousin, Disengaged Leadership.


To illustrate Regionalism Run Rampant let's ...


2. New 100-year vision effort launched - Sign On San Diego


Capping a century of regional planning efforts, the San Diego Foundation is taking a different route to mapping the local future — a plan with a built-in implementation strategy.
...
Called "Our Greater San Diego Vision," the initiative being launched at San Diego State University today involves four task forces, 150 "ambassadors" and $2 million in a high-tech-driven outreach to the public that coincidentally will end at the beginning of the 2012 election season.


"We care about San Diego, and we want to bring the parties together and try to move to a conclusion," said Bill Geppert, chairman of the 13-member steering committee. "San Diego is such a great place, and yet it does take an inordinate amount of time to move through and make important decisions. Other communities have been more successful in doing it quicker. Denver built 10 major infrastructure projects in a 12-year period of time."
...


3. A Power Grab Threat to New Canaan's Autonomy - New Canaan, CT Patch


Are we headed toward a return to county government? 


A Government "Power Grab" hurts job growth, the economy and stocks. There is an effort to convert the South Western Regional Planning Agency (SWRPA) to a Council of Governments (COG).


SWRPA was organized to coordinate regional cooperation on inter-municipal issues of transportation, housing, community development, environment and open space and has no binding votes.


The effort, supported by New Canaan's First Selectman, would create a COG with "binding votes" on its eight members. Governor Dannel Malloy has instructed his appointed Office of Policy and Management to approach elected officials in Fairfield County to vote in favor of the COG so that approval could be completed before the fall elections that could see changes among the SWRPA CEO's.


The creation of a COG is the first step towards a return to county government empowered to control New Canaan's municipal finances and allocate our tax dollars to regional COG programs benefiting the larger towns such as Norwalk and Stamford. There is movement to include Bridgeport in the Southwestern Connecticut Regional COG. The COG would be empowered to propose regional taxes such as a county property tax or sales tax to fund its programs. ... increase in taxes would further hurt the "soft" real estate prices and retail businesses. ...


4. Strategic Direction For Waikato Regional Development | Voxy 


Waikato Regional Council this week outlined a new strategic direction for regional development aimed at protecting the environment and boosting regional export growth and income.
...
From the early 1900s to 1970, New Zealand had a standard of living above the OECD average and on par with Australia. However, since then the gap in GDP per capita between New Zealand and Australia has widened. Average incomes in New Zealand are now 30 per cent lower than in Australia, despite New Zealanders working longer hours.


The Waikato GDP per capita dropped below the national level for the first time in 2007 and the gap is projected to widen over time.


"One major challenge for the region is to determine the best ways to contribute to the national goal of lifting New Zealand's standards of living," Cr Buckley said.


5. Coquitlam councillor Selina Robinson still seeking clarity on Regional Growth Strategy | Vancouver, Canada | Straight


Coquitlam remains the only Metro Vancouver municipality that has not ratified the Regional Growth Strategy. That's because the municipality has a number of concerns around the landmark regional planning document.


Tuesday (June 14) marked the first meeting between Coquitlam council members and Metro Vancouver staff to seek a solution via non-binding arbitration.


Metro did not allow Coquitlam to switch its cameras on at City Hall to record the proceedings, according to Coun. Selina Robinson. However, Gerry McGuire, from a group called VCVYV—Vancouver Citizens Voice TV—filmed the meeting and posted several segments on YouTube.


In her remarks stating the case for Coquitlam, Robinson honed in once again on lands that are deemed "regionally significant", an ongoing concern for the first-term councillor.


"I certainly struggled, and our council certainly struggled, around what it means to be regionally significant," ...


6. Leadership Northern Colorado prepares for graduation | Northern Colorado Business Report


Leadership Northern Colorado has announced the graduation of its second class from the six-month program designed to educate participants on the issues facing the Northern Colorado region.
...
Leadership Northern Colorado is a joint initiative between the chambers of commerce in the cities of Fort Collins, Greeley, Loveland, the Community Foundation of Northern Colorado and the Community Foundation Serving Greeley and Weld County. LNC is designed to build human capacity and identify, define and address issues in Northern Colorado.




7. Homeland Security funding approved for regional towns- The Register Citizen


After some previous hesitation by local officials voicing support for a spending plan by the state's Department of Emergency Services and Homeland Security Region 5, the budget passed "overwhelmingly," officials say.


According to Region 5 Coordinator Tom Vannini, the region's representatives approved the DEMHS Regional Collaboration fiscal year 2010 grant, which provides funds to planning projects, training and equipment for public safety and emergency management. The federal grant totals $856,875 ...


The spending plan faced some concerns last week by the fiscally-conservative members of the Litchfield Council of Elected Officials (LHCEO), claiming the money was being wasted on unneeded items such as license plate readers for police vehicles and pole cameras for bridges, roofs and underground.


According to the spending plan, $45,000 is being used for the cameras and $168,875 for the license plate readers.


8. Plan for regional cooperation demonstration zone published - People's Daily Online


China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) yesterday published the construction plan for the country's first trans-regional cooperation demonstration zone, which will be located in Lianyungang, east China's Jiangsu Province, ...


... Lianyungang Municipal Government held an introduction and promotion conference in Beijing to show the planning of the demonstration zone and the achievements of coastal development in that city.


The establishment of the demonstration zone to enhance economic cooperation among the country's east, central and western regions will help to make the best of the city's position as a seaport at the beginning of the new Eurasian Continental Bridge and to serve the development of open economy in China's central and western regions. It will also benefit the trans-regional flow and allocation of resources, providing experiences and acting as an example for the promotion of the integrated development among China's eastern, central and western regions.


9. Terrace Standard - Future of the northwest discussed at conference


CITY COUNCILLOR Bruce Bidgood spoke about the future of northwestern BC at a regional development conference being held in the mid-northern city of Ostersund, Sweden today.


He underlined the Northwest Transmission Line and the mines it is intended to stimulate, modernization of Rio Tinto Alcan's Kitimat aluminum smelter, the Kitimat liquefied natural gas plant and plans by Avanti to re-open a molybdenum deposit at Kitsault as examples of underway or pending industrial projects.


The conference is focussing on growing green technology and policies being applied to business and industry and is sponsored by local and regional governments in mid-northern Sweden and by the European Union.
...


"We have trees and lots of biomass," said Bidgood.
...
As a municipal councillor, Bidgood summarized Terrace's future as a series of questions, keying on how to develop an economy that is not subject to what has been a traditional boom and bust cycle.
...


10. MEPs seek to maintain regional aid spending | European Voice


The Parliament warns against shrinking the budget for cohesion policies.


MEPs are expected next week to urge EU member states to keep regional aid spending at current levels in the EU's post-2013 spending.


The European Parliament is scheduled to approve five reports on cohesion and regional policy during its 22-23 June mini-plenary in Brussels. One of the reports, drafted for the regional development committee by Markus Pieper, a German centre-right MEP, insists that a "well funded" cohesion policy continues to be essential to reduce regional economic disparities across the EU.


The report sees regional aid as a way of helping to meet the goals of the Europe 2020 jobs and growth strategy, and it suggests some simplification of the rules on allocating this funding, and greater flexibility in its use. But member states should manage the aid better, the report adds.
...




11. Myrtle Beach Regional Economic Development Corp - Business - The Sun News


The Myrtle Beach Regional Economic Development Corp. executive committee Wednesday gave the go-ahead to negotiate to buy a property and to hire a consultant to create a plan that will identify properties the group should buy to lure businesses.
...
The committee voted to have Lofton talk to consultants who could evaluate what new buildings the corporation should consider building, what land it should consider purchasing and what existing buildings may add to the corporation's ability to attract businesses.


The EDC has $60,000 budgeted for consultants next year, pending final approval by the Horry County Council of $1.8 million in funding, which will be voted on next week.


The consultant would make recommendations that would steer the corporation's spending on property purchases, Lofton said.
...


12. HUD and EPA Collaborate on the Promotion of Sustainable Housing | Mortgage News 


U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Shaun Donovan and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lisa Jackson have announced a collaborative effort to build upon current federal investments for regions that support sustainable and livable communities. For the first time ever, HUD and EPA will join forces to competitively award $5.65 million to strengthen the capacity of existing sustainable communities grantees to create more housing choices, make transportation more efficient and reliable, and support vibrant and healthy neighborhoods for American families.
...
Applications for the NOFA are due July 8, 2011. Non-profit organizations, local or state public agencies, for-profit organizations, nationally recognized and accredited Universities or Colleges, or any combination of eligible entities as a Capacity Building Team are eligible to apply for funding.


Notice of funding availability (NOFA)


13. Contemporary Northwest Art Awards -- The limits of regionalism | Oregon Live


Walking through the Portland Art Museum's second iteration of the Contemporary Northwest Art Awards, which opened last Saturday, I found myself wondering if, in 2011, such a thing as regional art exists.


The ease of global communication and travel coupled with the sheer volume of information at our fingertips has made contemporary art discourse accessible to artists everywhere. If the distance between major art markets and second- and third-tier outliers is erased, then how much of a role does geography actually play in cultivating a region's aesthetic sensibility?


The CNAAs, which replaced the museum's Oregon Biennial surveys, assert that regionalism is, indeed, alive and well, insistently carving out an identity for the Northwest that extends from Oregon and Washington to Idaho, Montana and Wyoming.
...


14. Hassinger honored with 2011 Outstanding Service Award by Central Mass Regional Planning Commission


Grafton man-of-all-boards, Robert Hassinger, was honored recently by the Central Mass Regional Planning Commission with the 2011 Outstanding Service Award.


Hassinger was recognized for his 20 years of contributions through dedicated service and leadership to the commission and its executive, transportation and physical development committees.
...




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Regional Communities - "Think Local Planet, Act Regionally."

#444 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Sun Jun 19, 2011 7:08 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - June 16-18, 2011
regionswork
Send Email Send Email
 

1. Editorial: It's imperative for Florida officials to keep funding unchanged for state's 11 regional planning councils » TCPalm


The 2011 Legislature essentially dismantled state oversight of growth planning issues — and Gov. Rick Scott is wasting no time formalizing lawmakers' dubious handiwork.
...
There are three levels of government — local, regional and state — that planned growth projects must clear on their way to becoming actual developments. (In some cases, depending on the project, federal approvals also may be required.)


The Legislature and the governor may have eviscerated state oversight of growth planning issues, but at least they're leaving intact the next link in the chain of authority: regional planners.


Well, not really.
...


Florida lawmakers can restore funding for the regional planning councils by overriding Scott's decision with a two-thirds vote. This is the proper, logical course of action.


In the absence of adequate state oversight of growth planning issues, the regional component becomes more — not less — important.


2. $200,000 available for collaborative development efforts | The Tidewater News


When it comes to economic development, state officials believe it's better to work together.


Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development officials will award money for economic development to localities or regions that team up and come up with the best economic development proposal, said Chris Thompson, program manager.


The General Assembly has budgeted $200,000 for the Building Collaborative Communities program, which will entice localities to use regional assets to attract business.


"You can end up losing out on opportunities when localities go against each other," Thompson said. "The ultimate aim is to make regions more competitive and focus on regional collaboration."


Teams have until July 27 to submit proposals to the state, Thompson said. The money will go to the top two or three regions. The department is open to proposals based on several factors including strategic planning, capacity building and organizational building.


...


3.  Supes refuse to participate in regional study | Mountain Democrat


A 3-2 vote Tuesday kept El Dorado County out of the process of formally supporting study projects proposed by the Sacramento Area Council of Governments. ...


Many people in the audience had attended the May supervisors' meeting and expressed grave concerns at that time about the county getting any more involved with regional entities. Some were members of local Tea Party groups; others spoke for themselves. And their comments were heavily weighted toward fears that participation in regional issues is part of an insidious United Nations effort to create a "one world government" that ultimately would destroy American freedoms and private property.


....Agenda 21 developed by the U.N. ...as the foundation of sustainable development — also called "smart growth."
...


Supervisor Ron Briggs, who ... voted against the MOU, said, "We're losing our identity to regionalization. Ultimately this board is going to be neutered out of the planning process for ourselves."
...


4. Downtown Development is a Regional Priority - GTR Newspapers 


Time and again, research tells us that a community must have a vibrant, thriving core in order for the entire region to grow. Downtown Tulsa must be a "destination place" in order for Northeast Oklahoma to reach its potential.


It is not enough just to "keep up with the Joneses." Our peer cities and regions are also focusing on their downtowns, making it critical for Tulsa to successfully revitalize, develop and create one of the nation's preeminent business improvement districts.


The Tulsa Metro Chamber enlisted the assistance of an economic development consulting firm in 2008 to examine the Chamber's economic development plan, Tulsa's Future. The results showed that a more comprehensive, holistic approach must be adopted and must include community development – specifically that of downtown and the Arkansas River.


The Tulsa's Future Oversight Committee identified two primary goals for the plan's five-year period 2011-2015. The first goal is to create 10,000 primary, high-value jobs


5.  Biz Beat: Local foods distribution center in the works in Dane County


The appetite for locally-produced foods, especially in places like Madison, appears insatiable....


But getting more local products into the mainstream grocery supply chain has remained a challenge. It's one thing to sell tomatoes or spinach off the back of a truck versus getting them ready for the shelves at Roundy's.



Now, an effort is quietly moving forward in Dane County to develop a commercial-scale processing facility for local food items.


Plans call for a 15,000-square foot refrigerated "packing house" where fresh produce can be delivered, sorted, washed and prepared for distribution on a wider scale to large institutional buyers or retailers. .


.. the idea for a local food processing facility really started to take shape after the Capital Area Regional Planning Commission (CARPC) last fall landed a $2 million Sustainable Community Regional Planning Grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).


One project identified in the grant is preparing a business plan for "an aggregation, storage and distribution facility that connects growers in the Capitol Region with wholesale buyers in southern Wisconsin and northern Illinois for the purpose of preserving, strengthening and promoting local Wisconsin agriculture and improving food access in underserved communities."
...


6. Nevada sets 2015 deadline to withdraw from state agreement created to protect Lake Tahoe

Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval on Friday signed legislation, SB271, that poses harm for the decades-long effort to protect and restore Lake Tahoe.

The League to Save Lake Tahoe, also known as "Keep Tahoe Blue," is calling on Sandoval to now work closely with leaders in Nevada and California to ensure the bi-state agreement that protects Lake Tahoe's environment remains intact.

"This legislation undermines the movement to protect Lake Tahoe just at a time when environmental threats facing the Lake are the greatest," said Rochelle Nason, League executive director. "Climate change, urban runoff, invasive species, and catastrophic wildfire are all immediate threats to the Lake's sensitive ecosystem.This legislation threatens the cooperation needed to restore the Lake's environment, and ignores the will of citizens who love Lake Tahoe and want it protected."

...


7. Storm surge could threaten the local area - dailypress.com


A new report ... says that Gloucester, York, Hampton and Poquoson would be especially vulnerable to storm surge from a major hurricane.


Projected rises in sea level may only make the problem worse, according to the study by the Hampton Roads Planning District Commission. More than 1 million people could be affected if southeastern Virginia is struck by a Category 4 storm and local roads are crippled.


"While its location along the Mid-Atlantic coast protects it from the brunt of many tropical storms, when storms strike the area the effects can be quite damaging and incapacitating. Sea level rise will increase the threat from storm-induced flooding in addition to permanently inundating some areas. Accelerated rates of sea level rise due to climate change pose an even greater threat to the region," the report said.


In the past 100 years, sea levels have risen between 1 and 2 feet in much of the area. That is expected to continue into the future, regardless of climate change.


8. Road trips strike right chord for leadership - The Nashville Ledger


The Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce...conducts leadership study missions in which various community leaders embark upon a pilgrimage to a different city in order to observe and understand defined practices and policies of these communities.


Certainly each mission yields its own fruits, but few have been as productive as the visit to Denver two years and three cities ago. It was there that Mayor Dean was exposed to regional cooperation shared among the different municipalities in the Denver and the structure of the regional partnership. As a result of the trip, Mayor Dean formed the Regional Caucus of Mayors, an initiative lauded by the leadership of Nashville's surrounding counties.


Additionally, the delegation was educated as to the value that a convention center can bring to a city. Obviously that presentation did not fall on deaf ears. And we have the cranes to prove it, although negotiations were well under way.


Foremost, many were curious about Denver's mass transit.


10. State Helps Plan Countywide Health Coalition / iBerkshires - Berkshire County


The effort to create a countywide health coalition received a boost Friday with the announcement of a $29,000 planning grant.


Local boards of health have been discussing sharing services for years and now they can map out how the coalition would operate with the help of state funds.


"It's basically an organizational planning grant," Berkshire Regional Planning Commission Executive Director Nathaniel Karns said Friday. "Over the years public health board have been given more responsibility and most of our boards are volunteers."


The idea is basically for the smaller of the county towns to pool their resources together to handle inspections and administer programs. The local boards would still be in charge of setting policy while providing shared services for the whole county.


"What we're envisioning is an ala carte menu," Karns said. "I would expect there would be contractors or paid staff hired to do specific things."
...


11. Wilmington transforms into mountain bike mecca - NCPR News


The town of Wilmington in the Adirondacks is gearing up for a major mountain bike race this weekend.


The Wilmington/Whiteface 100K will serve as one of three qualifiers for the Leadville Trail 100 Mountain Bike Race - one of the largest and most prestigious mountain bike competitions in North America.


Jon Lundin, spokesman for the Olympic Regional Development Authority, said, "To have the Wilmington/Whiteface race be the first of the three races, it's huge for the region and it not only brings tremendous exposure about mountain biking to the area, but it brings world-class athletes back to Lake Placid and it's another super biking event for the region."
...
Jim McKenna, president of the Regional Office of Sustainable Tourism, said the Leadville qualifier will provide an economic boost for Wilmington and the Olympic region. He also said there's room for the event to grow.
...


12. Transportation Department announces Interstate 69 website » Corpus Christi Caller-Times


The Texas Department of Transportation has announced the start of a website and citizen outreach efforts for the proposed Interstate 69 project.


The website is www.txdot.gov/DrivenByTexans.


The proposed I-69 corridor runs from the Mexican border in the Rio Grande Valley to northeast Texas.


A group of regional planning committees has proposed using parts of existing highways for Interstate 69 development. They include U.S. Highways 59, 77, 84, and 281; and State Highway 44.




13. Maple Ridge News - Some thaw in chilly talks with Metro growth plan holdouts


There is softening but no breakthrough yet in the impasse between Metro Vancouver and Coquitlam council over the proposed regional growth strategy after two days of dispute resolution talks.


Coquitlam is the sole holdout city after every other municipality agreed to sign the master plan governing growth in the region for decades to come.


Coquitlam Mayor Richard Stewart warned smaller cities may be locked in with no way out, despite a requirement the Metro board consider reviewing the plan every five years.


Vancouver, Surrey and Burnaby together hold a majority of Metro board votes and could block a review indefinitely, he said during Thursday's meeting with Metro reps.


Coquitlam's proposed solution is to lower the bar for a review to a one-third vote of the Metro board, which Stewart said would allow 15 smaller cities representing a million-plus residents to force a rethink of the strategy.


"It's a 30-year document," Stewart said. "We've got a serious concern with that."
...


14. Getting real with regionalism in Parma and Parma Heights: Parma Sun Post editorial 

The mayors of Parma and Parma Heights agreed Monday to take a step toward a more regionalized approach to providing services to their residents by sharing some police resources. Parma Mayor Dean DePiero and Parma Heights Mayor Mike Byrne have worked out an agreement to handle the housing of jail prisoners in the case of overcrowding, borrow officers in investigative work, share investigation equipment and cooperate on the use of auxiliary units.

They are to be commended for taking these concrete steps at a time when local governments must do something for themselves in the face of the state's budget crunch and declining tax revenues. Cities will have less money to work with. Cuts in local budgets are simply not enough to cover these shortfalls.

While this agreement is not monumental in scope, it is a good example of taking this concept of regionalism and putting it into a simple, first-step action plan to, it is hoped, save some money and some jobs in both administrations. ...

15. Montgomery County commissioners hear plans on airfield at Willow Grove Naval Air Station - Public Spirit Willow Grove Guide - Montgomery News


Claims that a regional airport would stimulate the local economy fell on deaf ears Wednesday, as residents living near the Willow Grove Naval Air Station let it be known they are against having any kind of airport as a neighbor.


A crowd packed ... meeting room for a public hearing on the corporate airport proposal, where opponents raised the specter of plane crashes and round-the-clock noise from air traffic.


The Bucks County Airport Authority, which first brought the airport proposal to the commissioners in May, envision an aviation facility that would handle corporate jets and private planes. It was suggested the proposed facility be operated by a joint authority made up of Bucks and Montgomery counties.
...
Former Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission official Roger Moog said Willow Grove would be an excellent location for a regional airfield and claimed corporate jets that would use the runway are "very much quieter aircraft" than military and commercial planes.


16. Development officials urge localities to think regionally | The News Leader 


Regional and other local economic development officials also talked excitedly about upcoming projects in the region.


Robin Sullenberger, CEO of the Shenandoah Valley Partnership, said the agency is teaming up with the New River Valley Partnership and the Roanoke Valley Economic Development Partnership to market Instate 81 for development between Interstates 66 and 77. He said the partnership also hopes to bring more science, technology and engineering industries to the region.


17. L.A. Gridlock, Air Pollution Can Be Cut Significantly With Proven Solutions in Visionary Plan


Angelenos soon could enjoy clearer roads, easier access to jobs, clearer skies and an improved quality of life through the deployment and implementation of strategies set forth in a transportation plan released today by the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corporation (LAEDC) and Environmental Defense Fund (EDF).


"Vision Los Angeles: Accessing Los Angeles" is a consensus action plan designed to improve transportation access and mobility, and make housing and transportation more affordable, while improving air quality and reducing green house gas pollution. Nearly all of the 15 strategies in the plan are being used successfully somewhere in the world and build upon existing regional plans, including L.A. Mayor Villaraigosa's America Fast Forward initiative (formerly known as 30/10) whose goal is to complete 30 years of transit projects in 10 years.


By deploying the Vision Los Angeles strategies, the region can create tens of thousands of jobs in the construction sector. ...


18. Worcester Telegram & Gazette - telegram.com - Planners see transportation as continuing concern for MetroWest


Planning officials studying future development in MetroWest are still working to identify priorities, but as the region continues to grow, they said, transportation will remain a major concern.


"We can no longer continue to serve all our transit needs with cars," Marc Draisen, executive director of the Metropolitan Area Planning Council said last night.


The Boston-based planning council, the Worcester-based Central Massachusetts Regional Planning Commission, state and local officials and the 495/MetroWest Partnership are working together to draft a shared framework for future growth in the MetroWest region.


The goal of the 495/MetroWest Development Compact is to identify regional priority areas for development, preservation and infrastructure improvements.


...


19. Derek Popp: Mineral Point Road area lacks regional planning - Madison, WI


Regarding last Saturday's article, I understand the plight of Steve's Liquor losing its store location. But the real culprit is poor planning and oversight of West Madison development.


Currently there are a lot of complaints about regional planning. In the case of the West Side, the Madison City Council, Dane County Board and several towns all approved developments with little consideration of the traffic these developments would cause.


Look at outgoing Mineral Point Road. These government units approved housing for thousands, and those residents are all commuting through that one intersection as well as on the roads leading there.


As the development progressed, the infrastructure to handle the increased traffic should have been put into place, such as upgrading the roads to four lanes and getting rid of the at-grade intersection, especially once the mall went in. Or the housing and mall should have been planned with additional roads to carry the traffic load.


20. Royalties for Regions adverts slammed | Perth Now


Regional Development Minister Brendon Grylls has revealed the government plans to launch an advertising campaign for its Royalties for Regions program.


Under the program, 25 per cent of WA's royalties are used to fund projects, infrastructure and community services in the state's regions.


Mr Grylls said as well as an imminent start to the advertising campaign, the Department of Regional Development had conducted opinion polling about the program.


``The reason that they're planning that is that in the budget announced at the end of last month, there is a $75 million fund to go out in contestable grants for the regional community,'' he said.


But opposition regional development spokesman Mark McGowan said the advertising was blatantly political.


21. Mid West Super Towns - ABC Perth - Australian Broadcasting Corporation


With the Western Australian population expected to double over the next forty years, the Super Towns project is about developing regional communities and preparing them for this growth.


The Minister for Regional Development ... says the Pilbara Cities initiative has shown "that with proper planning you can get the investment decisions right and attract private sector investments."


"We want to make sure that spreads across all communities in WA."


..., CEO of the Wheatbelt Development Commission, says the group have been working closely with five Mid West towns preparing applications in terms of their "importance to the region and their delivery of key services in the region."


She also notes that Commission will continue to work with the towns that miss out on Super Town status.


"Super Towns is just one of the programs across a range of Royalties for Regions programs and we will continue to work with the communities to make sure they are well placed to maximise their opportunities."


22. Creating a better Midlands business future - News - Business - Articles - Westmeath Independent


... business leaders representing key players in renewable technology, tourism, arts and crafts, technology and food came together ... in Tullamore to develop their plans for a new Midlands economy, based on co-operation and innovation.


The event was facilitated by regional development agency Atlantic Corridor and Bord na Mona, a company which has a large presence and long history in the Midlands region of Ireland. Focusing on how companies in the region can work together to create new opportunities that will generate enterprise and employment, the workshop was characterised by lively group discussions and debate.


... CEO of Bord na Mona "Having attended many workshops and think-ins on enterprise, this event was truly different. All the opportunities identified were identified by those in business themselves in food, arts and crafts, technology and so on. These people know their businesses better than anyone and what is needed to support and grow their businesses in the Midlands.


23. Emda abolition was wrong, says Cowcher : Midlands : Insider News : Insider Media Ltd


Despite holding a seat on the Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire (D2N2) local enterprise partnership (LEP) board, George Cowcher has told Insider he thought it was "the wrong decision" to abolish predecessor, East Midlands Development Agency (Emda). The chief executive of the Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire Chamber of Commerce said the axing of the regional development agency "will leave a large hole".


"We felt that it was the wrong decision to abolish the RDAs," said Cowcher. "Emda in particular has done a lot to assist businesses in Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire and its closure will leave a large hole."


D2N2 is one of the biggest LEPs in the country and has secured one of the government's first 11 enterprise zone locations.


"The East Midlands has a lot to shout about but there hasn't always been a unity across the region, ...


24. Strait-Highlands Regional Development Agency unveils Imagine 2030 - Local - News - The Cape Breton Post


Billed as a place to work, grow, live and play, Imagine 2030 has been a project the Strait-Highlands Regional Development Agency has been working on for more than a year. On Wednesday, the RDA held an open house for the public to show both the immediate and strategic long-term goals in an attempt to bolster the region's population and create a feeling of pride among people living in the town.


Several conceptual drawings were unveiled with several key priorities as a starting point for the ambitious project.


Three immediate goals are a pride of place campaign involving a community cleanup and branding the town's image, a storefront facade program for the business park, streetscape improvements along Reeves Street and a signage program.


As well, there will be the development of a newcomer retention strategy, which is an essential part of the overall Imagine 2030 concept, said Amanda Mombourquette, the RDA's senior innovations and skills facilitator.




25. Business : Kerala firm bags contract for Gwalior magnet area


A Kerala-based company has been awarded the consultancy contract to build a counter magnet to ease the pressure on the national capital of New Delhi, the world's largest urban agglomeration after Tokyo.


Cochin-based Mir Projects and Consultants has been awarded the consultancy for the master plan preparation and development of Gwalior Counter Magnet, which is the first among five such cities.


The counter magnet areas were mooted after Delhi and the National Capital Region, or NCR, witnessed massive migration of population from neighbouring areas because of employment opportunities and well-developed infrastructure.


They are aimed at attracting people to these areas and thereby assisting in the decongestion of the NCR, ...


Kota (Rajasthan), Hissar (Haryana), Patiala (Punjab) and Bareilly (Uttar Pradesh) are other counter magnet cities aside from the recent additions of Kanpur, Ambala and Dehradun.
...
The region is expected to attract large-scale investment ...




26. Boost for townships on cities' outskirts in state - Hindustan Times


Determined to make its plans to develop new townships on the fringes of cities and areas such as the Mumbai Metropolitan Region a reality, the state government has decided to amend the Maharashtra Regional Town Planning Act, 1966, next week. The amendment aims at encouraging townships by providing all infrastructure to private lands pooled by landowners.


The bill will be on the lines of an amendment carried out by the Gujarat government in 1999. It is likely to be tabled before the state legislature in the coming monsoon session.


The scheme is being looked upon as an alternative to private townships promoted by developers, where there is no guarantee of infrastructure development or revenue generation for the government.


Planning authorities such as the Mumbai Metropolitan Region Development Authority (MMRDA) and the City and Industrial Development Corporation (Cidco) will take up the job of creating such townships.
...


27. World Bank to assist ECOWAS deepen regional cooperation


The World Bank has expressed its willingness to deepen cooperation with ECOWAS to promote its regional integration in the sub-region. A report by ECOWAS quoted the bank's Vice President, African Region, Dr Obiageli Ezekwesili, as saying that "ECOWAS is one of the bank's important partners" and commended its initiatives to promote economic development in the sub-region.


The report stated that Ezekwesili made the remark in Washington when she received a delegation from ECOWAS, led by Dr Ada Okwuosa, the Commissioner for Administration and Finance.


She said that such partnership would fast-track ECOWAS new Regional Strategic Plan aimed at reviewing its existing institutional structure.


The bank also gave recommendations to ECOWAS for effectively running its operations, including the establishment of a task force on strategic planning, human resources, community computer centre and external relations communications.
...


28. Environmentalists seeks ways of preventing desertification


Stakeholders in the environmental sector on Thursday deliberated at a forum on issues which are at the root of sustainable development of people living in fragile ecosystem, plagued by the threat of desertification.


The participants described ways in which the threat of desertification and effects of drought in places like the Upper West Region could be reversed to promote socioeconomic development.
...
Alhaji Issaku Salia, Upper West Regional Minister, said that the search for sustainable solutions to the threat of desertification in the region should be a source of great concern to everyone.


He noted that persistent bushfires, unsustainable farming practises, indiscriminate fuel and wood harvesting, and over grazing among others were contributing towards degradation of the Savannah ecosystem and eroding the natural resource of socioeconomic development in the Region.




29. Bulgaria: Bulgarian Govt Moves to Found Mega-Structure for Infrastructure - Novinite.com - Sofia News Agency


Bulgaria's government is certain to set up a state-owned mega-company to be in charge of large-scale infrastructure projects, a somewhat controversial brainchild of Regional Development Minister Rosen Plevneliev.


The new infrastructure company will be called State Company "Strategic Infrastructure Projects". It is to be established as on Thursday, the Bulgarian Parliament adopted amendments to the Road Traffic Act, which include provisions for its setting up.


The mega-structure will be place in charge of "strategic infrastructure projects", namely the Struma Highway (running from Sofia to the border with Greece; expected completion date - 2014), the Hemus Highway (running from Sofia to Varna through Northern Bulgaria; expected completion date unknown), or the Cherno More (i.e. Black Sea) Highway (running between Varna and Burgas on the Black Sea coast; expected completion date unknown).
...






More "region, regions, regional" resources tagged "re:*" with global geocodes:  
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Regional Communities - "Think Local Planet, Act Regionally." 

#445 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Tue Jun 21, 2011 6:29 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - June 19-20, 2011
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1. Surprise surprise: "experts" picked by road lobbyists put road building at top of priority list - Greater Greater Washington


The 2030 Group, an advocacy organization funded by some of Virginia's longtime proponents of sprawl-inducing highway development, came out with a thoroughly unsurprising "survey" today that recommends the very same projects the organizers have pushed for years.
...
Far better studies of regional priorities include those from the Council of Governments, whose scenario studies looked not only at vehicle speeds but overall land use and found that the biggest gains in improving commutes came from responsible land use, like developing underutilized Metro stations, addressing the east-west job divide in the region, and revitalizing existing, aging commercial corridors.


The COG Region Forward report, which all 22 area jurisdictions endorsed, shows that addressing land use and the imbalance between jobs and housing, along with supportive transit and transit-oriented development, are the top priorities. COG's scenario studies demonstrated that better land use planning offers the biggest bang ...


2. Should Alaska create a fund to attract investors to develop the Arctic? | Alaska Dispatch


The state is positioning itself to be the banker as well as the builder of Arctic projects in the hope of attracting more private investment to the region. And that could be the catalyst to jumpstart broad development in the Arctic -- beyond just oil and gas operations. ... Arctic Imperative Summit portrayed the region as an "emerging market" that will need some sort of established investment fund to lead the way and then entice skittish private investors to follow.


The Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority -- a state development agency ... could be that entity, if political leaders decide to put significant amounts of cash in the agency's bank account.


... idea of a "regional development syndicate" for the Arctic, a group that might include state, federal and private investors. ... foreign investors, including China, are backing Alaska projects or buying significant shares in U.S. companies that are doing business here....


3. Conservationists battle city in Lake Tahoe fight - San Jose Mercury News


A conservation group is asking a federal judge to throw out the California city of South Lake Tahoe's new planning regulations, saying the update allows for too much development at the expense of the lake's clarity and scenic beauty.


The League to Save Lake Tahoe says in the lawsuit that city council plans are illegal because they were not reviewed by the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency as required by a federal bi-state compact for Nevada and California.


South Lake Tahoe City Attorney Patrick Enright said Monday he had no immediate comment because he had not yet seen the lawsuit.


The suit filed recently in U.S. District Court in Sacramento, Calif., says the planning blueprint—combined with intended road expansions—will result in increased ozone emissions, airborne dust and erosion, which are three of the chief culprits blamed for the decline in the clarity of the alpine lake's waters over the past four decades.
...




Oxford City Hall will be the setting of the Northeast Georgia Regional Planning Commission meeting for a new 2035 plan for the region.

The region is made up of 12 counties — Barrow, Clarke, Elbert, Greene, Jackson, Jasper, Madison, Morgan, Newton, Oconee, Oglethorpe and Walton — and the plan is a long-range one for managing the region's forecasted growth through the year 2035, according to the commission's Web site.

The meeting ... is primarily for stakeholders of the regions who make decisions, like commissioners and the Chamber of Commerce, but it is open to the public.

"It's an honor for our city to be chosen," said Oxford Mayor Jerry Roseberry, who serves on the planning advisory committee and volunteered Oxford as the setting for the first meeting. "(The committee) thought it would be a good location."

The plan has come in three phases — the commission already has conducted a regional assessment and stakeholder development, and now it is working in the implementation phase.



5. ECan rewrites regional planning policy | Stuff.co.nz


Canterbury's earthquakes have forced a rethink of one of the region's most significant planning documents.


Environment Canterbury's (ECan) proposed 2011 Canterbury regional policy statement (RPS) will give legal weight to the Canterbury water management strategy. It also includes changes to guidelines on dealing with natural hazards, such as earthquakes.
...
"We revised with new directions on earthquake faulting and the development of land subject to faulting," Langman said. "It also looks at avoiding or mitigating the effects from fault rupturing, liquefaction and lateral spreading, and puts some conditions down for new developments.


"It doesn't deal with the issue of any managed retreat from suburbs. That will be dealt with by Cera (Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority)."
...
The proposed policy on faults says ECan will:


Assist Christchurch city and district councils to map "fault avoidance zones".
...


6. Vince Cable urges Government to save North East economic powers - Journal Live


BUSINESS Secretary Vince Cable has been urged to hold a genuine consultation on the need for the region to keep key decision-making powers in local hands – or see the economy weaken.


A consultation will be held on the decision to close down regional development agencies, including One North East.


But the promise came with an admission from the Government that it had already made up its mind to scrap the agencies.


Now Newcastle Council leader Nick Forbes and his predecessor Liberal Democrat David Faulkner have sent a joint letter to Dr Cablecalling for the regeneration body to either be saved or for the region to retain some of its functions.
...


7. It's grimmer up North than it needs to be - Telegraph


As you travel northward your eye, accustomed to the South or East, does not notice much difference until you are beyond Birmingham. ...


This is less a divide than an imbalance caused by London's dominant position as an economic, cultural and political megalopolis. Although other European countries, such as Italy, have their geographically rich and poor divisions, none – not even France – has a capital city that acts like a national black hole, sucking investment, skilled migrant workers, young people, money and, ultimately, decision-making powers towards it.


But this has been true for decades...



At the root of the problem is regional policy itself. Regions command little local loyalty in England and have even less economic coherence, yet they have been the basis for the planning of successive governments. Some blame the EU for handing out development funds on a regional basis; yet Continental countries manage to organise things differently. Since the mid 1960s, France has developed a network of communautés urbaines, conurbations that exercise delegated powers over waste, water, public transport, roads, economic development and the environment, each covering more than a million people.These are centred on major cities that have a sense of place and identity, rather than on regions that don't. Major German, Spanish and Italian cities do the same – and all are wealthier than any British cities, except London. That must be the way forward and the Coalition's plan to replace the RDAs with local enterprise partnerships is a move in the right direction.


Mind you, it won't resolve a deeper cultural divide that will always remain. ...




8. Cutbacks in state, federal programs could impact communities | Dothan Eagle


Editor's note: The following article focuses on Slocomb, but the town faces challenges familiar to all Wiregrass communities. ...


"Slocomb has been very active in planning and preparing for public and private investment over the past couple of decades," said Scott Farmer, director of community development with Southeast Alabama Regional Planning and Development Commission.


Towns like Slocomb search for ways to meet the needs of residents and businesses. The commission's community development department provides a range of administrative services to Barbour, Coffee, Covington, Dale, Geneva, Henry and Houston counties.


The department is one of the most productive in Alabama, having written several of the highest rated Community Development Block Grant applications in the state. ...


The road ahead might not be so bright for towns like Slocomb. Farmer said many of the programs are projected to be cut substantially as government budgets are trimmed.
... 


The University of Mary Washington has announced the creation of the University Center for Economic Development and its intent to award a contract to the Fredericksburg Regional Alliance to support the university's regional economic development efforts.

The university issued a request for proposals March 2, 2011, to identify a partner in the field of economic development and research. UMW sought a vendor with experience in economic development principles, in working with governmental organizations, and in gathering local business intelligence. The successful bidder was asked to demonstrate governmental experience at the local, state, and federal levels as well as international experience in order to partner with UMW to establish the University Center for Economic Development.

The Fredericksburg Regional Alliance responded to the university's request. A UMW selection committee evaluated the FRA proposal, making the recommendation for selection on June 10.
...



10. Wisconsin business alliance hires economic development pro for new position | RE Journals


The Kenosha Area Business Alliance (KABA) recently hired Brian Rademacher to fill its newly created position of economic development director.


Most recently, before beginning work with KABA on May 26, Rademacher worked for four years as economic development coordinator for the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning.


In that capacity, he worked with the planning commission for a seven-county region (Cook, DuPage, Kane, Kendall, Lake, McHenry and Will) in Northeastern Illinois. He also worked closely with economic development corporations, local governments and business leaders to provide insight into the economy and to identify needs ranging from industry analysis to workforce development.


His CMAP duties included an analysis of emerging and leading business trends in the region, as well as helping create the economic development component of a comprehensive regional plan known as "Go To 2040."
...


11. Carpoolers Unite | Green News | Metro New Orleans


The Regional Planning Commission's (RPC) Metro New Orleans GreenRide is a ridesharing matchmaker — the program offers a free carpool matching service for metro New Orleans commuters. Create a profile, and the program will match you with commuters in your area. The program also will calculate your shared commute into cost savings and emissions reductions: how much gas will you save, and how much carbon emissions you will prevent from entering the atmosphere.


  The program, part of the RPC's Congestion Management Plan (itself a part of the comprehensive Metropolitan Transportation Plan), intends to reduce congestion on roads and highways. RPC transportation planner John King says GreenRide hopes to have up to 1,500 users within the program's first year. (Its first few weeks saw 100 registered users.) "It's all pretty new to us," King says. "We're still getting a feel for what works well in this region."
...


12. City Spatial Planning Bylaw Draft Agreed by Public Works Ministry - Jakarta


Jakarta Capital City Government has continuously insisted Jakarta City Council (DPRD) to accelerate the Jakarta bylaw draft of spatial plan for 2010-2030 ...


The draft has involved the concept of metropolitan priority area (MPA). MPA is a master plan of megapolitan expansion plan which is also listed within it.


Director of the Regional Spatial Development Area II, Directorate General of Spatial Planning, Kemenpu, Bahal Naiborhu Edison stated that the spatial resolution is not only a government duty alone because it will become regional development guidance which bring direct or indirect impact to the progress of regional development, the public and the private.


Meanwhile, Head of Regional Legislation Board (Balegda) of Jakarta City Council, Triwisaksana expressed that his party is striving hard to immediately ratify the draft before Jakarta`s anniversary on June 22, 2011.


13. EIB and Hungary give boost to development of Danube Region


Today, the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the Republic of Hungary signed a Memorandum of Understanding on the EU Strategy for the Danube Region. This Strategy identifies priorities for action in the fields of infrastructure, environmental protection, knowledge economy and the competitiveness of enterprises. Based on the good model developed for the Baltic Sea Strategy the EIB will contribute to coordinating the activities in the region.


The EU Strategy covers the Danube macro region, with a population of more than 100 million including parts of 8 EU Member States: Germany, Austria, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Bulgaria and Romania and 6 non-EU countries: Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Ukraine and Moldova.
...


14. Due to the global financial crisis, regional sustainable development is immensely Inadequate- Robert Persaud


Progress in achieving sustainable development regionally has been immensely inadequate due to the global financial crisis. This is the view of Agriculture Minister Robert Persaud who was speaking at the United Nations Conference of sustainable development on the 20th June.


"In the midst of these constraints, the path to sustainable development becomes even more challenging, there no doubt that some progress have been made individually by states as well as collectively by regions in this regard" the minister said.


The Minister stressed that emphasis needs to be placed on attaining financial resources, technical expertise and regional cooperation.


The UN conference on sustainable development seeks to secure renewed political commitment between Caribbean countries, assess progress from previous meetings and address emerging challenges.


15. IMPLEMENT EAC PACTS TO EXPEDITE INTEGRATION


Although the East African Community (EAC) customs and union and the common market came into force in 2005 and 2010 respectively in efforts to ease trade and subsequently reduce poverty for 133.5 people in the region, problems abound.


Truly the five members of the EAC have succeeded in eliminating many of the tariffs on intra-regional trade.


But the trade growth is not as high and fast as it was expected because numerous non-tariff barriers are yet to be tackled.


It is surprising that even in the modern era when blocs such the Eurozone are expanding and galvanising themselves to deal with socioeconomic and terror challenges, some African leaders are still reluctant to adopt regionalism or Pan-Africanism as advocated by political icons such Kwame Nkrumah and Mwalimu Nyerere.
...
By the look of things, it will be difficult for the EAC's monetary union to get off the ground next year as it is scheduled without implementing the customs union and common market protocols ....



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Regional Communities - "Think Local Planet, Act Regionally." 

#446 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Fri Jun 24, 2011 7:50 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - June 21-23, 2011
regionswork
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 1. Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce Foundation Announces Groundbreaking Economic Study of Metro Region -- CHICAGO, June 23, 2011 /PRNewswire/ --


The Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce Foundation today announced that it has undertaken a ground-breaking economic study of the Tri-State Chicago Metropolitan Region to be conducted by The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).  This is the first study of a U.S. metro area and will encompass a dynamic geographic and economic area that includes parts of southeast Wisconsin, northwest Indiana and the Chicagoland area, creating a comprehensive understanding of how a more integrated economy will enhance the region's global competiveness.  "This study will provide invaluable insight to the three states and encourage cross state participation, something that has been difficult to achieve," ...


"The Tri-State Chicago Metropolitan Region is a unique review, because not only is it the first Territorial Review in America, but it presents the challenge of having three separate governments to work with.
...


 2. Official: Growth Management Lives On After Legislative Changes | TheLedger.com


The death of growth management in Florida has been greatly exaggerated, a state official contended at a conference in Polk County on Wednesday.


"I was a little surprised at the obituaries written about growth management," said Billy Buzzett, secretary of the soon-to-expire Florida Department of Community Affairs, referring to media reports on changes to state law in the 2011 legislative session. "Growth management is not dead."


... The current DCA will expire on Oct. 1 and will become part of a new agency called the Department of Economic Opportunity.


Growth management may not be dead, but the Legislature massively shifted the responsibility for approving new residential and commercial development from the state to the county and municipal level, according to DCA officials.


...Buzzett and other DCA officials didn't criticize the new growth management law, but they indicated the Legislature did not always accept their proposals.


...


 3. New Policy Paper Calls for Creations of Regional and Local Collaborative News Networks -- WASHINGTON, June 23, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ --


Aspen Institute Communications and Society Program and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation released a new policy paper that calls on leaders of local print and broadcast media to spearhead the creation of regional and local collaborative news networks that meet the information needs of their communities. These interactive news networks are part of a broader set of strategies for re-inventing local journalism that are aimed at addressing the need for media policies that foster innovation, competition and support for business models that provide marketplace incentives for quality journalism.Re-Imagining Journalism: Local News for a Networked World, by Michael R. Fancher, outlines five strategic areas that are critical for reforming local journalism and calls upon for-profit media, not-for-profit and non-traditional media, higher education, community and non-profit institutions, libraries, researchers, government at all levels, and citizens to each play a role ...




 4. Four East Side communities will study merging, with county help | Cleveland


Decades ago, they split apart. Now, Moreland Hills, Orange, Pepper Pike and Woodmere are considering merging in the most significant step toward regionalism Cuyahoga County has ever seen.The four East Side suburbs -- which along with Hunting Valley once made up Orange Township -- already share a school district, recreation programs and senior services. Last year, they studied sharing police, fire and public works. And Wednesday they announced they will study whether joining together could save their residents serious money....Planners and other good-government advocates have long viewed Cuyahoga County, with its 59 communities, as ripe for mergers, collaborations or tax-sharing agreements.
...
The latest merger proposal grew out talks four years ago about sharing services, said Moreland Hills Mayor Susan Renda. The idea took on added urgency this year, when the state announced big cuts in aid to cities and the county offered assistance.
...




 5. Orange Mayor Kathy Mulcahy speaks out on regionalism | Cleveland


Mayor Kathy Mulcahy welcomes neighboring communities to stop talking about regionalism and actually do something about it.


Mulcahy has talked of regionalism several times during council meetings and with other public officials. She said Orange is in the perfect position to be a leader in testing the municipal theory of "regionalism."


"We have well-seasoned, long term, well known department heads. ... "Their community roots are very deep. They know most of the key players in the Chagrin Valley. They place us in a good position to be a leader for regionalism."
...


She said the Baldwin Wallace study conducted last year in hopes of offering regionalism recommendations to Pepper Pike, Orange, Moreland Hills, Hunting Valley and even Woodmere has given the village a great body of knowledge to follow up on.
...
Mulcahy said the communities need to quantify what regionalism means in terms of economic benefit.
...


 6. A zoo for all of us - Toledo Blade


Wood County commissioners refused Tuesday even to ask their constituents whether they would be willing to pay the same property tax to support the Toledo Zoo that Lucas County residents have paid for years. So much for regional cooperation to support a regional asset.


Commissioners rejected zoo officials' request to place on November's ballot a 0.85-mill, five-year levy that would have cost the owner of a $100,000 home 50 cents a week. A renewal of that operating levy for the zoo will appear on the Lucas County ballot this fall.


The zoo's benefits, economic as well as educational and cultural, transcend Toledo and Lucas County. Zoo officials said they needed help from Wood County because of rising costs of animal upkeep and staff, and dwindling revenue from a deteriorating Lucas County tax base.


In a typical year, the number of Wood County residents who visit the zoo equals more than half the county's population. ...Wood Countians would have gotten one day a week of free admission ...




 7. Area biotech path could lie through Richmond | Daily Progress


Though Robert T. Skunda considers Virginia only middle of the pack compared with other states' biotech programs, the Virginia BioTechnology Research Park president hopes the state's biotech industry will grow stronger, including the improvement of regional collaboration.


Effective collaboration is among numerous ingredients that could help the industry thrive in the coming decades. Commitment from universities to advance biotechnology is also key, experts contend, in addition to securing stable funding streams.


As both Richmond and Charlottesville are positioned to continue developments in the biotech industry, Skunda says, solid ties between the cities could advance the interests of both.
...




 8. Regional planners in turmoil || Gulf Coast Business Review | Tampa Bay, Bradenton, Sarasota, Fort Myers, Naples


Southwest Florida Regional Planning Council members considered suspending Executive Director Ken Heatherington at an emergency executive committee meeting Thursday afternoon. But his job is still not safe, and he could be fired by the end of the month.


Council Chairman and Marco Island Councilman Chuck Keister called the meeting, and issued an email about the subject only two hours prior. Keister recommended the suspension following a public outcry that ensued after Heatherington terminated three staff members because of budget cuts and put another on administrative leave for violating department policies. Three of the four are planners: David Crawford, Jason Utley and Dan Trescott. Trescott is accused of the policy violations.


The controversy evolved from a decision by Heatherington to move forward with the layoffs that were to be effective at the end of June, rather than present alternatives to Keister and the council first.
...


 9. Bike-sharing network may expand to Rockville - The Washington Post


Those sturdy red bicycles that have woven their way into the urban landscape in the District and Arlington could make their debut in Rockville by next year with the help of a $1.9 million federal grant approved Wednesday by the regional planning board.
...


More than 1,100 bikes offered by the Capital Bikeshare program already are being used by commuters, shoppers and tourists in Washington and across the river in Arlington, with riders choosing bikes from more than 110 secure docking stations.


The funding, approved by the National Capital Region Transportation Planning Board during a regular meeting, would be used to add 200 bikes and 20 docking stations in Rockville and Shady Grove. Because it's unlikely that many people would pedal from Rockville into the District, most of those bikes would be used around town or to commute from home to Metro stations.
...


10. New research provides analysis of operational costs in trucking | Canadian Transportation and Logistics


The American Transportation Research Institute (ATRI) has released the findings of its 2011 update to An Analysis of the Operational Costs of Trucking. ...


"Given the essential role that trucking plays in freight transportation, quantifying the value of proposed infrastructure improvements depends on real-world industry data. As a result, ATRI's operational costs data will be a critical input to the transportation planning process," said Ted Dahlburg, manager of freight planning for the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission, the Metropolitan Planning Organization for the Philadelphia-Camden-Trenton region.


ATRI identified 2008, 2009 and first quarter 2010 cost per mile and cost per hour figures stratified by fleet size, sector and region of the country. ... The average marginal cost per mile was $1.45 in 2009 and $1.49 in the first quarter of 2010 for the for-hire segment of the industry.


... "Fleets are extremely sensitive to even the smallest change in operating costs


11. Mississippi coastal tourism going regional | The Associated Press | Entertainment | Washington Examiner


A new regional tourism partnership created to help administer a $16 million grant from BP may soon replace individual tourism bureaus all along the Mississippi Gulf Coast.


The Mississippi Coast Regional Partnership was created earlier this year after the state and BP agreed to award Mississippi $16 million for tourism.


The partnership is made up of two representatives from Hancock, Harrison, and Jackson counties respectively, and seven appointments from the Gulf Coast Business Council....


"At the end of the day, we feel like it will make it better for Hancock County," Pullman said. "If we get on the backs of Harrison and Jackson counties, there is going to be a lot of spill over, and a lot more opportunities."


Local tourism officials, however, say they are not sold on the regional approach.


Beth Carriere of the Hancock County Tourism Bureau said creation of the partnership means the end of the local bureaus....


12. Opinion: Regional strategy key to clean energy - Rep. Lois Capps - POLITICO


Last week, President Barack Obama traveled to Durham, N.C., to tour Cree Inc. — one of the nation's leading manufacturers of energy-efficient lighting. He spoke with employees and met with his Jobs and Competitiveness Council to discuss initiatives and policies to spur economic growth, promote job creation and accelerate hiring across the United States.

A major point of agreement is that one of the most effective models to achieve these goals is regional innovation clusters that focus on developing and commercializing clean energy technologies, accelerating regional economic development and creating jobs. Another is that strong federal support for energy research is critical to developing technologies that will allow the U.S. to transition away from imported oil, reduce carbon pollution and build a world-leading clean energy industry.


Research funding alone, however, is insufficient to address the commercialization needs and economic development opportunities available ...


13. Quality of life issues align in 5 ET counties » Knoxville News Sentinel


While five East Tennessee counties span areas as diverse as downtown Knoxville in Knox County to rural farmland in Union County, they share much in common, a special report released Tuesday shows.


Ninety percent of the residents of Knox, Anderson, Blount, Loudon and Union counties spend nearly half their incomes on housing and driving, according to that "State of the Region" report.


Common health concerns include heart disease, diabetes and childhood obesity, it states.
...


Issued by the Knoxville-Knox County Metropolitan Planning Commission, the report is the benchmark for an ambitious, multi-year study of the region about to be launched by a team of professional consultants.


"It is Planning 101," Mark Donaldson, MPC's executive director, said of the report. "We figure out where we are as a region, where we want to go, and how to get there."


The regional planning effort even has a catchy title: Plan East Tennessee, or PlanET for short.
...


14. Gov. Scott makes appointments to regional planning councils | Saint Petersblog

Governor Rick Scott today announced nineteen reappointments and two appointments to eight regional planning councils throughout the state.

Apalachee Regional Planning Council, Region Two ...

15. The Geography of Peace - Creative Class


The overall level of world peace world fell for the third year in a row, according to the latest version of the Global Peace Index produced by the Institute for Economics and Peace. Most of this trend was driven by the increased "social and political turmoil in the Middle East and North African Nations during the early part of 2011," the report notes.


But what are the factors that shape the relative peacefulness of nations? And, what is the connection between peace – or its opposite – on their economic growth, well-being, and prosperity?


This map charts the Global Peace Index (GPI) scores for 153 countries worldwide. The GPI is based on 25 separate indicators of internal and external conflict, including wars and external conflicts, deaths from external conflicts, militarization, weapons exports, homicides, access to weapons, violent political demonstrations, prison populations, and police presence.
...


16. `Adventure capital of the UK' - News & Star 


LEADERS from Cumbria's tourism industry met to discuss how they can better co-ordinate marketing activity to provide a boost to the region's visitor economy.


There are growing fears over the ability of the region to promote its "world class" tourism offer in light of public sector funding cuts and the phasing out of the Northwest Regional Development Agency, which heavily supported the sector.


Tourism experts believe the physical make-up of the region means it requires a unique marketing strategy.


...


17.  Five Regional Cities And Economic Corridors To Propel Transformation Agenda - BERNAMA


Transformation programmes will be formulated and implemented for five regional cities and economic corridors in recognition of their importance and potential to propel the economic growth of the country.


In a statement Tuesday, the Performance Management & Delivery Unit (PEMANDU), said the transformation programmes for the five will build on the excellent work done to-date.


"It will take the development achieved to-date to the next level to build out regional and global hubs in their economic areas of specialisation," it said.


The five are -- Georgetown and the Northern Corridor Economic Region (NCER); Johor Baharu and Iskandar Malaysia and East Coast Economic Region (ECER); Kuching and Sarawak Corridor of Renewable Energy (SCORE); and Kota Kinabalu and Sabah Development Corridor (SDC), it said.
...


18. The former Yugoslavia: Let's hear it for the Yugosphere | The Economist


Two years ago I coined the term "Yugosphere" in an article for The Economist. I thought the word encapsulated some of the dynamics I had seen developing in the former Yugoslavia in recent years. ...


... the idea also has political application. I expect to see ever-more co-ordination among the states of the former Yugoslavia. ...


First, the Yugosphere was simply a way of describing the renewal of thousands of broken 
bonds across the former state.


Call it the Yugosphere, call it the "region", the "zone", the Adriatic or whatever. No one outside the area cares. In fact, given everything else that is going on in the world few people outside the Balkans care about the region at all. Look at the Yugosphere. Disastrous demographics, low productivity, comparatively poor infrastructure, suffering from a long-term decline in education standards. And a combined population barely the size of Shanghai. In a world like this more co-operation is surely in everyone's interests.


19. Health tourism on the Hungary, Croatia borders


An EU funded project, `The Role of Health Tourism in Improving the Competitive Strength of the Rural Areas in Hungary and Croatia' is a trans-border project that aims to define factors necessary for the improvement of the competitive strength of the rural trans-border area through health tourism. The research results will be available soon.
...
Health tourism is one of the oldest types of tourism in Croatia. It is the use of comparative natural and healing advantages arising out of the climate, with the purpose of maintaining and improving health and quality of life. The basis of health tourism is the use of natural healing factors that can come from the sea, spa, or climate. Geothermal sources are an extremely important resource in Hungary, so health tourism is also important there. The social impact of health tourism on the standard of living, employment and education will be determined.
...


20. Future cohesion policy could have 51 `intermediate' regions - Europolitics


The creation of a category of intermediate regions in the EU's future cohesion policy, for regions with GDP of between 75% and 90% of the EU average, is still at the heart of debates on Structural Funds. ...


... The new status would entitle all of them to the same treatment, whether or not they were previously convergence regions (today, those exiting the convergence objective receive more money than those never under the objective, even if they have the same GDP).


According to the commissioner, 51 European regions out of 271 could be concerned by the new category (figures to be confirmed, ...). According to a Commission working paper consulted by Europolitics, affected will be one region in Austria, four in Belgium, nine in Germany, four in Spain, one in Finland, ten in France, six in Greece, four in Italy, Malta, two in Poland and nine in the United Kingdom, for a total of 48 regions in `old' member states of the 51 concerned (51 less Malta and the two Polish regions).
...


21. Growth management a major municipal topic - Cochrane Eagle


How to manage a rapidly growing population is on the minds of both Cochrane town council and the Calgary Regional Partnership (CRP).


Mayor Truper McBride said Cochrane will not pursue an annexation of land anytime in the near future and will pursue a growth management strategy — including laying out goals for housing density.


"We have a 30-50 year supply if managed well," he said.
...


22.  Task force wants to scrap NEDC - St. Catharines Standard, Niagara Region, Sun Media - Ontario, CA


A Niagara Region task force has recommended the Niagara Economic Development Corp. be disbanded.


In its place would be a single economic development system working out of one Niagara Region department.


Its report, released Wednesday, would ultimately mean folding together the economic development activities of all 13 Niagara municipalities into a single unit.


The result would be "one-stop shopping" and less confusion for businesses seeking to stay in, expand or move to the region.


...



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Regional Communities - "Think Local Planet, Act Regionally." 

#447 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Sat Jun 25, 2011 7:14 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - June 24, 2011
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1. Cornell expert says hydrofacking already affecting New York State


Reflecting on lessons learned and questions yet to be answered about the hydrofracking and the economy, a Cornell expert today told members of the Tompkins County Council of Governments (TCCOG) that New York State is already being affected by such shale gas drilling, even though wells are not yet permitted here.


Economic Geographer Susan Christopherson, of Cornell's Department of City and Regional Planning, has been studying the economic effects of hydrofracking, looking at the experience in nearby Pennsylvania and effects in New York.  Since there is "no border fence between New York and Pennsylvania," she said, drilling produces a regional industrial effect, and cautioned there will be "important impacts to Tompkins County"—from such aspects as heavy truck traffic, water resources, and waste disposal— even if a single well is not drilled here. She maintained State officials are showing "willful ignorance and disinterest" in failing to  address those issues and, because of that, the state is unprepared.


...


2. Seneca president says territories are open for business - ObserverToday.com | News, Sports, Jobs, Community Information - Dunkirk | The Observer


Seneca Nation of Indians President Robert Odawi Porter wants others to know the nation's territories are "open for business."


It was a message officials from Chautauqua, Cattaraugus, Allegany, Erie, Niagara counties, Warren and McKean counties in Pennsylvania and the Southern Tier West Regional Planning and Development Board heard at a nation-sponsored economic development meeting ...


"We're integrated in Western New York," said Porter about Seneca businesses he wants to do well. Therefore, he said he wanted to bring together others and start a dialogue to make sure Seneca and neighboring businesses thrive. The Thursday meeting was a way to begin that discussion, agreed officials gathered who said they shared information about Industrial Development Agency structures, and how the governments can work better together.


For instance, Porter said, the nation can offer advantages such as attracting tourism, tax abatements, working with nation regulations instead of those of New York while other area governmental officials offer their own advantages, resulting in potential business partnerships.


"We are all a little unique and different," said Michael Kimelberg, nation chief planning officer with David Kimelberg, chief executive officer of Seneca Holdings, adding learning offerings each can contribute was the order of the day. In the end, officials said, all who came to the economic development meeting want the same thing: for the region to do well. 
...


3. Parisi outlines plan for controversial regional planning commission - Madison, WI


... outgoing Dane County Executive ... calling for the Capital Area Regional Planning Commission to disband.


Incoming Executive Joe Parisi vowed to talk with stakeholders to determine the future of a body that is paid for entirely by the county at a cost of $700,000 a year.On Thursday, Parisi put out a memo outlining his plan for retaining and reforming the commission.


"We do need some type of process to manage our growth," Parisi said Thursday. "We are one of the fastest growing counties in the country and we need to manage that. So the question for me was, is CARPC the best vehicle to manage that growth or is some other alternative better? Or is a reformed CARPC better?"


After meeting with environmentalists, developers and representatives from the county, the city of Madison, the Cities and Villages Association, and the Dane County Towns Association, he decided to give the commission a chance to fulfill its original charter....


4. State, local and native corporation reps discuss Integrated Resource Plan - Petersburg Pilot - Alaska


There are dark clouds, storms and train wrecks on the horizon for Southeast Alaska's utility needs ... 


As oil prices fluctuate around the world and locally, Southeast's access to clean available hydropower has driven residents to convert from oil to electric heat at an unprecedented rate. And as the available resources dry up, planning for the future by integrating all the region's projects into one plan has begun.


... in the Petersburg City Council chambers, members of state and local agencies as well as regional native corporations came together to discuss plans for an Integrated Resource Plan, due to be drafted and released later this year.


The plan discussed Tuesday is meant to examine the region's energy needs for the next 50 years, so that future projects can be prioritized and developed with a unified voice.
...


5. Strengthening entente cordiale with Wales' Celtic Cousins - News Wales


The special relationship with Brittany was given a further boost today when First Minister, Carwyn Jones, addressed the Breton Regional Council in Rennes, renewing the Welsh Government's commitment to further cooperation between the two countries.


The First Minister was invited to Brittany by Monsieur Jean-Yves le Drian, President of the Regional Council.


Reflecting on the common ties between Wales and Brittany, the First Minister will praise the co-operation between the two countries on areas including culture, language, health, agriculture and sustainable development.


He said that the partnership is continuing to deliver real mutual benefit and continued:"By working together we shape and influence policy on an international stage and further promote the role of regional governments. Wales and Brittany are both longstanding members of The Conference of Peripheral Maritime Regions (CPMR).


... CPMR is an example of how regional cooperation can have real benefits."...



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#448 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Sun Jun 26, 2011 6:02 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - June 25, 2011
regionswork
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1. Nonprofit partnerships work to jumpstart economy | Richmond Times-Dispatch


Can one region "JumpStart" a national economy?


However unlikely the proposition, the Northeast Ohio region of 4 million people is giving it a real whirl.


First, it's leading by practice. Drawing on the region's historically large foundation resources, since 2004 it has had a "Fund for Our Economic Future" focused on such goals as connecting cutting-edge industries.


"This is regional, collaborative and for the long haul," says its president, Brad Whitehead. He cites the sparks of creativity and growth potential in such innovations as taking "a Rolls-Royce facility in fuel cells in North Canton, hooking up with Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, with polymer technology in Akron, and then materials and metal strength in Youngstown."


Now, the Ohioans' signature job-producing nonprofit — JumpStart, a 7-year-old organization that invests public and private funds in entrepreneurial startups — is "going national" with a new affiliate, JumpStart America, which aims to raise ...


2. Call for Participation: Special Session on Regional Economic Development and Growth at the 58th Annual North American Meetings of the Regional Science Association International (NARSC) & Second Conference of the Regional Science Association of the Americas (RSAmericas) 


The economic recession, coupled with the ongoing global economic restructuring, has made researchers and policy makers question their assumptions about how to generate regional economic growth. There is a growing realization that a one-size-fits-all approach to economic development may not work; and that, instead, tailored local and regional strategies may be needed. Given this, regional economic development practitioners want to know what strategies will lead to sustainable economic growth. Among the questions they must consider are: how do they foster the development of human capital, which is essential to innovation; how do they develop an environment that supports entrepreneurship formation and firm and employment growth; and what types of transportation and communications infrastructure are needed?


...


The Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission (DVRPC) hosted an "Active Transportation Summit" on Thursday, June 23, at the Cira Centre in Philadelphia. The conference, co-hosted by the Pennsylvania Environmental Council (PEC), was aimed at raising awareness of the local regional trail network, its successes and the ongoing work needed to complete it.
...
"A regional trail network is a key element for multi-modal transportation," said DVRPC executive director Barry Seymour.

The DVRPC has a regional trails council that brings different groups together to work on the entire trails project.


Say what you will about our region's leaders - and we've probably said just about everything - they certainly have a passion for improving the Grand Strand and leaving it a better place than they found it.

Rebuilding and revitalization fever seems to have swept through our region, from Horry County's decision to dedicate new money to the Regional Economic Development Corp. to Georgetown County's study of local industry. Perhaps it's all a reaction to coming out of recession, taking a deep breath and wanting to quickly put contraction in the rear view mirror. Perhaps the stars just aligned and we found a number of business-building leaders in place all at the same time. Whatever the reason, plans are being made, funds are being raised and optimism is in the air all around us.
...



5. Budget cuts create battle inside region's planning agency, but whose job is in trouble? » Naples Daily News


The executive director of the Southwest Florida Regional Planning Council laid off three planning staff members to cut the budget and then put one of them on administrative leave.


Now he's under fire and trying to keep his own job.


The planning council's executive committee, in an emergency meeting Thursday, nearly placed executive director Ken Heatherington on administrative leave without pay.


But Heatherington buckled to the panel's requests to re-examine his budget cuts.


Heatherington will bring alternative budget options to the regional council's budget-finance committee on Wednesday in preparation for the council's next session, on Thursday.
One budget option still includes the layoffs, Heatherington said.


The decision to lay off staff ultimately lies with the executive director. The regional planning council's board consists of elected officials in the six-county region.
...


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#449 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Mon Jun 27, 2011 5:34 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - June 26, 2011
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Denver and Aurora are gearing up for a modern-day border war over the biggest deal to be announced in the region in a decade.


At issue is a planned Aurora hotel and theme park that could get the largest public subsidy the state has ever awarded, and the possible relocation of one of Denver's most beloved institutions — the National Western Stock Show & Rodeo.


It's a tale rife with all the drama of the Wild West, ...


"The challenge with regionalism is you can't create a doughnut. If we keep shipping our tax base and our cultural institutions to cities in the ring around us, there won't be anything left to support Denver itself," ... president of the Lower Downtown Neighborhood Association.


Denver City Councilman Charlie Brown said the development proposal and resulting tension suggest a fracture in the mostly cooperative dealings among economic developers and business advocacy groups.


"It reveals that regionalism and intergovernmental cooperation look great on a bumper sticker or in a speech, but actually we're all territorial animals," he said.


Absent from the debate is Gov. John Hickenlooper, who during his eight years as Denver mayor touted regionalism as critical to the health of the city and surrounding communities. ...


2. East Side suburbs must consider police, fire, trash services; video: residents, businesses react | cleveland.com


Moreland Hills picks up trash once a week. Woodmere collects twice. Orange pays a garbage contractor. Pepper Pike ...


Trash -- perhaps the most regular, most visible chore municipal governments perform -- is something all residents worry about. And it's one of many issues the four East Side suburbs must study before asking voters to consider merging.


The communities' mayors announced Wednesday they are studying a merger in the most significant step toward regionalism Cuyahoga County has ever seen. Now comes the tough stuff: comparing police staffing, mapping fire coverage, negotiating tax rates and compromising on employee benefits.


The suburbs were once part of Orange Township. Now, they share schools and recreation programs. The villages of Moreland Hills, Orange and Woodmere collaborate for dispatch services, and all four communities contract for income tax collection.


But integrating the four into one city of 13,500 residents and 18 square miles? That's a daunting proposition.
...


3. After the quake: old new town solution for new overspill problem - Cities Matter


Our vision


The long-term shape of Auckland could be a 100 km-long 'city'.  It would retain one clear major centre – a green CBD – but there could be a dozen secondary city centres. They would lie from north to south – like pearls on the chain – along a natural central spine.  They would be urban in appearance.  They would be separated by the greens of farmland, town belts, and parks, but well connected by private and public transport.


This alternative vision builds on reality: Aucklanders live on an isthmus and that shapes our choices.  (Some live on an isthmus within an isthmus).  The completion of the western ring motorway and planned investment in the rail – if it happens -- will only reinforce the north-south development of the city, its region, and its hinterland. It is hard to imagine planning policies that could force change on this natural geography without compounding congestion and costs.We can have a future in which settlements of various sizes (towns, villages, ...


4. Bencini Balks At Board's Rush To Summer - re: Piedmont Triad Council of Governments (PTCOG)


... Bencini, who's been a major backer of regionalism, and of the county's participation in the PTCOG, still had a number of questions.
Bencini said publicly in the days before the meeting that he'd heard from some sources there were other duties the county would have to either contract for or hire additional county staff to handle if the county were not a member of PTCOG.

Bencini asked if Guilford County would need to hire any additional staff to take over other duties formally performed by COG.

"We should not have to contract anything else," Fox said.

Commissioner Kay Cashion asked county staff if the county's membership was still a possibility at some point in the future.

"The door is still open," Fox said.

Gibson said he didn't support the motion to contract out the service for $52,000 instead of joining the organization the county had been a member of for 40 years.

"We talk big talk about regionalism and working with other governments in this area," Gibson said.

He said it seemed now like all of that was just lip service, since the county was no longer going to be a member the group.
"I think that's the wrong thing to do," Gibson said.

Bencini and Gibson couldn't find any support on the board, which voted to pay the COG $52,000 to administer the grants as a service for non-members.

...

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#450 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Tue Jun 28, 2011 5:19 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - June 27, 2011
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1. New Report: Most Aging Baby Boomers Face Poor Mobility Options : Center for Neighborhood Technology


CNT provided the analysis for the new Transportation4America report, Aging in Place, Stuck Without Options, out today on the cities that have worst mobility options for seniors. Large cities with the poorest transit access for seniors included Atlanta, Riverside-San Bernardino (CA), Houston, Detroit, and Dallas-90% of seniors in Atlanta will lack transit access in 2015. Medium-sized cities (1million-3million) with the poorest transit access for seniors are Kansas City, Oklahoma City, Fort Worth-Arlington, Nashville, and Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill. By 2015, 88% of seniors in Kansas City will have poor access to public transit.


CNT Research Director Peter Haas ... "As you see in the cities that top the worst mobility options for seniors, urban form is more spread out. Baby boomers by and large were raised in more dispersed communities where auto-dependency was the favored mode of transport. As the boomers age in these areas, they will be most affected by lack of public transportation."
...


2. Nevada law shifts balance of power on Tahoe planning agency - Sacramento News - Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee


...


The law is a manifestation of Nevada's mounting frustration with Tahoe development restrictions. Though critics say TRPA has rarely balked at any major development project at the lake, cumbersome regulations often produce years of delay and extra compliance costs.


"It's an issue about the pace of work that gets done," said Maureen McCarthy, executive director of the Tahoe Science Consortium. "Nevada's position is driven heavily by the economic climate. The state is broke, and by comparison to California, Nevada is really broke."


McCarthy's group helps government officials understand the science that affects Tahoe. She said TRPA has been invaluable in that regard because it welcomes that science and incorporates it into decisions.


... "We don't want to see the baby thrown out with the bath water, and the baby is science."...


California state Sen. Ted Gaines, R-Roseville, supports the new Nevada law. His district includes the California portion of Lake Tahoe, ...


3. Senecas seek bigger role as area developers - Business - The Buffalo News


The Seneca Nation of Indians wants to be a bigger player in economic development across Western New York and into Pennsylvania.


The nation hosted a meeting of economic development officials from both states Thursday in its Seneca Allegany Casino to learn what each other has to offer and how they can work together in the future.


"For the longest time, I've wanted to get all the IDAs and development agencies in this region together in one room to discover and discuss what we have in common," said Robert Odawi Porter, the Seneca Nation president.


"Let's see how we can all work together to foster and build economic development options to benefit all our people, whether they live within Seneca, New York or Pennsylvania boundaries," Porter said. "Good business knows no boundaries."


... meeting was one of the first times that economic development officials from the Seneca Nation and five New York and two Pennsylvania counties had gotten together to talk about economic development.


4. EDITORIAL: Charting the course for economic growth - Northwest Indiana


The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's major study of the greater Chicago area -- from southeast Wisconsin to Northwest Indiana -- is one more effort to chart a course for the area's future.


The Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce is leading the Paris-based OEDC's tri-state study to analyze the region's economic impact. In the process, the chamber will gauge the area's economic competitiveness, attractiveness, sustainability and political climate compared to other major cities around the world.As a major study, the effort includes amassing an army of data. But it's also a call to arms for people and organizations to improve the situation here.


The Gary and Region Investment Project ...is a similar undertaking for Northwest Indiana.... 


"I think people are recognizing that we could be in trouble unless we take steps to act,"  Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce Foundation President .... "There's a recognition on a global scale that regional approaches ... make sense."
...


5. Next American City » Magazine » The Enabling City


We face massive challenges … and we are inspired." This is the opening line of what until a few years ago would have been considered an improbable urban manifesto. Crafted in 2006 by the Social Silicon Valley collective, Towards City 2.0 is a compelling call to arms that was submitted to an international ideas competition launched by officials in Helsinki, Finland. Confronted with the need to address issues of rapid population growth and environmental change, 14 towns and municipalities in the Helsinki Metropolitan Regionturned to the public, looking for solutions that would address their residential, land use and transportation needs of the future. In six incredibly insightful pages, City 2.0 details the collective's vision for a city that doubles as an innovation hub. Here, hyperlocal ideas are connected to the larger city fabric through a "social innovation mayor," a political figure responsible for driving long-term structural changes by unlocking the capacity of others to ...


6. Human Transit: that influential texas "urban mobility report" 


.. Congress for the New Urbanism conference in Madison ... a small but sharp audience gathered to hear Tim Lomax of the Texas Transportation Institute (TTI) debate Joe Cortwright of CEOs for Cities.  Tim was there to defend TTI's influential Urban Mobility Report (UMR), an annual compendium of statistics that are widely used to define how US cities think about mobility problems and to benchmark these cities against each other.  Joe was there to attack TTI's methodology as biased against compact, sustainable cities. 


The technical core of the argument is simple.  TTI's Travel Time Index, one of their more quoted products, is a ratio of peak congested travel times by car against uncongested travel times by car.  In other words, travel times are said to be "worse" only if they get much longer in peak commute hours than they are midday. 


This ratio inevitably gives "better" scores to cities where normal uncongested travel times are pretty long -- in other words, spread-out cities. ...


...




7. Regional committee to go the distance - Australia


A new Ministerial Advisory Council is to be established to advise the Minister for Regional Australia on issues affecting country communities.


   The Minister, Simon Crean said the new Council would give regional communities even stronger backing at the highest level of government.


   Mr Crean said $4.3 billion was budgeted for key investments in regional communities including health and hospitals, skills, higher education and infrastructure.


   He said the Government had strengthened the role of the nation's 55 Regional Development Australia Committees and was driving a new place-based approach to help deliver local solutions to local issues.


"We are determined to make sure regional communities can meet the challenge of an economy in transition and reach their full potential," Mr Crean said.
...




8. Development Blueprint For County Clare Is Launched - Ireland


The Mayor of Clare launched the Clare County Development Plan 2011-2017 today describing it as a "window of opportunity for the County to foster innovation, creativity and new sustainable, inclusive development."


Councillor Christy Curtin joined Council officials as well as Clare's 31 other Elected Members at the official launch in Aras Contae an Chláir.


The Clare County Development Plan 2011-2017 sets out an overall strategy for the proper planning and sustainable development of the functional area of Clare County Council. The six-year blueprint replaces the existing County Development Plan 2005 and is the sixth such Plan since 1964.


... Mayor Curtin stated: "The primary goal of this Plan is to position County Clare as a driver for local and regional growth through harnessing the potential of its unique location, quality of life, natural resources and other competitive advantages.  Ultimately, the Plan seeks to make County Clare a better place to live in, work and visit."


...


9. Cisco CEO Keynotes at 2011 Urban Area Security Initiative (UASI) Conference


John Chambers, CEO of Cisco Systems


Enhancing capabilities through regional collaboration.  The tech community has provided the opportunity to enhance our communications and coordination.


What is changing?  Market transitions don't wait for anyone.  Security and safety is another piece of this.  Think about what social media brings to the table, but in a secure fashion.  The public sector is going to get leaner and meaner. Today it is a network economy feeding on information.  Now you have so much data that you need to access the relevant data.  Dynamic is the way to think about it.  Interagency coordination is needed.


Constant change is going to be tough.  Collaboration is the answer, not command and control.  Need to outthink and outmaneuver the events that are going to impact us.  We used to function in the PC world.  Today it is all about mobile.  By 2013 there will be 1 trillion devices connecting people across the world.Getting these all to work with a seamless interface is the key...for future collaboration.


10. Carl Zimmer: A Planet of Viruses - The Long Now Foundation - FORA.tv


The Earth's atmosphere is determined in large part by ocean bacteria; every day viruses kill half of them. Every year in the oceans, viruses transfer a trillion trillion genes between host organisms. They evolve faster than anything else, and they are a major engine of the evolution of the rest of life. Our own bodies are made up of 10 trillion human cells, 100 trillion bacteria, and 4 trillion very busy viruses. Some of them kill us. Many of them help us. Some of them are us. Viral time is ancient and blindingly fast.


Science journalist Carl Zimmer's wrote "A Planet of Viruses" and explains in this presentation what is known about the viruses. SARS, HIV and H1N1 are covered, as well as the need for an annual vaccination, since viruses mutate so rapidly. The other Long Now Foundation videos at this site are worth a look. Steward Brand, publisher of "The Whole Earth Catalog" is the founder and moderator for questions after the presentation.  


More links: http://www.delicious.com/I.see.regions.work

#451 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Thu Jun 30, 2011 5:54 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - June 28-29, 2011
regionswork
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1. A New Threat to Regional Government & Environmental Quality at Lake Tahoe « Legal Planet: Environmental Law and Policy
...
It seems extremely unlikely that California will accede to Nevada's political demands. (As noted above, it was California's insistence that the Tahoe Compact be made more environmentally protective that produced the revised, 1980 bi-state Compact.  Environmental preservation of Lake Tahoe continues to draw widespread, bipartisan support among Californians.) So unless Nevada blinks and repeals this unfortunate act of political extortion, nearly a half century of bi-state cooperation and environmental leadership will end in 2015, when Nevada withdraws from the Tahoe Compact. What happens thereafter–and whether the Tahoe Basin's fragile environment can be preserved–is anyone's guess.


2. Addressing Regional Skill Gaps « EMSI | Economic Modeling Specialists Inc.


So the topic du jour is the skills mismatch in the US, which is all about how employers are having a hard time finding appropriately skilled employees during a time of abundant unemployment. It's an odd phenomenon, and one that has folks at all levels flummoxed. 


So why is this happening? There are a bunch of explanations – economic change has revealed that the American workforce: 1) has a lot of out-of-date skills and training; 2) vocational institutions and higher education aren't equipping students with what employers want; 3) rapid advances in technology and business have created skills needs that very few possess; 4) as businesses become more lean, they want more out of their employees. 
...
Below are a series of steps that EMSI recommends. From a best practices standpoint, our clients have taken the critical information identified through this process to execute new strategies, invest in innovative practices, and adjust to rapidly changing economic environments.
...




3. A Restructuring of Census Bureau Regional Offices - The Director's Blog
...


The regional offices are a key part of our work, and we have been deliberating since April 2010 on how best to organize them for the future. Our goal is to prepare the Census Bureau for the changing landscape of statistical data collection we see coming.


We have decided to transition from a Regional Office design of 12 offices to one of 6 offices. The transition has begun and will be fully completed by January 2013. The new design strengthens and unifies the supervision of field representatives and increases the number of supervisory staff working out of their homes. Simultaneously, we are reviewing the technical and administrative organization within the headquarters offices in order to assure that we have both a strong technical skill mix and a cost efficient administrative organization, matching that of the new regional structure.
...


4. Create a network of regional European news agency | Social European Journalism Blog


This proposal was submitted to us by Jean Lemaître ( Director of IHECS International and Further education) and Thomas Lemaigre ( Director of Alter Agency ).


Around 800 European journalists are accredited to European Institutions. They do a hard and necessary work. But they generally favour political and institutional information and often find themselves isolated from their national and regional editors, who compartmentalise European information without leaving sufficient breathing space for the local dimension.


Furthermore, fewer and fewer media can afford the taxes and expenses to maintain a journalist in Brussels. With a few exceptions, they are essentially national media.


At the same time, dozens of thousands journalists work in the 27 Member states, on regional and local areas, close to citizens: local radio and televisions, town and associative newspapers, Internet…...


Our proposal:


We offer to set up a network of regional European press agencies which:
...


5. Plan unveiled to build region's 'Culturescape' - The Cornwall Standard Freeholder - Ontario, CA


The regional culture plan ... recommending that a special committee be formed to consolidate resources, including the creation of a central arts facility, in the hopes of boosting economic spinoff opportunities.


The plan, called Building the Culturescape in Cornwall and the Communities of Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry, was presented to about a dozen municipal politicians and close to 100 members of the public ...


High amongst the recommendations is a cultural council, which would be the glue toward embellishing cultural pursuits in the region, ...


...


One of the recommendations cited the role for municipalities to establish a "funding envelope" which moves the plan forward consistently. Oftentimes, some money is needed to "leverage" provincial and federal grant programs.


Another recommendation, to create a cultural map listing as many activities and venues as possible, is needed.




6. Thinking regionally: Great Lakes Bay collaboration growing - Midland Daily News:
Collaboration is growing in the Great Lakes Bay Region, according to attendees at a first-ever community update on regional efforts.

The Great Lakes Bay Regional Alliance organized the event Tuesday at the Midland Center for the Arts, bringing together leaders from Midland, Bay, Saginaw and Isabella counties.

Terry Moore, CEO of the GLBR Alliance, said councils have been formed to improve advocacy efforts, economic development, education and arts and entertainment in the region. The organization also runs the GLBR Leadership Institute, now 171 graduates strong, to spread the message that the communities in the region are stronger together than alone."

Together, we are enough," Moore said. "We're able to do what needs to be done and we are in the process of doing it."

Moore welcomed Isabella County into the alliance at the event.
...

"Regional cooperation and collaboration are key elements in a thriving regional economy,"  ...



7. 'Vision' folly | Press-Enterprise Editorials | PE.com | News for Inland Southern California

Spurring greater regional cooperation in San Bernardino County requires more than feel-good public relations symbolism. Yes, collaboration by local governments can be effective at addressing common needs. But innocuous generalities will not build a countywide partnership; city and county officials need to develop practical approaches to reach that goal.

Local government officials plan to adopt a new shared "vision" for the county at a June 30 meeting of the San Bernardino Associated Governments. ...

... developing a coordinated strategy requires something more substantial than the banal results of a "visioning process."

San Bernardino County should focus on functional ways to meet countywide needs, not on rhetorical gestures. Riverside County, for example, has a uniform transportation fee for development and a multi-species habitat conservation plan, which attempt comprehensive solutions to regional issues. Words are no substitute for steps that offer real, practical progress.


8. LOWELL MURRAY: You do not govern, you hold to account those who do | iPolitics

Below is a speech Sen. Lowell Murray, the longest serving senator still sitting, delivered at a conference honouring prominent Acadian scholar Donald Savoie held earleir this month at Le Pays de la Sagouine in Bouctouche, N.B.

...

Canadians, especially those who live in or come from the slower growth regions, tend to take for granted and to seldom acknowledge how federal government transfers to persons such as pensions and Employment Insurance contribute indirectly to the maintenance of decent incomes and living standards in those regions, and make possible the existence at any viable level of seasonal industries such as fisheries and tourism. Likewise intergovernmental transfers — not just Equalization but transfers for health, post secondary education and social programs — help maintain national standards and prevent the massive rate of disinvestment, outmigration and depopulation that would occur in the absence of such standards.

Then of course there are the direct federal investments in ports, airports, military bases and various infrastructure that contribute very significantly to the economy of those regions. All this is today part of the Canadian fabric,  ...

9. Anglican-Lutheran dialogue examines service and witness - ENInews

...

The commission, which was established in its current form in 2004, will recommend that the next phase of Anglican-Lutheran international work be a coordinating committee, rather than a theological group, to encourage cooperation in regional work.Theology, however, would still be part of its mandate, ....

The meeting heard of the difficulties faced by Christians in the Holy Land, where much of the Palestinian population faces daily restrictions and lack of jobs and opportunities. The meeting also heard from Christians from Tanzania, South Africa, Argentina, Botswana and Japan, whose general message was "an emphasis on getting on with mission," Barnett-Cowan said.

Regional cooperation could take the forms of challenging the stigma of HIV/AIDS or working together to combat climate change, she noted. In Jerusalem, "there had been a full communion commission and the bishops pledged to re-activate that," she said.
...


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#452 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Mon Jul 4, 2011 5:26 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - June 30 - July 3, 2011
regionswork
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... Clinton Global Initiative – America ... The concept ... to get public, private and non-profit leaders together in a room, shake lightly and see what comes out. It is starting to sound like the recipe for a cocktail but it is part of an increasing focus on regions leading the way to economic vitality.
...
Growth and market activity is usually based in regions, and in order to accelerate that growth, specialized plans are needed. The concept of a grassroots "bottoms up" regional economic development planning has emerged as one way to drive the economic recovery and competitiveness. For example, The Brookings Institution has selected three U.S. regions – the Twin Cities, Northeast Ohio, and Puget Sound – to participate in a pilot project, though the Metropolitan Business Plan Initiative. The goal is to leverage the efforts currently underway and establish a public/private regional agenda for job creation through cluster development, innovation and entrepreneurship.
...


Cuyahoga County will help move forward talks of a possible merger between Pepper Pike, Orange Village, Moreland Hills and Woodmere.

Mayors Bruce Akers of Pepper Pike, Kathy Mulcahy of Orange Village, Susan Renda of Moreland Hills and Charles Smith of Woodmere attended a meeting and a press conference June 22, along with Cuyahoga County Executive Ed Fitzgerald, announcing a study that will focus on regionalism.

The Cuyahoga County Planning Commission is putting together the study to see what the benefits the benefits to the four communities of combining services or possibly merging into one municipality.

Initial talks of collaboration

Mulcahy said the mayors went to Fitzgerald a number of months ago to talk about doing a study focused on regionalism and other collaborative efforts. The mayors were ready to study the facts of merging, and were looking for support from the county or any entity who could relay any cost-saving benefits to the four municipalities.
...


Two area economic development announcements Thursday will bring 40 new jobs to the region.
-
Monroe County is one of 10 counties in the Barren River Area Development District that partners with the chamber to promote regional economic development.
-
Why should Warren County residents care about an announcement two counties away? The answer is simple, Warren County Judge-executive Mike Buchanon said.

"Recognizing that our local economy and our local workforce is truly regional, and planning and marketing accordingly, is key to our continued job growth and strengthening our quality of life,""Our local companies' workforce commutes daily from every county in our region, as do their customers. And many of our Warren County residents work in surrounding counties. ...

"Warren County is the retail shopping hub for all of our BRADD counties, and more. So our efforts to help neighboring governments bring in new jobs to their respective counties, pays dividends to our community as well.
...

Northeastern Pennsylvania has had both success and shortcomings in its efforts to replace manufacturing jobs over the past 30 years.

A report from the Brookings Institution, ... "Responding to Manufacturing Job Loss: What Can Economic Development Policy Do?" offers an assessment, or what some would call a critique, of the economic development efforts in six metro areas, including Scranton, from 1980 to 2005.

Here's some of the assessments Brookings made in the study:

- Local economic developers are adept at promoting the region's inherent advantages, but fail to place an emphasis on generating new advantages.

- Work force development efforts are lagging other regions of the state.

- Until recently, the region's economic development groups competed, rather than cooperated.

- Efforts to promote entrepreneurship, while laudable, have had limited success in creating an entrepreneurial culture.

- The region as a whole takes collective risks, but shuns individual risk.
...

From the Statehouse, the 5-year-old lease of the Indiana Toll Road looks wildly successful. It looks a little different from up north.

The 75-year lease to ITR Concession Co. handed the state $3.8 billion upfront. As Gov. Mitch Daniels proudly said Wednesday, that deal has kept Indiana investing in its roads and bridges at a time when other states are forced to let infrastructure crumble.
...
For its part, ITR Concessions pledged to operate the Toll Road to meet state standards and invest $4.4 billion in the project over the life of the lease.

All that's very good.

But folks in our part of the state have a few additional observations about Major Moves.

Toll rates have gone up. The direct impact of that is on the Toll Road corridor drivers and businesses that rely on the highway. Some of us still remember the promise, made more than half a century ago, that the road would become free after construction bonds were retired. It appears now that that promise will never be fulfilled.

...

Redlands and Logan will strive to be at the forefront of the emerging digital economy under a plan released last week.

The two cities will cooperate under a joint push to enhance the two regions' economic and social development.

Plans to enhance employment and education through a rapid take up of the proposed high-speed broadband network is one of the key planks of a "Regional Roadmap" unveiled at the launch of community-based organisation Regional Development Australia (RDA) Logan and Redlands Inc.

RDA Logan and Redlands is part of a national network of committees established by the Australian Government to help grow and strengthen the nation's regions, and ensure their long-term sustainability.

Committees work with their local communities to identify opportunities, challenges and priorities for action.

Redland Mayor, Cr Melva Hobson said the Logan and Redlands RDA would provide a conduit between the federal government and local government.

...


The upcoming annual Lake Tahoe Summit, to be hosted this year by U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California on Aug. 16, promises to be a doozy.
...
The two-state compact is under severe stress. A renewed commitment is needed by all parties – with the clear goal to restore, then maintain the waters of Lake Tahoe.

Tim Cashman, a Nevada representative on the TRPA governing board has said, "The compact is designed to force us to work together. This is the way to protect Lake Tahoe."

At this year's Lake Tahoe Summit, Feinstein and Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada will have to do heavy lifting to rally attention and energy toward solving Lake Tahoe's very real problems. ...

Lake Tahoe's future depends on Nevada and California working together to protect the lake, which is essential for protecting the economy of this resort region now, and into the future. Both states can't let the two-state compact fail. Honest dialogue – not ultimatums – is the only road forward.


Two bills aimed at keeping New Jersey in a regional greenhouse gas reduction pact received final approval from the Legislature Wednesday, but the fate of the state's participation was no closer to being resolved.

Gov. Chris Christie announced in May he was pulling the state from the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, or RGGI, by the end of the year, saying it failed to cut pollution. Democrats fast-tracked three bills through the Legislature to try to stop him.

New Jersey is one of 10 states currently participating in the pact, which seeks to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases believed to be a factor in global warming. To emit the pollutants, energy producers must acquire permits that can be bought and sold among plants, making it fiscally prudent to rein in their emissions.

The Assembly voted 43-34 Wednesday to approve a measure requiring the state to stay in the pact.

...

Clues, the Yahoo product that provides information on search trends on Yahoo searches, has just gotten a big upgrade. Their new version includes an upgraded interface, regional search data, and trends for separate demographics.

The Yahoo Clues New Features

While Yahoo Clues has been around for a long time, it's often been overlooked. The trend data, after all, only went back a month, and the top overall trends were often the only visible data points. According to the Yahoo Search Blog, there are four major features in the new version:

An updated design that provides quick links to Top Trends, which shows the most searched for terms, and Trend Analysis.

An improved heatmap that shows how search data is faring in specific regions.

Global reach, with all English searches from around the world showing in the trend data.

Improved information, including 12 months of trend history, three times as many search terms, and the ability to search through data for specified groups.

Sample - Comparison of trend terms "regional" and "local" 



The Western Visayas Regional Development Council yesterday approved a collegial resolution calling on Coca-Cola and other similar industries to buy sugar produced domestically.

Herman Santos of the Confederation of Sugar Producers Association, and Hernane Braza of Sugar Watch sought the RDC's support for the Philippine sugar industry at its meeting at the Capitol in Bacolod City.

They pointed out that the importation of sugar premixes and high fructose corn syrup is badly hurting the domestic sugar industry, which prompted their campaign to boycott Coca-Cola products.
...


On Thursday, 19 out of 24 participating regional planning council members gave Ken Heatherington a "vote of no confidence."

The council said they were upset about Heatherington's budget proposals, bonuses he gave last year, abrupt layoffs, lack of communication, his inability to produce public records and his overall management style.
...
The vote stemmed from disagreements between Heatherington and the council on how to tackle a reduced budget for fiscal 2011 to 2012, which was cut $220,000 by the state.
...
Heatherington came to Thursday's meeting with three additional budgets. Two of the budgets left the council in a deficit, ...

The council voted 14 to 10 to approve a "goal budget." The "goal budget" included the plan to reduce the budget by $250,000 and to look at "all the options." All options include, re-examining the regional planning council's mission, strategizing to increase revenue and terminating the executive director.


The wise entrepreneur develops a business plan before launching a venture. The plan is an indispensable tool for stating a company's mission, analyzing the competition, sizing up risks, developing products or services customers want to buy, figuring out who you need to hire, forecasting financials and measuring performance.

Now imagine doing all that for a region.

That's the goal of the Metropolitan Business Plan, an initiative recently undertaken by the CenterState Corporation for Economic Opportunity in concert with the Brookings Institution, a think tank, and RW Ventures, a consultant.

We know what you're thinking. Just what we need, another study!

CenterState CEO's forebear, the Metropolitan Development Association, produced stacks of them over the years, attempting to chart a path to jobs and prosperity for a city and region forever picking itself up off the mat.
...

What will the Syracuse region pick? The process is just getting started.


If you're looking for a way to escape the triple digit heat this holiday weekend, there are going to be additional cooling stations open across the Las Vegas valley.

Temperatures are expected to reach or exceed 110 degrees, which can be a serious health hazard if you're without shelter, or even without air conditioning and cold water inside.

The Southern Nevada Regional Planning Coalition's Inclement Weather Shelter Program provides seasonal cooling shelters seven days a week throughout the summer at the Salvation Army and Shade Tree Shelter.

When the weather reaches these "Extreme Weather" thresholds, additional Cooling Stations are made available to the homeless and others to provide a safe place to escape from the heat and receive water.

...

Natal suffers from regionalism of a special type. For this reason, a low-key provincial politician may hold the keys to the country's future.

"Regionalism" is a term adopted by activists and commentators wishing to skirt the controversial vocabularies of tribalism and ethnicity. It refers to the tendency of some citizens to award public sector jobs, political offices and government tenders to fellow South Africans who share a similar background, language or culture.

There is a lot of regionalism about. The African National Congress (ANC) has historically believed that discussion of ethnic chauvinism should be suppressed. Instead, tribalism should be ameliorated by managing candidate lists, balancing government appointments and denying ethnic entrepreneurs the freedom to mobilise in internal elections.

...


Residents of the southern Kyrgyzstan request politicians to refrain from division citizens by regional and national features as the leader of the Kyrgyz Communist Party, Iskhak Masaliyev, stated at the press conference in 24.kg news agency.

According to him, people note that current politicians further the growth of regionalism and nationalist moods. "This has become the major problem in Kyrgyzstan for recent 20 years and the presidential elections won't be an exception – Iskhak Masaliyev said. – The population offers the Kyrgyz politicians to field as less candidates as possible for the presidency to avoid division of the nation."

He expressed concern that the growth of regionalism will cause the collapse of the country.


 The new director-general of police V Dinesh Reddy said regionalism was becoming a problem in the state, joining other `isms' like extremism, communalism and factionism.

Addressing a press conference after taking charge, Reddy said, `'Regionalism is a problem but we will tackle the issue. We will cross the bridge when it comes.'' Describing policing as a noble profession second only to medicine, the new state police chief said he would provide a definite direction to his force.

"I assure people of the entire state that protecting their lives and property will be my aim,'' he said.

...

This is a speech that was presented at The Universities at Shady Grove in Rockville Maryland on June 25, 2011. Panelists presented their speech on an array of topics pertinent to Eritrea's Path towards Democracy.

The main issues that were presented by the panelists were: Diversity Management in Nation Building, Religion and Languages in Eritrean politics, Regionalism Identity and Political Organizations in Eritrea, Nationality Rights and Constitutional Design in Eritrea and Lessons from Constitutional Designs in Africa. This is a speech that was given relating to Regionalism, Identity and Political Organizations in Eritrea.
...



#453 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Thu Jul 7, 2011 7:21 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - July 4 - 6, 2011
regionswork
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1. In a Growth-Oriented System, Youngstown, Ohio Struggles to Shrink - Streetsblog Capitol Hill


Youngstown ... population dwindle from 115,000 residents to barely 67,000 over just three decades. ... 


Almost a decade ago, ... Youngstown was planning to shrink — but to shrink smart. 


... now — in 2011 — the city of Youngstown is just getting around to removing its first street. Part of the problem is that the state, regional and national policy framework is still oriented for growth. After all, Youngstown can't go to the Ohio Department of Transportation and ask for money to tear out roads — yet. ODOT's money is for building roads, and that fuels a dynamic that threatens what progress has made in Youngstown. 


... Youngstown's population loss doesn't stop at its borders; the overall Youngstown-Warren region lost 6 percent of its population in the last decade alone. As yet, however, there is no regional plan for right-sizing. In fact, the region continues with a campaign of widening roads in the ever-more-distant suburbs, while allowing its urban infrastructure to crumble.
...


 2. Pinole Snubs Regional Planning Agency - Pinole, CA Patch


The Pinole City Council voted unanimously Tuesday not to renew its 2011-12 membership in the Association of Bay Area Governments, the agency that oversees regional planning and other issues.


Pinole is the first city to withdraw from the 101-member organization for the new fiscal year, said ABAG assistant executive director Patricia Jones. City officials can attend association meetings but will lose their voting rights.


The association, founded in 1951, provides planning assistance, some funding and lobbying for cities and counties around the nine-county Bay Area. It also sets regional policy guidelines on housing and transportation issues.


In deciding not to pay the $4,030 dues, council members questioned the value of the regional organization for small cities. While council members noted that the association has helped to obtain some funding for the city ... they said they'd like to drop out for a year to test the value of membership.
...


 3. Wellington Webb: Don't let the stock show get away - The Denver Post


... For all of us who grew up with the National Western Stock Show in Denver and those who proudly call Denver home, we must consider all of the arguments before letting a 105-year-old institution leave the Mile High City.


"Regionalism" has become a buzz word, with supporters of the move to Aurora saying it is the best thing for both communities. But what many Denver residents may not remember is that this isn't the first time that Denver almost lost two of its vital assets, which would have changed the face of downtown.


As mayor, I believed strongly that a great city must have three priorities: public safety, a good educational system, and be the cultural and entertainment hub of the region. During my term, there was a real danger that Denver was going to lose the Denver Broncos, Denver Nuggets and Colorado Avalanche ...


... I know that I don't want to look back in a few years and say, "Remember when the Stock Show was in Denver? That's one we let get away."


 4. Ricky Mathews column: Leadership Council announces next steps | al.com


What may be the most ambitious regional collaboration in our recent history is underway. ...


... Coastal Recovery Commission (CRC) of Alabama, then the Coastal Alabama Leadership Council that grew from the CRC's December 2010 report. Now, we're ... about to apply our goals more broadly and grow our membership into an even more effective regional force.


The effort that began as Coastal Alabama's self-examination of vulnerabilities in the wake of the 2010 oil spill has evolved into a set of ambitious goals ... new Leadership Council ... Coastal Alabama Leadership Foundation (CALF), to raise funds and apply for planning and implementation grants. 


... we've deepened the understanding among business, academic, environmental and public health leaders about the critical value of a broad, regional perspective. The regional outlook we thought we had wasn't nearly broad enough or inclusive enough. Now we know.


... Leadership Council enjoys the passionate commitment of key corporate ...


 5. Leadership Triangle Elects Board Members - North Carolina


Leadership Triangle is a non-profit organization established in 1992 to educate and promote regionalism across the separate communities of the Triangle. It does this through regional and leadership development classes, seminars and awards. They strive to build leadership capacity, cooperation, and networking opportunities across the public, private and civic sector, preserving local uniqueness while acting regionally to deal with issues such as traffic congestion, water quality, housing affordability, open space, school funding, economic and social equity. Since 1992 Leadership Triangle has brought together emerging leaders from all corners of the Triangle, building bridges across Wake, Chatham, Durham and Orange communities and across business, government, nonprofit, academic, and grassroots leadership. They connect current and emerging community leaders, honoring differences, yet finding common ground on which to address regional issues and ... www.leadershiptriangle.com.


 6. Let's get new RTA bill done - Wisconsin


The same Republicans who just killed the Dane County Regional Transit Authority say they're willing to allow RTAs in Wisconsin if they're more consistent and accountable.
...
Dane County needs an RTA to encourage regional cooperation on transportation planning to avoid gridlock.


Assembly Speaker Jeff Fitzgerald, R-Horicon, and Rep. Robin Vos, R-Rochester, played key roles during the recent state budget process in nixing the legal status of several RTAs including Dane County's.


Yet they told the State Journal editorial board recently that they'll encourage more study and a compromise bill that can be approved as early as next year or by 2013.


We intend to hold them to that pledge.


Vos seems to want a one-size-fits-all approach to RTAs, which we don't understand. After all, the transportation needs in Dane County are different than in rural areas or, for that matter, southeastern Wisconsin.


Vos also said he wants to make sure property taxpayers are protected.
...


 7. Europe Stifles Drivers in Favor of Mass Transit and Walking - NYTimes.com


While American cities are synchronizing green lights to improve traffic flow and offering apps to help drivers find parking, many European cities are doing the opposite: creating environments openly hostile to cars. The methods vary, but the mission is clear — to make car use expensive and just plain miserable enough to tilt drivers toward more environmentally friendly modes of transportation.


Cities including Vienna to Munich and Copenhagen have closed vast swaths of streets to car traffic. Barcelona and Paris have had car lanes eroded by popular bike-sharing programs. Drivers in London and Stockholm pay hefty congestion charges just for entering the heart of the city. And over the past two years, dozens of German cities have joined a national network of "environmental zones" where only cars with low carbon dioxide emissions may enter.


Likeminded cities welcome new shopping malls and apartment buildings but severely restrict the allowable number of parking spaces. ...


 8. Parliament backs development funding for regions `in transition'


Plans to create a new category of regions to benefit from EU cohesion funding in 2014-2020 were supported ...Better targeted and more transparent European structural funds, to help reduce regional disparities while rising to the challenges of the Europe 2020 strategy, were among other demands made in the resolution.


A majority of MEPs voted in favour of creating a category of regions `in transition' which have a "per capita GDP between 75% and 90% of the EU average" (…) "in order to avoid unequal treatment of regions in spite of their similar situations". The argument for this is that some regions have risen above the 75% threshold that entitles them to receive "convergence" funding, while others that were previously better off have been hit by the crisis or by structural problems that have hampered their development.


The current `phasing-out' and `phasing-in' systems ... replaced by more predictable and balanced structural aid over seven years for around 50 regions


 9. Brussels penalises UK museums, firms and councils £500k for not flying EU flag | Mail Online


Fines for failing to display the EU flag and logos should be scrapped, a government minister said yesterday.


Brussels has imposed financial penalties of almost £500,000 on councils, museums, universities, travel firms and business groups.


Each had breached rules that require display of EU symbols in return for grant money – a system Eric Pickles said was unfair.


`It defies common sense that the EU can hammer public bodies with huge fines for merely not flying their flag,' said the communities and local government secretary.


`This is a prime example of bureaucracy taking over, with organisations being hit for the most minor breaches for over-complicated rules.


`The end result is British taxpayers' money being wasted on design guidelines, form-filling and millions of pounds of red tape. These fines should be axed.'


The fines relate to money given to the UK by the European Regional Development Fund since 2000.


...


10. EDITORIAL: Transportation vital for economic development


When looking to the region's future, it's important to look at the big picture -- and the Northwestern Indiana Regional Planning Commission is doing exactly that.


For the first time in NIRPC's 45-year history, the agency has approved a blueprint that marries transportation and economic development.


The 2040 Comprehensive Regional Plan details 30 years of transportation projects along with land-use alternatives and other goals.


The NIRPC plan aims to revitalize the region's urban core -- a valuable aim that dovetails nicely with efforts like that of the Gary and Region Investment Project. GRIP, a major effort sponsored by The Times Media Co. and the Metropolitan Planning Council, in conjunction with groups like the Urban Land Institute, is looking at specific projects that hold promise in improving the quality of life in the region and boosting economic development as well.


NIRPC's plan aims to create livable communities throughout Lake, Porter and LaPorte counties.
...


11. Regional Planning to Consider Six Areas of Annexation - KHGI-TV/KWNB-TV/KHGI-CA-Grand Island, Kearney, Hastings, Lincoln - Nebraska


The Regional Planning Commission ... hold six public hearings on whether land adjacent to Grand Island should be annexed into the city.


Specifics on the areas that are being proposed for annexation, as well as other information that will be presented at the meeting tonight, are available on the city's website at www.grand-island.com/annexation.


The six areas being considered for annexation will assume no increase in valuation; however there will be additional taxes paid when the property comes into the city and is subject to city property taxes and as tax shifts occur from Northwest schools to Grand Island public schools as a result of annexation.
...


12. UNCC rolls out regional-indicators site - Earth & Energy


UNC Charlotte's Urban Institute has unveiled a new website that tracks how the Charlotte region's doing on the economy, environment, education and other indicators.


The institute launched its Charlotte Regional Indicators Project in 2007. The new version allows its database to be updated with fresh material as soon as it's released from the source.


"It is our hope that the Indicators website will become a sort of 'community commons,' where the data and commentary found here will spark more serious conversations and dialogue across the region – in city council meetings, neighborhood gatherings, corporate and nonprofit board rooms, in classrooms, and around the family dinner table – as we all strive for that elusive shared vision of what the Charlotte region can be," ...


13. Thawing Arctic opens up new shipping routes on the 'roof of the world' | Environment | guardian.co.uk


Cold is the new hot in shipping circles as melting sea ice opens up prospects for trade between China and the west to move across the roof of the world.


An increasing amount of seaborne traffic is beginning to move on the so-called Northern Sea Route which traverses the Siberian coast. There are also hopes of opening up more of the North West Passage above Canada.


The attraction of the voyage is that it is one-third of the distance of more traditional routes through the Suez Canal. This means less carbon-dioxide (CO2) emissions and less fuel. It also means less pirates.
...



"Ships operating in or near the Arctic use advanced diesel engines that release black carbon into one of the most sensitive regions for climate change," ...


The study team's key conclusion, based on the modelling of future emissions in the region, is that "short-lived forcing of about 4.5 gigatons of black carbon from Arctic shipping may increase the global warming potential due to ships' carbon dioxide emissions by some 17 to 78%."
...



14. Call for regional adaptation strategy


Broader regional collaboration on adaptation and joint meteorological data management and knowledge sharing to plan on water and food security must be achieved for water management in the face of climate change.


Water expert Dr Ainun Nishat, speaking as the chair, said the meeting agreed on greater collaboration on two blocks. One was on climate change and its impacts on regional water resources and another on sharing of knowledge and capacity building.
...


The recommendations came at the end of a two-day consultative meeting yesterday between water experts of Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Bhutan.


Ministry of Environment and Forests and International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development ...


The meeting's outcome will be presented at Bhutan Climate Summit 2011 in Thimpu titled "For a Living Himalayas" at the end of this year, said speakers at the meeting.
...


15. The Hindu : Opinion / Letters : Telangana issue - Letters


      a. Establishing a State will not eradicate poverty, illiteracy, unemployment and inequality (July 6). An amicable solution to the Telangana issue is the need of the hour. There has to be a mechanism where regionalism will be addressed without affecting national integrity. But the political class, instead of creating an amicable relationship among the regions, seems only to be fuelling implacable hatred.
...
      b. The best that the Centre can do is iron out contentious issues through deft bargaining.
...
      c. Telangana may be a so-called backward area but there are a number of such regions in India. Does this mean that all of them must be given statehood? Innocent youth spearheading the agitation appear to have become pawns in the hands of the political class. Eliminating corruption, and not a separate state, is the key to development.
...
      d. The editorial "End this drift on Telangana" (July 6) was well-intentioned. The need of the hour is political consensus.
...




16. RCC to host first meeting on implementation of regional strategy on justice and home affairs in South East Europe - Balkans.com


The first meeting of the Steering Group on Regional Strategy on Justice and Home Affairs, designed to facilitate the Strategy implementation, will open in Sarajevo ... under the auspices of the Regional Cooperation Council (RCC) Secretariat.


... discuss implementation of the South East European (SEE) Regional Strategic Document 2011-2013 on Justice and Home Affairs and its Action Plan, endorsed by the South-East European Cooperation Process (SEECP) ministers of justice and home affairs ...


It will review, update and consolidate regional strategic choices, challenges and priorities; and establish a monitoring and evaluation mechanism to assess the level of regional cooperation within justice and home affairs area.


...joint RCC-European Commission working group meeting on international cooperation in criminal justice and law enforcement cooperation in the fight against trans-border organised crime, within the Multi-Beneficiary Instrument for Pre-accession Assistance (IPA) Programme.




17. The trouble with transparency | TransConflict | Transform, Transcend, Translate - TransConflict Serbia


Two mirror myths obscure useful discussion of trajectories in the Balkans. The first, the notion that the region is dominated by primeval ethnic hatred, has been pretty well dispatched by critics and pundits. ...


The companion myth, unlike its twin, remains not only alive but a cornerstone of an international orthodoxy currently stunting regional development. It goes as follows. In many parts of the Balkans – especially but not exclusively Bosnia – there exists a robust tradition of multi-ethnic cooperation.  ...


... problem with this is that it neglects the bedrock of the region's material history. Ethnicity certainly is not the determining factor in Balkan relationships, but it and other fault lines of communal relations have a solid basis in durable problems related to topography and associated issues around communication and transportation. It always has been easier to move into and out of the Balkans than among points within the region. Therefore, serial invasions and settlement patterns have tended to leave puddles of people who (according to the archaeological record) quickly lost touch with each other. Under these conditions, developing linguistic, religious, and – most of all – localist distinctions have created social differences and patronage-based patterns of subsistence and communal support that remain fiercely robust even in the face of international efforts to inundate them with civic rhetoric.


This baseline condition means in the Balkans – at all times and places – developments and decisions related to communications and transportation matter more than forming local versions of such political forms as monarchy, autocracy, or democratic constitutionalism. ...


18. IU releases blueprint for regional campuses to collaborate - News and Tribune


A new strategic planning process between Indiana University's regional campuses means more opportunities for its students.


Sue Giesecke, executive vice chancellor for academic affairs at IU Kokomo, said the new Blueprint for Student Attainment, released in June, provides a way for the regional campus leaders to collaborate to make the campuses stronger as a whole, while maintaining individual identities.
...


Now that the planning process is in place, Giesecke said the next year will be spent determining specific action steps to expand student opportunities. The Blueprint for Student Attainment sets priorities of collaboration, engagement and excellence to chart progress for the regional campuses.


19. Why Regional Pitching Can Leverage Big Success - Penny C. Sansevieri


With all the talk of Facebook, Twitter, blogging and other social media, we often forget how we used to promote a book: locally. Many books that hit big success did so by building a regional buzz. But regional seems a lot less sexy these days and often gets overlooked. If media is being pursued, it's often on a national level, bypassing individual markets altogether.


One of the things I've found about regional promotion is that it can often surprise you. When we worked on The Kennedy Detail last November, we had enormous success regionally, while major stations and national markets seemed to lag in interest for this exceptional title. In fact, I believe that part of the reason this book hit the bestseller list was because of the regional buzz.
...




More links: http://www.delicious.com/I.see.regions.work

Agriculture Secretary Vilsack Invites Applications to Promote Regional Business Development and Job Creation Efforts



WASHINGTON, July 5, 2011 – Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today announced that USDA is accepting applications for grants to support regional economic development strategies and promote job creation.


"The Obama Administration is working on a regional basis to build networks of strong, self-sustaining rural communities," Vilsack said. "This program will help create jobs and assist in identifying and developing business opportunities in rural areas."


Almost $2.5 million is available through USDA Rural Development's Rural Business Opportunity Grant (RBOG) program. The program promotes sustainable economic development in rural communities and regions with exceptional needs. Last year, for example, Ecotrust in Oregon received a RBOG grant to increase recruitment of producers and buyers in rural communities throughout the Pacific Northwest. It also used the grant to provide training and assistance for FoodHub, which is an online directory and marketplace designed to connect wholesale food buyers and sellers. The system will help agricultural producers tap into the consumer demand for food, help link food buyers and producers and shorten the supply chain between producers and wholesalers.


The RBOG program provides training and technical assistance grants for business development, entrepreneurs, and economic development officials and assists with economic development planning. Funding is available to rural public bodies, nonprofit corporations, Native American tribes and cooperatives with primarily rural members that conduct activities for the mutual benefit of the membership.


Applications for Rural Business Opportunity Grants are due August 1, 2011. Application instructions may be obtained from the July 1, 2011 Federal Register, page 38604, www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2011-07-01/html/2011-16555.htm or by contacting a USDA Rural Development State Office.


In June, President Obama signed an Executive Order establishing the first White House Rural Council, chaired by Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack. The White House Rural Council will work throughout government to create policies to promote economic prosperity and a high quality of life in our rural communities.


Since taking office, President Obama's Administration has taken significant steps to improve the lives of rural Americans and has provided broad support for rural communities. The Obama Administration has set goals of modernizing infrastructure by providing broadband access to 10 million Americans, expanding educational opportunities for students in rural areas, and providing affordable health care. In the long term, these unparalleled rural investments will help ensure that America's rural communities are repopulating, self-sustaining, and thriving economically.


USDA, through its Rural Development mission area, administers and manages housing, business and community infrastructure and facility programs through a national network of state and local offices. Rural Development has an existing portfolio of more than $150 billion in loans and loan guarantees. These programs are designed to improve the economic stability of rural communities, businesses, residents, farmers and ranchers and improve the quality of life in rural America.  

#454 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Mon Jul 11, 2011 5:50 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - July 7-10 , 2011
regionswork
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1. Webinar July 14: Applying for HUD Regional Planning Grants | Smart Growth America

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) recently announced an additional $67 million investment in stronger, more sustainable communities that connect housing to jobs while fostering local innovation and building a clean energy economy.

If you plan to apply for this year's round of HUD Sustainable Communities Regional Planning grants, join us for a webinar on Thursday, July 14, 2011 at 2:00 PM EDT. You will hear tips from past Partnership for Sustainable Communities grant recipients, receive advice from a firm that has written several successful applications, and learn the criteria that the Partnership uses to grade applications.

This event is hosted by Smart Growth America and the American Planning Association.

What: "Applying for HUD Regional Planning Grants"

When: Thursday, July 14, 2011, 2:00 PM EDT

Where: Webinar information will be sent to registrants


 2. Collaboration equals success | Vail Daily


We are not alone facing the regionalism vs. parochialism debate. Metropolitan Denver is currently struggling with the same exact regional vs. parochial issues (albeit on a much larger scale) related to a proposed Gaylord Resort property in Aurora. Downtown Denver supporters are scared it will drive business away, saying "regionalism and intergovernmental cooperation look great on a bumper sticker or in a speech, but actually we're all territorial animals" . Aurora officials are ecstatic about the opportunity ...


Stealing a line from Gov. Hickenlooper, "Wouldn't it be nice if regional collaboration becomes the new competition?"


What does this have to do with doing business in the Vail Valley?


Guests don't see political boundaries. Many locals don't see town boundaries, either. We might live in Eagle and work in Vail. Or vice versa. So at some level we're all in it together. And working together as one destination, as one regional business community, only makes sense.


 3. Valley long-term water needs OK | The News Leader


The Central Valley has plenty of water to meet its needs for the next three decades, a state-ordered study by the area's regional planning body found.


The study projects an 80 percent increase in demand for water in the region by 2040.


But the Central Shenandoah Regional Planning District Commission said there is enough water available in the area to meet its total needs — a piece of good fortune that not every part of Virginia shares.


The challenge, though, will be getting water from parts of the region where there's lots more water than people, to parts where the population is growing fast, the report said.


... first public airing ... Waynesboro's City Council ... will consider a drought ordinance recommended by the study.


That ordinance would allow the city to order restrictions on watering lawns, washing vehicles and filling swimming pools in times of drought.


Concerns about Virginia's long term water needs ... prompted the state to order such studies in 2005.


 4. SANDAG still has time to make meaningful change with its SB 375 plan. | Amanda Eaken's Blog


BREAKING NEWS: 60 years of government structures and polices that subsidize sprawl development have not been dismantled in nine short months by San Diego's new regional plan! Like so many attention grabbing stories, Ethan Elkind's blog post proclaiming California's first Sustainable Communities Strategy (SCS) a "dud" is a poorly informed piece that doesn't do justice to the movement for sustainable, equitable communities.


Yes, San Diego County's draft SCS, compiled by its regional agency SANDAG, needs significant improvement. But we never expected SB 375 to work overnight. With some additional changes that can be made to SANDAG's SCS by October, as well as commitments we would like to see SANDAG make for policy change over the next few years, it is still possible for this first SCS under SB 375 to provide a critical pivot away from the continued paradigm of poorly planned, unaffordable, sprawl development.


...one of SANDAG's big constraints...40 year sales tax known as TransNet


 5. Palo Alto Online : Palo Alto challenges regional growth projections


A regional plan to promote "sustainable communities" is facing a chorus of opposition from Palo Alto and other cities, many of which would have to build thousands of houses to accommodate the latest vision for the Bay Area's future.


The debate over long-term growth and housing projections highlights the challenges facing regional agencies as they try to meet the goals of Senate Bill 375, a landmark 2008 bill that seeks to reduce green-house gas emissions by promoting development near transportation corridors. The scenario unveiled by the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) has the goal of reducing per-capita gas emissions by 7 percent by 2020 and by 15 percent by 2035.


... Council members and planning officials have consistently argued that the regional housing projections are highly overstated and that the agencies' methodology is fundamentally flawed.
...


 6. N.J. development sprawl has continued, study says | MyCentralJersey.com


Despite a decades-long attempt to head off exclusionary zoning and development sprawl, New Jersey is still struggling to provide a mix of affordable housing choices near jobs, researchers at Rowan University have found.


Development patterns in Monmouth and Somerset ...In a better economy, the two counties will continue adding to inventories of large-lot homes and commercial properties based on current zoning, leaving little room for cheaper high-density residential development,
"Large-lot subdivisions lock in a residential land-use pattern that excludes many New Jersey residents that can't afford large single-family homes and often prevents those people from living near their jobs," ...


Hasse said regional planning efforts are often thwarted by New Jersey's affinity for home rule, with municipal land-use boards opting for large-lot housing or quick ratable grabs from industrial and highway development. Meanwhile, plans for apartments and townhouses ... get chilly receptions.




 7. Study: Gas drilling will hurt local tourism | Star-Gazette 


Widespread Marcellus Shale drilling in the Southern Tier could substantially damage the long-term growth of the local tourism industry, according to a study released by the Southern Tier Central Regional Planning & Development Board.


Individual gas wells and drilling activity, while disruptive at the local scale, will likely have very little impact on the tourism sector, the study says. But increased traffic, air and noise pollution, industrial accidents, the decreased availability of hotel/motel rooms and seasonal lodging, disruptions to wildlife and hunting grounds, and other aspects associated with a large-scale drilling program "will change the pristine and rural character of the region to a gritty and industrial one."


... funded by a $7,000 Appalachian Commission Grant ... It focuses solely on Chemung, Schuyler and Steuben counties.


Marcia Weber, executive director of Southern Tier Central said the agency's goal was to create a balanced report.
...


Extra: Get ready for the North American gas shock - The Automatic Earth 



In this era of global bubble-blowing we have seen speculative fever flourish in relation to many different asset classes. ... We have been witnessing just such a dynamic playing out in the North American natural gas market in recent years, with a particular focus on the shale gas that is touted as being the key to energy independence. ... Thankfully there have been a few sober voices in the wilderness who were prepared to challenge the received wisdom, ...





 8. A huge step for regionalism: Chagrin Solon Sun editorial


Regionalism is the latest buzzword in Greater Cleveland, as communities try to figure out how to do more with less and cut costs wherever possible to save money and maintain the highest level of services possible. Partnering with neighboring communities to provide the same service at a lower cost is one way area cities are finding they can shave their budgets.


In the Chagrin Valley, regionalism is nothing new — we have been practicing this concept for decades and it works just fine. ...


Why the recent announcement about four local communities entering into a study to look at sharing more services is such a big story is because it takes regionalism to the next step and opens the door for a possible merger of the communities. This will be watched very closely throughout the region and will likely spur other communities to engage in similar talks.
We applaud ... this study and give serious consideration to all aspects of regionalism, including the possibility of a merger.
...


 9. Pioneering Green Legislation in New York a Model for Other States | Progressive States Network


... The new law, the Power NY Act of 2011 (AB 7006-A), establishes the first statewide "on-bill recovery" program — allowing charges for retrofitting a home or business to be included in a utility bill statement and paid over time, with monthly payments calibrated to include energy savings so that the loan doesn't increase the bill. The passage of this bill is considered a next step to New York's Green Jobs/Green NY Act, legislation that was enacted in 2009 to retrofit one million homes in five years and consequently create 14,250 full time jobs. The Power NY Act of 2011 comes at a time when most Americans believe that their government's number one concern should be the creation of jobs.


Thanks to the 2009 law, New York homeowners now have access to convenient and safe loans for energy efficiency retrofits and are given over 15 years to pay back the cost of the retrofit. ...


10. Litchfield Hills council discusses advantages of shared services - and what's already in place - The Register Citizen


In the northwestern corner of Connecticut, following one of the heaviest snowfalls in recent memory, some towns are acting as a whole in assisting one another with costly road maintenance.
...
"Treated salt was our biggest saving this year," said Torrington Mayor Ryan J. Bingham of one regional grant. "We're saving $5 per ton, minimum — saving $100,000 for the region.


"That's huge," he added.


Regional planning organizations such as the Litchfield Hills Council of Elected Officials (LHCEO) have delved deeply into shared services recently, and through federal and state appropriated grants, some say they are coming out ahead of some tougher economical curves.


LHCEO — consisting of Barkhamsted, Colebrook, Goshen, Hartland, Harwinton, Litchfield, Morris, New Hartford, Norfolk, Torrington and Winchester — shares services from road maintenance with plows and highway signs to emergency personnel and educational outlets.


"We're already semi-regionalized with schools," ...


11. North Carolina, South Carolina collaborate on offshore wind energy projects - South Carolina


RALEIGH Representatives from South Carolina as well as North Carolina met in Charlotte in June to discuss opportunities for collaborating to accelerate a development of offshore wind appetite on a south Atlantic seaboard. The meeting is being heralded as a poignant first step towards regional collaboration for offshore wind in a Southeast.


The objective of a two-state meeting was to explore ways to leverage each states unique experience, knowledge, as well as resources to accelerate a deployment of offshore wind appetite in a way that is jointly beneficial to both states. Our states have been singly positioned with strengths as well as advantages that complement each other. said Elizabeth Colbert-Busch of a Clemson University Restoration Institute. Some of a initial opportunities that were discussed included enabling various research institutions to collaborate on future research projects as well as exploring a probability of an offshore wind appetite project along a NC/SC border.
...


12. Businesses net millions moving within Ohio metros - Forbes.com


Relocations that netted small- and medium-sized businesses at least $39 million in property tax breaks to move around within the Cleveland and Cincinnati regions largely sent jobs from areas of poverty into more affluent communities, according to a study released Thursday.


In "Paid to Sprawl: Subsidized Job Flight from Cleveland and Cincinnati," the Washington-based Good Jobs First nonprofit research center reviewed business relocations from 1995 to 2010 in the multi-county regions, finding data on 164 moves that involved an estimated 14,500 workers.


Report authors say the findings show that state officials should consider regional tax-revenue sharing and encourage regional economic-development cooperation to prevent "poaching" of companies between nearby communities. Such moves often transfer job opportunities from cities and areas with high minority populations to less diverse areas and often to sites inaccessible by public transportation, they say.




13. Dakota arts programs line up grants | StarTribune.com


The Metropolitan Regional Arts Council recently awarded more $500,000 in grants for arts activities, including three grants in Dakota County.


A total of 57 arts organizations in the seven-county metro area received some of the $535,419 in grants. They were selected based on their artistic quality and community need.
...
The council is one of 11 regional arts councils in the state. It is funded through an appropriation from the state Legislature and by funds from the Legacy Amendment, as well as a grant from The McKnight Foundation.
...


14. New CivicAction video captures the spirit of city building - a preview to the Greater Toronto Summit 2011 Report - CIVICACTION


What does city building look like in action? Find out in the video unveiled today by CivicAction that captures highlights of its Greater Toronto Summit 2011.


The video, produced by the innovative youth-led Hightop Studios, captures the essence of CivicAction's city building mandate and the energy of CivicAction's 2011 Summit, where more than 1,000 city builders tackled the tough issues and big opportunities facing the Greater Toronto region.


The video features interviews with CivicAction Chair John Tory and CEO Julia Deans and Summit highlights including Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi on embracing diversity, eco-entrepreneur Majora Carter on collaborating to further local economic development, Michael Littlejohn of IBM on building smarter cities, and Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion on the need for regional collaboration.
...
To view the Social Media Release, click here: http://smr.newswire.ca/en/civicaction/new-civicaction-video-captures-the-spirit-of-city-building


15. Reaching Past Borders to Protect the Mediterranean : TreeHugger
...
Graduate students from Israel and the Palestinian Authority, as well as Lebanon, Greece, Malta, Tunisia, Italy, and the United Kingdom, were among the participants in a two-week-long regional marine research project that took place in June off the coast of Italy. Organized by the Israel-based conservation group EcoOcean, the trip sought both to create bridges between the region's next generation of scientists and to research some of the threats to the Mediterranean, which is bordered by 21 different countries with wildly varying environmental laws and level of enforcement.


"Scientific cooperation between nations is imperative to successfully research, monitor, and manage the Mediterranean Sea, which has been invaluable in shaping the economic, technological, and cultural development of the nations surrounding it," said EcoOcean director Daniel Schaeffer, who came up with the idea for the workshop, titled "Environmental Impacts Know No Boundaries."


16. MCCI hails move to boost regional cooperation - Bangaladesh


The Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Dhaka (MCCI) on Saturday welcomed the initiative taken by the present government to enhance regional cooperation.


Reiterating the MCCI's appreciation for the landmark visit of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to Delhi in January 2011, the chamber said that the visit started the process of regional cooperation.


"Due to her sincere effort region cooperation will now be flourished", the President of the MCCI, Major General (retired) Amjad Khan Chowdhury said in a statement issued to the press.


The statement noted: "A number of dignitaries from our neighbouring country are visiting Bangladesh.


...


17. Port Strategy - UK development to rely on "volunteers"


The old Regional Development Agencies are being replaced by 36 voluntary organisations called Local Enterprise Partnerships (LEPs) – that are without any money of their own, having to bid for pots of money to win investment funds.


Doug Morrison, port director of Southampton ABP and chair of one of the new partnerships put it quite bluntly. At a recent event hosted by the Port of Southampton he said "If this LEP doesn't deliver what it needs to, businesses won't be involved in it for very long. We all have too much to do in our day jobs."


Iain Shepherd chair of Marine South East said, "Everyone is on a limited timescale. If the LEPs can do something, and do it quickly, then we will be able to go forward. If we can't deliver, then they will die because businesses - who are the heart of this - simply won't think it worthwhile continuing to make the effort."


...


18. What is regional policy? - Inforegio - EU Regional Policy


The purpose of EU regional policy is to reduce the significant economic, social and territorial disparities that still exist between Europe's regions. Leaving these disparities in place would undermine some of the cornerstones of the EU, including its large single market and its currency, the euro.


19. TRID - Transport Research International Documentation


TRID is a newly integrated database that combines the records from TRB's Transportation Research Information Services (TRIS) Database and the OECD's Joint Transport Research Centre's International Transport Research Documentation (ITRD) Database. TRID provides access to over 900,000 records of transportation research worldwide.


20. SLOWTH: Or why it is so very important (and so very easy) to slow down traffic in cities | World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda


It is the consistent position of this journal that much of what is wrong with our current transportation arrangements in cities could be greatly alleviated if we can find ways just to slow down. It is very powerful — and it's just not that hard to do. Get comfortable and have a look.


The use of a strange not to say rather ugly word like "slowth" in an attempt to draw attention to the importance of slowing traffic in cities, and why it is such a very good idea, may be counterproductive. Only you, the reader, can make that decision. ... it would be great if you would take pen in hand and add to and improve what follows here on this important subject.
...
Slowth is a new mobility transport planning concept, usually deployed in congested urban environments, where transport is calibrated for lower top speeds, but the result is shorter overall travel times across the entire system. ...






Suzerainty  occurs where a region or people is a tributary to a more powerful entity which controls its foreign affairs while allowing the tributary vassal state some limited domestic autonomy.[1] The dominant entity in the suzerainty relationship, or the more powerful entity itself, is called a suzerain. The term suzerainty was originally used to describe the relationship between the Ottoman Empire and its surrounding regions. It differs from sovereignty in that the tributary has only some (often limited) self-rule. A suzerain can also refer to a feudal lord, to whom vassals must pay tribute. Although it is a concept which has existed in a number of historical empires, it is a concept that is very difficult to describe using 20th- or 21st-century theories of international law, in which sovereignty either exists or does not. While a sovereign nation can agree by treaty to become a protectorate of a stronger power, modern international law



22. Jesse's Café Américain: Pictures From a Non-Farm Payrolls Report - There Is No Such Thing As 'Free Trade'
...



Here's one for those who favor giving tax breaks on offshore funds for multinationals who use accounting gimmicks and loopholes to realize their income in tax haven countries. The program allows corporations like GE to repatriate their stashed cash on the cheap, and pay it out in tax free dividends to wealthy shareholders and bonuses for their executives. 


It is a powerful incentive to send even more employment and economic activity offshore, and for countries to engage in state directed mercantilism.  There are no Porterian 'natural competitive advantages' involved, but there is a strong artificial disincentive to allow domestic consumption and advancement of the mercantilist's own middle class.  There is, at the end of the day, the least common denominator of the health and freedom of the many as the unifying corporate objective, and the principle of one world government.


Trickle down is a canard. Globalization and 'free trade' is a means of beating down all independent public policy and local sovereignty.  There is no purely objective macroeconomics without major policy assumptions as to the public 'good.'  Naturally efficient and rational markets are the economic equivalent of  Piltdown Man.


And there is no such thing as sustainable 'free trade' between independent political entities under fiat currency regimes, without assuming a perfectly rational system run by angels.   The game is rigged and the regulators and politicians are bought, always and everywhere, under this type of artificial construct, with a nationless oligarchy as its ultimate objective.
...



23. The magic button to "Make Everything OK" - just for fun




More links: http://www.delicious.com/I.see.regions.work

#455 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Thu Jul 14, 2011 4:04 am
Subject: So how should we measure regional excellence in homeland security? Input request
regionswork
Send Email Send Email
 
Regional Excellence

Measuring Regional Excellence for Homeland Security

by Bill Dodge

           
            The U. S. Congress has asked the National Academy or Public Administration (NAPA) to develop quantifiable measures for assessing the effectiveness of grants administered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).  (Redundancy Elimination and Enhanced Performance for Preparedness Grants Act  --  Public Law No: 111-271)  The measures are to focus on the State Homeland Security Grant Program  and the Urban Area Security Initiative (UASI), the key sources of federal largesse for building the capacity of state and local governments, and their partners, to safeguard citizens against terrorist and other disasters. 

            This task is being overseen by a panel of NAPA fellows, including yours truly.  The Congressional mandate is especially demanding and its success requires your suggestions for measuring regional excellence.

            The U.S. Congress is requesting only 3 to 7 measures and a roadmap for their implementation.  It wants hard evidence that can be printed on a pocket card and makes a convincing case with lay persons in an "elevator speech". 

            The tough part of this task is dealing with the unknown and unpredictable. 

In some ways, homeland security is like other efforts.  The  efficiency, effectiveness, and even equity of the processes for using FEMA funds can be measured.  How many first providers were trained, how much equipment was purchased, how many exercises were conducted? And at what cost?  How many communities  --  large and small, rich and poor  --   are covered by homeland security plans?  How many partners, across all sectors, are participating in the strategies to safeguard their communities?

            However, the impact of homeland security is more difficult to measure.  Unlike transit systems or health services, no clear path can be easily drawn between expenditures made and results accomplished.  It is difficult to predict the timing or frequency of natural disasters.  Witness the plethora of tornadoes this year, even before the traditional heart of tornado season.  Manmade incidents, especially terrorist attacks, do not even have seasons.  And the nature of these events range from the unpredictable to the totally unexpected
"black swans".  Witness the simultaneous impact of a massive earthquake and tsunami on the supposedly-protected Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.

            Finally, federal funding is not a given.  There is a strong likelihood that UASI funds will be concentrated in a smaller number of regions, those  allegedly more prone to terrorist  attacks, potentially eliminating funding for over 30 participating regions in the coming year.

            In the first meeting of the NAPA panel, I discovered that I had been especially selected to help measure regional excellence in homeland security.

Regions have emerged as the most local level for addressing disasters and attacks.  Only at the regional level can sufficient first providers be assembled to respond to major disasters and attacks, especially in the first 24 hours.  Individual jurisdictions, even the largest, need to reach out to neighbors.  Witness the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon.  Across the country, many states have mandated the preparation of regional homeland security plans and, even where they haven't, local governments and their private, nonprofit, and civic partners have voluntarily come together to develop regional plans. 

            State and national governments are critical to providing follow-up recovery assistance, but regions need to develop the capacity to be first providers.  In fact, some regions are negotiating protocols with surrounding regions, creating a network of regions prepared to respond, depending on the magnitude of the event.

            So how should we measure regional excellence in homeland security?  Your suggestions are critical.

            Currently, UASI grant recipients are required to create some form of a regional mechanism for planning and monitoring the use of federal funds as well as designate an official liaison with FEMA.  Should there be minimal expectations for regional governance, such as adopted processes for setting strategic goals and prioritizing the use of funds, tested systems for managing complex activities  --  such as interoperability communications, regional exercises, incident evaluations, and mutual aid protocols with other regions  --  and regular reporting on progress in strengthening homeland security? 

Is there a single measure, even a proxy, which describes the regional governance capacity needed to address disasters and attacks? 

For example, should there be a requirement that local governments and their partners in each region, including state and federal government agencies, design and adopt a regional governance agreement, a Homeland Security Regional Compact, which creates and empowers the regional governance capacity needed to safeguard the region?  Or, given that federal funds might not go on indefinitely, should there be a requirement to institutionalize a minimal regional governance capacity with federal funding --  the "muscle" as David Robertson, Executive Director of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments, calls it  --  that does not atrophy if federal funding declines.

            Is there a combined measure of regional excellence?  Such as a combination of indicators of readiness  --  adopting a Homeland Security Regional Compact,  #/% of priority actions implemented in regional plans, #/% of first providers trained,  # of regional exercises conducted, #/%  of recommendations from exercise evaluations implemented, #/% of recommendations from incident evaluations implemented, etc.  Maybe, it could be called the Homeland Security Regional Readiness Index, with ratings from 0 to 100 and measured regularly to assess changes over time.

            Or, are there other ways to measure regional excellence?

Your thoughts on potential measures, and suggestions for their implementation, are welcome.  WilliamRDodge@....  And as soon as possible.  The NAPA panel will next meet in early August to consider candidate measures for its report to the Congress.

Thanks to the National Association of Regional Councils for surveying its members.  If you responded to its survey, you do not have to respond again;  the survey results will be sent to NAPA.
           
            Thanks for helping to make measuring regional excellence in FEMA programs a success.  And a precedent for all of the programs that depend upon achieving regional excellence for their success. 

***

Bill Dodge is looking for a few good regions that are interested in designing regional charters to strengthen their capacity to address tough common challenges.  He is the former Executive Director of the National Association of Regional Councils, author of Regional Excellence, and is writing a new book on regional charters.                

#456 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Fri Jul 15, 2011 8:50 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - July 11-14, 2011
regionswork
Send Email Send Email
 
 1. Online index measures 'resilience' of U.S. metro areas - UB Reporter


Which U.S. metro region is most likely to come out of the next recession, natural disaster or other regional "shock" relatively unscathed?Rochester, Minn. A little more battered might be College Station-Bryan, Texas.


These two regions are ranked first and last, respectively, by a new online tool measuring more than 360 U.S. metros for their "regional resilience," or capacity to weather acute and chronic stresses ranging from gradual economic decline to rapid population gains to earthquakes and floods.


The Resilience Capacity Index (RCI), developed by Kathryn A. Foster, director of the UB Regional Institute, produces a single statistic for each region based on its performance across 12 economic, socio-demographic and community connectivity indicators, ranging from income equality and business environment to voter participation and the population of health insured. A gauge for how well a region is positioned to adapt to stress, the index can help regional leaders identify strengths ...


 2. Building Resilient Regions | Harnessing the power of metropolitan regions


The Network on Building Resilient Regions (BRR) examines the power of metropolitan regions to respond to local and national challenges. BRR brings together a group of experts to investigate why metro regions matter now, what constitutes resilience in the face of challenges, and what factors help to build and sustain strong metro regions.


The site is organized by topic area


* Economic Insecurities focuses on the impact of poverty and foreclosures


* Economic Resilience examines those factors that allow a region to respond to challenges


* Infrastructure focuses on challenges of infrastructure, particularly transportation


* Governance examines policymaking and the role of government in creating strong regions


* Immigration focuses on the benefits and challenges of immigration in regions


BRR is affiliated with the Institute of Governmental Studies at the University of California, Berkeley.


 3. Going it alone - Baton Rouge Business Report 


Marketing gurus and economic development wonks have been spinning out terms like "clusters" and "regionalism" and "corridors" for more than two decades. Call it whatever you want, each buzzword essentially has the same meaning: a group of individual somethings [companies or industries, cities or parishes] joining forces to leverage resources to achieve a greater good.


... A diverse group coming together to build upon strengths, collaborate on problems and seek out new opportunities invariably produces far better and more innovative results than simply going it alone. The trick, of course, is that everyone must give up a little something for the greater good. Doing so, in theory, makes life better for everyone.


When it comes to geography there's an even more practical positive: Banding together creates greater population numbers, which leads to greater federal dollars.


This, of course, is one of the reasons why metropolitan forms of government get created. ...


 4. Green jobs flourish in Sacramento area - Sacramento Bee


The green economy accounts for about one of every 22 jobs in the Sacramento area, according to a report by the Brookings Institution.


In a nationwide study of more than 100 metropolitan areas, the Washington, D.C.-based institution said local solar installers, government agencies, recyclers, organic farms and other clean companies employed a total of 37,319 people, or about 4.5 percent of the capital region's workforce.


Sacramento's high concentration of green jobs ranked third in the nation behind the Albany, N.Y., area, where the green sector accounts for about 6.3 percent of employment, and Knoxville, Tenn., where green jobs are 4.9 percent of its workforce.


"This shows that the green sector is a big part of our overall economy," said Bill Mueller, chief executive officer of Valley Vision, a local nonprofit organization that's dedicated to regional planning.


... bright spots in a region hard hit by the real estate downturn, state budget cutbacks and double-digit unemployment.


 5. So much for California's anti-sprawl law, continued « The Berkeley Blog


My post on the shortcomings of SB 375, California's anti-sprawl law, generated a swift response from ... two smart growth advocates for whom I hold a lot of admiration and respect. In their detailed post, which is largely a critique of the San Diego Association of Government's (SANDAG) sustainable community strategy (SCS) plan and less about the arguments I made, they describe my post as "poorly informed." Yet nowhere do they contradict the points I raise about the inherent weaknesses of SB 375 or the problems with the SANDAG SCS (with which they seem to wholeheartedly agree).


They do cite some examples to counter my claim that SB 375 may just result in a lot of ineffectual regional planning. They point out that SB 375 has served as a rhetorical weapon against sprawl that may help fight I-5 widening in San Diego and force changes to planned highway projects in the region, all while galvanizing new interest groups to fight for strong SCSs in the long term. ...


 6. Government & Private Business Begin Work on a 40 Year Growth Plan For Area | WDEF News 12 | Chattanooga and the Tennessee Valley


Industrial development in the tri-state region is on a roll.


Big employers like Volkswagen, Amazon, Wacker and Gestamp can bring prosperity, but poor long range planning can cause plenty of headaches.


Leaders here in the tri-state area are beginning to look 40 years into the future.


Beth Jones, director of the Southeast Tennessee Development District made the presentation before the Hamilton County Commission, asking for half a million dollars total over a 3 year period to develop a regional long-range plan. A similar proposal was made to the Chattanooga city council Tuesday.


The goal is to raise a total of 3-million dollars in seed money, and then asking for full funding from HUD in Washington.


BETH JONES,DIR. S-E DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT "Unless we take a very focused effort on trying to perhaps guide that growth over the next 40 years, this region could go backwards.
...


 7. Planning begins for Wisconsin Point | Superior Telegram | Superior, Wisconsin


Councilor Tom Bridge has long fought for a Wisconsin Point free of illegal dumping and signs that some people just don't care.


That ideal led him to contemplate the notion of having the state take over the site for a park.


But short of that idea — planning how to manage the pristine dune that separates Lake Superior and Allouez Bay gets underway Friday.


People representing the city of Superior, Douglas County, University of Wisconsin-Superior, Lake Superior Natural Estuarine Research Reserve, Fond du Lac Band of Chippewa and Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources come together with Northwest Regional Planning Commission to develop a management plan for Wisconsin Point.


The goal of the plan is to establish a long-range vision for Wisconsin Point, said Jason Laumann, a planner with Northwest Regional Planning Commission.


... 


 8. Are States an Anachronism? - The Urbanophile


Today and Thursday I'll give a point-counterpoint on the relevancy and importance of states in the modern era.


Obviously states aren't going anywhere anytime soon, but a number of folks have suggested that state's aren't just obsolete, they are downright pernicious in their effects on local economies.


One principal exponent of this point of view is Richard Longworth, who has written about it extensively in his book "Caught in the Middle" and elsewhere. Here's what he has to say on the topic:


In the global era, states are simply too weak and too divided to provide for the welfare of their citizens…The reason is a deep, intractable problem. Midwestern states make no sense as units of government. Most Midwestern states don't really hang together – politically, economically, or socially. In truth, these states and their governments are incompetent to deal with twenty-first century problems because of their history, rooted in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
...


 9. New ECD regional directors, project managers named | Business & Heritage Clarksville


Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam and Economic and Community Development Commissioner (ECD) Bill Hagerty announced June 8, the selection of eight new regional directors as part of the reorganization of ECD resulting from the Jobs4TN initiative. The new regional directors will serve as the primary point-of-contact for Tennessee companies seeking state assistance with expansion or with accessing state services. In addition, Haslam and Hagerty also announced members of ECD's national project management team, the division within ECD responsible for the recruitment of new companies to the state.


ECD's regional directors will reside in each of the nine regions outlined in the Jobs4TN plan and will have primary responsibility for working with existing companies, aligning workforce development strategies and developing a regional strategic plan.


... professionals to implement our Jobs4TN program. ... move to make Tennessee the No. 1 location in the Southeast for high quality jobs, ...






Vermont Gov. Peter Shumlin is optimistic the New England states can reaffirm their commitment to renewable energy sources and reducing greenhouse gases.

Speaking on a Monday conference call from Halifax, Nova Scotia, Shumlin said a regional collaboration of New England states and eastern Canadian provinces has taken steps to develop a more complete renewable energy portfolio and strengthen the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI).

The development of reliable, "green" energy will have a special focus in Vermont regarding hydropower generated in Canada.

"We're going to leave here with a commitment to work together with the ambassadors here and with the New England governors and Eastern premiers to really push the envelope on the question of how we get green, reliable hydro as an able source of power for New England," Shumlin said.



10. Enhance disaster preparedness-Gatsinzi tells regional states - In2EastAfrica


The Minister of Disaster Preparedness and Refugee Affairs, Gen Marcel Gatsinzi has urged regional countries to enhance their disaster preparedness capacity as well as build appropriate capacity to mitigate the impact of dsasters.


... Disaster Response Tabletop Exercise (TTX), organised by the ministry in conjunction with various US organs.


Gatsinzi said that the readiness of countries and the entire region to manage a highly disruptive pandemic is of prime concern.


The specialised training workshop that brings together 100 participants aims at enhancing disaster management, humanitarian assistance and counteracting pandemic diseases.


"We are here because we all realise that the occurrence of a devastating pandemic is not science fiction. Preparedness for a potential pandemic is of utmost importance and requires the coordinated action of all segments of government and society."
...
It is partly organised by the US Africa Command, USAFRICOM.


...


11. Building Pax Asia-Pacifica - Fidel V. Ramos - Project Syndicate


One of the main sources of tension in Asia nowadays are the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea, where the Philippines, Vietnam, China, and others have conflicting claims. In Chinese media reports, the heightened "unfriendliness" in the region has allegedly arisen from "bad rumors and speculations" on the part of Filipino commentators. But the reality is starker: the intrusions by Chinese aircraft into Filipino airspace in May; Chinese patrol boats ...; and, most serious of all, a Chinese missile frigate firing at Filipino fishing boats in February near Palawan's Quirino atoll.


Will armed conflict result from these recurring – and, it seems, escalating – disputes between the Philippines and Vietnam on one side, and China on the other? War, of course, is in no one's interest. But the risk posed by these disputes is growing, because China's relations with both the Philippines and Vietnam are at their lowest point in decades.
...




12. 2011 PIC/Partners: Fostering Partnerships for Development | Regional | Solomon Islands News


The Pacific Plan


"At the regional level, the Pacific Plan remains the center of regional development and the platform for regional cooperation and integration to support collective responses in addressing regional development priorities," said Mr Slade.


"The role of development partners in the development of the region, in collaboration with island countries, is at the heart of the Pacific Plan. This is an acknowledgement of the significant contribution that development partners contribute to the sustainable development of the region."


The Pacific Plan was adopted by Forum Leaders in 2005 as the master strategy for strengthening regional cooperation and integration. The Pacific Plan is based on the concept of regionalism: that is, countries working together for their joint and individual benefit.
...


13. North Adams sets out to build first master plan in 40 years - Berkshire Eagle Online


The city has taken a step toward creating its first master plan in 40 years.


Monday night, more than 40 residents and some facilitators from the Berkshire Regional Planning Commission spent two hours "visioning" the city's future. Once completed, the master plan's strategy will help guide decisions -- from development to green technologies -- in North Adams for years to come.


...
"We're starting with the most basic vision -- the goals and strategies -- over the next few months," said Amy Kacala, a senior planner with Berkshire Regional Planning Commission. Kacala is working with the city on its plan.


She said the city's three-year planning process is designed to coincide with "Sustainable Berkshires," the Regional Planning Commission's master plan for the Berkshires. Great Barrington is also crafting a master plan that
coincides with the regional plan's timeline.


...


14. Duke's Cathy Davidson Has A Bold Plan for Change | Fast Company


...
It's a bracing perspective: Jettison the old criteria and stop comparing the future only with the past. Fifteen years into the commercialization of the Internet, with people coming of age who don't remember anything different, Davidson argues that we're at the perfect moment to begin reimagining our institutions and developing practices to deal with the onslaught of information, the reality of constant connectedness, and the challenges of global collaboration. We need to scrap the legacies of industrialism, everything from clock punching and rigid rules to SATs and HR departments. Instead, start celebrating "collaboration by difference" -- every team needs some people to count the passes and others to spot the gorilla. Manage your relationship with technology by scheduling offline "planned interruptions." And be mindful of which conversations need to take place in person or over the phone versus on email or text.
...


15. GOVERNANCE, UNCERTAINTY AND COMPASSION with DONALD MICHAEL, Ph.D. - Interview


Donald Michael, is a professor emeritus in planning and public policy - books - The Next Generation, The Unprepared Society, Learning to Plan and Planning to Learn.


MISHLOVE: ... One of the things I think you point out -- correct me if I'm wrong -- is that really to date there's been virtually no long-range social planning in government at all.


MICHAEL: Well, I think that's generally true, and that has resulted in very serious consequences, an accumulated pile-up of problems and possibilities both, that to be dealt with are going to require long-range planning. We're really in an ironic dilemma in this society, and you put it very well in your introduction -- that we've got to do it, whether we're talking about education or health or use of natural resources or many other areas, building cities and the like. We've got to do long-range planning in order to use our resources effectively and to have them available in the form we need in the future.
...


16. Register for the National Rural Transportation Conference by July 25 -
National Rural Transportation Conference


With the future direction of statewide and regional planning in question, there is no better time to hear updates from Washington and learn successful practices to enhance small metro and rural planning programs.  The National Rural Transportation Peer Learning Conference will occur August 24 - 26 in Washington, DC.  

The 
early registration and hotel room block deadlines are July 25.  

As the only annual training event on rural transportation planning and programs, the conference will bring together transportation, regional planning and economic development professionals, local officials, state DOT staff and stakeholders from regional, rural transportation planning organizations (RPOs) and small metropolitan planning organizations (MPOs) across the nation for three days of learning and networking with peers. Through a series of workshops, peer training, and networking sessions, conference participants will hear updates on the direction of federal policy and learn information on air quality, freight, sustainable communities, regional transit, scenario planning, and other issues.
Conference sponsors include the Appalachian Regional Commission, Development District Association of Appalachia, Environmental Protection Agency, Federal Highway Administration, Federal Transit Administration, National Association of Development Organizations (NADO) and NADO Research Foundation, and NADO's RPO America, along with other planning partners.

For more information, visit www.NADO.org/training/rpo2011 or contact NADO Program Managers Carrie Kissel, at ckissel@... or 202.624.8829, or Kathy Nothstine, at knothstine@... or 202.624.5256.

Visit www.RuralTransportation.org for the latest update
17. So how should we measure regional excellence in homeland security? Your suggestions are critical. - Request for input. Measuring Regional Excellence by Bill Dodge
   
    The U. S. Congress has asked the National Academy or Public Administration (NAPA) to develop quantifiable measures for assessing the effectiveness of grants administered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).  (Redundancy Elimination and Enhanced Performance for Preparedness Grants Act  --  Public Law No: 111-271)  The measures are to focus on the State Homeland Security Grant Program  and the Urban Area Security Initiative (UASI), the key sources of federal largesse for building the capacity of state and local governments, and their partners, to safeguard citizens against terrorist and other disasters.  

    This task is being overseen by a panel of NAPA fellows, including yours truly.  The Congressional mandate is especially demanding and its success requires your suggestions for measuring regional excellence.

    The U.S. Congress is requesting only 3 to 7 measures and a roadmap for their implementation.  It wants hard evidence that can be printed on a pocket card and makes a convincing case with lay persons in an "elevator speech".  

    The tough part of this task is dealing with the unknown and unpredictable.  

In some ways, homeland security is like other efforts.  The  efficiency, effectiveness, and even equity of the processes for using FEMA funds can be measured.  How many first providers were trained, how much equipment was purchased, how many exercises were conducted? And at what cost?  How many communities  --  large and small, rich and poor  --   are covered by homeland security plans?  How many partners, across all sectors, are participating in the strategies to safeguard their communities?

    However, the impact of homeland security is more difficult to measure.  Unlike transit systems or health services, no clear path can be easily drawn between expenditures made and results accomplished.  It is difficult to predict the timing or frequency of natural disasters.  Witness the plethora of tornadoes this year, even before the traditional heart of tornado season.  Manmade incidents, especially terrorist attacks, do not even have seasons.  And the nature of these events range from the unpredictable to the totally unexpected 
"black swans".  Witness the simultaneous impact of a massive earthquake and tsunami on the supposedly-protected Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.

    Finally, federal funding is not a given.  There is a strong likelihood that UASI funds will be concentrated in a smaller number of regions, those  allegedly more prone to terrorist  attacks, potentially eliminating funding for over 30 participating regions in the coming year.

    In the first meeting of the NAPA panel, I discovered that I had been especially selected to help measure regional excellence in homeland security. 

Regions have emerged as the most local level for addressing disasters and attacks.  Only at the regional level can sufficient first providers be assembled to respond to major disasters and attacks, especially in the first 24 hours.  Individual jurisdictions, even the largest, need to reach out to neighbors.  Witness the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon.  Across the country, many states have mandated the preparation of regional homeland security plans and, even where they haven't, local governments and their private, nonprofit, and civic partners have voluntarily come together to develop regional plans.  

    State and national governments are critical to providing follow-up recovery assistance, but regions need to develop the capacity to be first providers.  In fact, some regions are negotiating protocols with surrounding regions, creating a network of regions prepared to respond, depending on the magnitude of the event.

    So how should we measure regional excellence in homeland security?  Your suggestions are critical.

    Currently, UASI grant recipients are required to create some form of a regional mechanism for planning and monitoring the use of federal funds as well as designate an official liaison with FEMA.  Should there be minimal expectations for regional governance, such as adopted processes for setting strategic goals and prioritizing the use of funds, tested systems for managing complex activities  --  such as interoperability communications, regional exercises, incident evaluations, and mutual aid protocols with other regions  --  and regular reporting on progress in strengthening homeland security?  

Is there a single measure, even a proxy, which describes the regional governance capacity needed to address disasters and attacks?  

For example, should there be a requirement that local governments and their partners in each region, including state and federal government agencies, design and adopt a regional governance agreement, a Homeland Security Regional Compact, which creates and empowers the regional governance capacity needed to safeguard the region?  Or, given that federal funds might not go on indefinitely, should there be a requirement to institutionalize a minimal regional governance capacity with federal funding --  the "muscle" as David Robertson, Executive Director of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments, calls it  --  that does not atrophy if federal funding declines. 

    Is there a combined measure of regional excellence?  Such as a combination of indicators of readiness  --  adopting a Homeland Security Regional Compact,  #/% of priority actions implemented in regional plans, #/% of first providers trained,  # of regional exercises conducted, #/%  of recommendations from exercise evaluations implemented, #/% of recommendations from incident evaluations implemented, etc.  Maybe, it could be called the Homeland Security Regional Readiness Index, with ratings from 0 to 100 and measured regularly to assess changes over time. 

    Or, are there other ways to measure regional excellence?

Your thoughts on potential measures, and suggestions for their implementation, are welcome.  WilliamRDodge@....  And as soon as possible.  The NAPA panel will next meet in early August to consider candidate measures for its report to the Congress.

Thanks to the National Association of Regional Councils for surveying its members.  If you responded to its survey, you do not have to respond again;  the survey results will be sent to NAPA. 
    
    Thanks for helping to make measuring regional excellence in FEMA programs a success.  And a precedent for all of the programs that depend upon achieving regional excellence for their success.  
***

Bill Dodge is looking for a few good regions that are interested in designing regional charters to strengthen their capacity to address tough common challenges.  He is the former Executive Director of the National Association of Regional Councils, author of Regional Excellence, and is writing a new book on regional charters.    


#457 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Mon Jul 18, 2011 7:22 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - July 15-17, 2011
regionswork
Send Email Send Email
 
 1. Chamber rebrands Cornerstone: Welcome to JAXUSA - The Financial News & Daily Record - Jacksonville, Florida


Cornerstone is turning the corner to a new brand.


The Jacksonville Regional Chamber of Commerce will formally announce today that the Cornerstone name is being changed to "JAXUSA Partnership."


"It was totally precipitated from the marketplace," ...


The full name is JAXUSA Partnership For Regional Economic Development.


Cornerstone is the private, nonprofit division of the chamber. It is a regional partnership that markets the area for economic development.


"We kept hearing from site consultants and others that when we know you, Cornerstone is a great brand, but when you are trying to create awareness of who you are when you are communicating in this country or in other countries, `Cornerstone' has no meaning," he said.


"It could be any sort of organization and you are missing the opportunity of giving some indication of who are and where you are in your initial contact," said Mallot.


He said people often disregard initial contacts if they do not recognize the name or location.


 2. Changing visitors into homeowners | The Post and Courier, Charleston SC


Tourism alone won't fuel the Grand Strand's economic recovery, the Myrtle Beach Area Chamber of Commerce said last week.


That's why it's forming a partnership between itself, the Regional Economic Development Corporation and the Association of Realtors to capitalize on the number of new visitors to the area who might, at some point, want to buy homes or businesses here.
...
Franklin Daniels, speaking for the chamber, said the numbers "clearly show" an improvement in retail sales, average daily room rates, occupancy and enplanements at Myrtle Beach International Airport. For the first four months of this year, all those numbers are showing increases again, Daniels said.


Scott Schultz, the chamber's vice president of marketing, said promotional efforts have focused on new visitors, Internet and TV advertising, promoting the area's value and affordability and on growing air service.
...


 3. Planner: Foot traffic key to smarter, healthier towns | Burlington Free Press


What's been the most significant development in transportation for the 21st century?


The Segway? How about electric-assisted bicycles? Levitating trains?


Renowned British Columbian author and planner Todd Litman nixed those candidates before a stymied audience ... in Burlington.


The flying car, ... lost out, too.


Litman's vote, projected on the big screen, drew polite laughter: wheeled luggage.


He wasn't joking.


Foot traffic, he said, ultimately will allow Chittenden County to roll more smoothly — and with better health, and with a stronger economy — into the ensuing decades.


... regional advocates for smarter, sustainable urban development.


He shifted between data sets (fewer car commutes generally correlate with lower obesity rates and more prudent investments in real estate) and sacred cows (do electric cars do anything to solve vehicular-propelled issues of safety, congestion, road and parking costs, sprawl, habitat destruction and the sedentary habits of drivers?).
...


 4. Ron Dzwonkowski: What Detroit can learn from out-of-town visitors | Detroit Free Press | freep.com


Detroit makes a strong impression.


"It was far more impactful than we expected," said Randy Miller, a businessman and civic leader in Portland, Ore., recounting the visit of a 55-member delegation from Portland to Detroit late last year. "You learn more from failure than you do from success, and in Detroit, there was so much to learn."


Ouch.


But that's why the people from the Rose City came to the Motor City -- "to learn what maybe we can avoid," Miller said.


Other than being the largest city in its state and situated on a river, Portland has little in common with Detroit. ...


The Detroit trip was probably the most instructive of any the group has taken, Miller, the group chairman, said in a telephone interview in late June.


"We loved it," he said. "It will guide our thinking in many areas. We could see the importance of keeping the central city vital to the region. We could see the value of regional cooperation, the metropolitan approach we have taken in Portland.


...


 5. Editorial: Rigid labor shields put transit progress at risk | Detroit Free Press | freep.com


Bills recently introduced in the state Senate would create a regional transit authority needed to improve bus service in southeast Michigan, create a light-rail line on Woodward and beyond, and position metro Detroit to compete for hundreds of millions of dollars in federal transportation grants.


But the bills also contain some rigid labor protections that would make them politically unpalatable. Sponsors must be willing to negotiate and compromise, or the bills will never get to the governor's desk.


... Regional leaders have tried to create such an authority for more than a decade. It would recommend how to pay for, run and operate a regional system.


Ultimately, the new authority would enable a merger of the strapped city and suburban bus systems. Over the last five years, the Detroit Department of Transportation has cut nearly half its service, as the city whittled DDOT's annual budget from $80 million to $53 million. ...




 6. Douglas Rooks: Local land oversight needed | SeacoastOnline.com


Over the summer, a legislative study commission will begin composing a report recommending that the Land Use Regulation Commission be dismantled. LURC — known almost universally by its acronym — is effectively the local government for the state's vast 10.4 million acre unorganized territory, just over half of Maine's land area.


LURC was launched in 1971, and its 40th birthday has not been a happy occasion. Gov. Paul LePage took office pledging to abolish the agency, but the real energy behind this proposal comes from Senate President Kevin Raye, who intends to use his eighth and final year in the Senate getting rid of an agency his Washington County constituents love to hate.


The expectation about the study commission is based on its appointments under LD 1534, approved along party lines, which will be made exclusively by the governor, Senate president and House speaker — all publicly dedicated to dismantling LURC. ...


The real question is what would replace LURC. These are, after all, townships that have chosen not to create municipal governments, mostly because of sparse population. Raye and company say jurisdiction should be "returned" to the counties, which is a whopper. Maine counties have never done any planning worthy of the name, by design. The average town of 2,000 does more land use planning than any rural county, because counties have never been given that responsibility. When the federal government offered money for regional planning, Maine created councils of government and regional commissions. For whatever reasons, in Maine, counties have been confined to court, registry, corrections and law enforcement functions.
...


 7. Time to graduate to higher degrees of collaboration | Richmond Times-Dispatch


For at least one night, all seven of Richmond's colleges and universities agreed that each is an economic catalyst with tremendous potential.


But no one articulated the next steps on how they could unite to play an even more prominent regional role in driving positive change and adding valuable jobs.


It remains a great opportunity to seize because education and workforce development are clearly among the Richmond region's red-hot priorities. No one is in a better position to lead - to create the foundations for a more dynamic local economy - than are our colleges and universities.


On June 16, the Capital Region Collaborative, working with Greater Richmond Partnership and Leadership Metro Richmond, presented a panel discussion to explore higher education's role in revving up economic development in the Richmond region. ...


What's missing is a broader concept or initiative that links all seven for the betterment of our entire region.
...


 8. Moving To Greater Economic Strength And Competitiveness


One of the best examples of multimodal transportation is Chicago's no-mode-left-behind approach. The WindyCity has demonstrated it's open to multiple solutions and focuses on those that deliver goods and people to their destinations most efficiently


There are a few things required for population centers to succeed, including access to fresh water and transportation. Regions that develop a more sophisticated, multimodal transportation system will have a stronger economy because they will attract more businesses.


For outlying communities and small towns nearby, connecting to major metropolitan regions with alternative transportation is a brilliant self-preservation strategy.


All Together, Now


Creating a plan that integrates all modes of transportation begins with the transportation authorization bill being developed in Congress. By designating a new funding category especially for multimodal projects of regional or national significance, Congress can begin to encourage multimodalism.


 9. Officials have few options | Amarillo Globe-News


The Texas drought has escalated into a significant natural disaster. Around the Panhandle, normally one of the most agriculturally productive regions of the state, acres of dry dirt fill would-be croplands. Lakes' levels are falling statewide. Cities are tightening water restrictions, amid the driest October-through-June stretch in Texas history.


So what can the government do to help those who are hit hardest?


Not much, at the state level, experts say.


Droughts are tricky to manage. Their effects vary significantly from place to place, so local authorities generally assume primary responsibility for drought management. ...


The 1950s drought also spurred the Texas Legislature to create the Texas Water Development Board, in 1957. ... , the current regional planning process put in place by the Legislature in 1997 was partly in response to a drought the previous year.


Kramer and other environmentalists wish that this drought would spur stronger conservation measures. ...


10. Golden Triangle key to prosperity | Editorial | Kentucky.com


I strongly support the recent announcement by Mayor Jim Gray of Lexington and Mayor Greg Fischer of Louisville to study ways to encourage regional economic development and cooperation between Lexington and Louisville. The corridor between Lexington and Louisville is one of the most important in the state in terms of economic growth potential,...


However, any proposal that excludes Northern Kentucky will unnecessarily limit the vision of the full range of growth and economic development potential that is available within the triangle formed by Lexington, Louisville and Northern Kentucky.


Think outside the box by thinking within the triangle. Be bold. The sturdiest foundations are those supported by three legs. The two-legged approach currently under consideration would be made much stronger by including Northern Kentucky, and would provide a more stable foundation upon which to implement the study's recommendations.
...


11. U S budget impasses ultimately impact jobs - RN-T.com


If money really does make the world go around, the federal budget impasse in Washington has got planners around the region, and across the globe, on the edge of their seats.


The Northwest Georgia Regional Commission, a 15-county quasi-governmental agency based in Rome, finds itself in a unique position as a result of what Executive Director William Steiner calls "the chaos in Washington."


"I told our board when we presented the budget (for FY 12) this is based on current thinking, from this past year, but I may very well be back to you in October with a totally different budget," Steiner said. 


"We're a planning agency trying to do planning but we can't seem to know what our budget is going to be month-to-month. I'll be the first to admit that it's extremely challenging."


Even when the agency knows money is available, the NWGRC is having a tough time finding takers because of financial challenges facing communities across Northwest Georgia.


Even grants require money.
...


12. The truth about Asian carp | Detroit Free Press | freep.com
...


While much attention has been focused on the electric barrier in Chicago that is keeping carp out of the lakes, the fish have steadily made their way up rivers such as the Wabash, White and Tippecanoe in Indiana; the Cumberland and Tennessee rivers in Tennessee; the Kansas and Verdigris rivers in Kansas; the Missouri River as it threads through Missouri, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota; and, lately, the St. Croix River in Minnesota. ...


Bighead carp now have been collected from waters in 26 states and silver carp from 16 states, becoming one of the nation's most difficult and expensive invasive species to combat.


Even now, as a dozen state and federal agencies armed with millions of dollars focus on keeping Asian carp out of the Great Lakes, bighead and silver carp are spreading far and wide elsewhere. But a national strategy created several years ago to fight the carp has no money.


Starting in 2005, a task force created a ...national plan to stop the spread of Asian carp.
...


13. Six Towns Introduce Regional Affordable Housing Effort - Lexington, MA Patch


Six towns northwest of Boston are holding a kickoff planning meeting next week to launch the newly formed "Regional Housing Services Office," which will support municipal affordable housing efforts across the region.


The meeting takes place Thursday from 10 a.m. to noon at the Flynn Town Office building in Sudbury, located at 278 Old Sudbury Road.


Bedford, Concord, Lexington, Lincoln, Sudbury, and Weston established this Regional Housing Services Office as an innovative approach to managing affordable housing from a municipal perspective. The six towns signed an Inter-Municipal Agreement in February which became effective on July 1 to formalize a regional approach to affordable housing, under a new agreement brokered by the Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC) that aims to increase efficiency in administering housing programs and services.


14. Pat Howard: Start of runway work illustrates sporadic progress on regionalism - GoErie.com/Erie Times-News


As I use this space week after week to offer my version of where the Erie region's at and where it needs to go, I frequently get pushback from sour or discouraged people that boils down to a simple question.


Why bother?


It wouldn't/shouldn't/couldn't happen here, whatever it is, even if it works in other places. This is Erie.


The day I give up on Erie is the day I'll stop typing. Doing otherwise would make me part of the problem.


... it's useful to pause now and then to consider things that have gone right. They encourage us to keep pushing.


... Erie International Airport's runway... the dogged persistence of airport officials and the civic and business groups that for many years pushed the plan and its potential. ... county's assumption of responsibility for the airport's future, and the related transformation of its governing board into a regional body, also illustrates how the county has been supplanting the city of Erie as the governmental steward of the regional big picture.


15. A call for economic regionalism - Decaturdaily.com


When Audi announced recently it was considering building a U.S. assembly plant, wheels began turning in North Alabama.


While it is far too early to know whether Audi will build anything, much less a plant in North Alabama, the speculation has some justification. Audi's sister company, Volkswagen, recently completed construction of a huge assembly plant near Chattanooga. Its final choice was between Chattanooga and the Greenbrier Road area of Limestone County. ...


While there is room for the Audi plant to join VW at the Chattanooga site, auto assemblers typically space themselves far enough apart so they are drawing from different labor pools. They like to be close enough together, however, that they can rely on the same circle of suppliers.


Whether or not Audi ends up coming to North Alabama, the speculation is healthy. It forces the region to begin making sure that infrastructure is in place at sites that would facilitate a large employer.


....


16. Development authority receives award | Great Falls Tribune 


The Great Falls Development Authority received a 2011 Innovation Award from the National Association of Development Organizations Research Foundation for the Great Falls Montana Regional Diversification Project.


The Diversification Project included competitive market assessments of the region's work force, agri-processing and energy industries, and potential for entrepreneurial growth. It also included an analysis of the impact of the loss of the 564th Missile Squadron.


GFDA led the effort in partnership with Cascade County and Sweetgrass Development. The findings are being used by GFDA to pursue market-driven opportunities to grow and diversify the region's economy and support the creation of high-wage jobs. The project was funded by the Office of Economic Adjustment of the U.S. Department of Defense with support from the Montana Department of Commerce through a Community Development Block Grant to Cascade County and GFDA.
...


17. Government, business community gearing up for regional growth plan | Nooga.com


While a request for $500,000 to help fund development of a 40-year regional plan sailed through Chattanooga City Council Tuesday night, Hamilton County Commissioners were not so eager to commit an equal amount for what one termed a possible "blue sky," project.


"I agree we need infrastructure planning, I agree we need smart growth," Commissioner Joe Graham said ... "But considering what we have just gone through, the deep cuts in the budget and the laying off of people, I need to make sure I understand this. If one of those people we laid off calls me and says, 'I lost my job and you had one-half a million to blue sky,' I need to be able to explain what this is."


Chattanooga City Council members on Tuesday voted to commit $500,000 for the regional planning process that aims to map out how and where growth and development will occur in the greater Chattanooga area.


"This is a very aggressive plan," Beth Jones, executive director of the Southeast Tennessee Development District ...


18. Jump-starting the local economy - Northwest Indiana


JumpStart, a program in Ohio funded by the U.S. Economic Development Administration to create jobs and investments in that state, is developing a regional entrepreneurship action plan in Northwest Indiana.


An initiative was presented to the Northwest Indiana Economic Development District in January.


At the EDD's quarterly meeting on Friday, JumpStart representatives presented the district with a summary of the research JumpStart has done on Northwest Indiana by way of leadership and entrepreneur interviews and online surveys. It concluded in part that there is limited deal flow across a range of technologies, industries and markets. The study also found the region has a limited number of experienced entrepreneurs to mentor startups, but will create an action plan to address that.


Northwest Indiana's EDD was formed in late 2009, mainly in response to the situation in 2008 when Northwest Indiana missed out on $40 million in federal flood aid directed to Indiana. The region missed out because it did not have a local economic development district eligible for funding from the federal Economic Development Administration, which requires a public-private partnership. This requirement necessitated a new organization be formed, despite the existence of several groups and agencies already involved in regional economic development.
...


19. RI.gov: Secretary of State Mollis' Bill Creating Regional Presidential Primary Signed into Law


Legislation from Secretary of State A. Ralph Mollis that moves Rhode Island's 2012 presidential primary from March 6 to April 24 has been signed into law by Governor Chafee.


The change creates a regional primary that will see Rhode Islanders go to the polls on the same day as voters in Pennsylvania as well as New York and Connecticut, which last month also approved legislation moving their 2012 presidential primaries to April 24.


"I've been calling for a national system of regional primaries since I first took office. They can make small states like ours more relevant," said Mollis. "Candidates are much more likely to stop here if they can combine it with a swing through Pennsylvania, New York and Connecticut."


20. A Discussion On Chinese Regional Debt: People Are Only Examining A Slice Of The Problem


... concerns over local government debt in China — how serious of a problem is it? ... guest on the show was Professor He Ping, a colleague from Tsinghua University.


One point that I think is very important, but only had the chance to mention once, and very briefly, during the program, is that despite all the attention they are getting, LGFV (Local Government Financing Vehicle) loans are only one of many categories of risky loans that have the potential to impose serious losses on China's financial system. In fact, in the early days of China's stimulus-inspired lending boom, in Spring 2009, China's bank regulators clearly considered loans to local government-sponsored infrastructure projects among the least risky loans taking place, arguing that it made little sense to set aside loan loss reserves against them since they were virtually certain to be paid back. The fact that the least risky category of lending is now generating such concern is itself a reason for real concern.


21. Bankruptcy on the table for Alabama County: Governor - KDAF


Bankruptcy is still a "very strong possibility" for Alabama's Jefferson County, Governor Robert Bentley said on Saturday -- a move that could make for the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history.


A $3.2 billion bond debt related to Jefferson County's sewer system has pushed the county toward the brink, and a rare Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy could have ripple effects in the $2.9 trillion U.S. municipal bond market.
...
The county is observing a "standstill period" to allow settlement talks with creditors, and this week it finalized a plan aimed at settling the debt to present to creditors.


The debt situation escalated in the mid-2000s when interest on variable- and auction-rate swaps from a refinancing of an upgrade to its sewer system spiraled in 2008.
...
"If there's any way that we can negotiate a settlement short of bankruptcy, that is our position."


Bentley said he is not open to sending money to the county. ...


22. Alberta highlights energy and environment with Pacific Northwest neighbours | Canada Views


Energy, the environment, innovation and regional collaboration will be key areas of discussion for an Alberta delegation participating in the 21st Annual Pacific Northwest Economic Region (PNWER) Summit in Portland, Oregon, July 19-22.


"Alberta is bringing a strong voice to this year's summit," said Mel Knight, Minister of Sustainable Resource Development and current PNWER president. "Our province has taken a leadership role on issues such as clean energy and climate change, and we have a keen interest in cross-border issues. Our heightened presence at this summit will be reinforced by the many opportunities we have to showcase our province and the work Alberta is doing."


The annual summit brings together approximately 550 key business leaders, legislators and government leaders from Alberta, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Yukon, Northwest Territories, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana and Alaska. ...


23. United Nation's Regional Economic Commissions And India - CJNEWS INDIA


...


While discussing the regional initiatives of United Nations regarding economic development, i asked myself about the true nature of such regional initiatives. Are these regional initiatives truly regional in nature or can they cooperate and collaborate among themselves or with other individuals and organisations residing beyond their regions?


For instance, recently I came across the activities of United Nation's Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) regarding intellectual property rights (IPRs). I found this initiative really impressive. However, can India be a part of UNECE directly or indirectly?
...
It seems, although many UN initiatives have been launched as regional, their public private partnership (PPP) model may help in expanding their expertise and scope. At the end of the day, any regional initiative that helps in achieving a global objective is always welcome irrespective of its mandate.


24. Regional Council invests to reduce poverty and homelessness « Poverty Free Waterloo Region


On March 23, Waterloo Regional Council voted to add nearly a quarter million dollars a year to the Regional budget for programs to help end persistent homelessness. The money is to fund programs that Regional staff had identified as very important but that were not originally included in the budget.


It required a Councillor to move a motion to add that money into the budget. That Councillor was Jane Brewer from Cambridge. The motion was seconded by Councillor Jane Mitchell from Waterloo. And it passed unanimously!


Councillor Brewer was actually surprised by the level of support around the table. How did it happen?


In short, it is because many people spoke up to say we want to create a community where everyone can live free from poverty. We want our taxes used to make sure everyone has a place that is home in our community.
...


25. Combating Desertification By Ranjani Kamala Murthy


...


Participants from African countries, suggested regional cooperation as a way out (and keep neo colonizing countries and companies out), perhaps South Asia should learn*. A paradigm shift from human development/unfettered rights towards human and environmental justice was suggested by participants with the bottom 25% claiming rights to resources, power and agency and top 25% losing. After all, the pie was limited. Security Councils at the regional level with representatives of poor countries dominating were seen as relevant (African participants), and non party social movements which challenge state, markets, community, institutionalized religion, colonial education, household, marriage and relationships towards justice (to all marginalized groups) were seen as crucial by participants from all countries. Only then will mother earth and human beings be left for generations to come, be able to live without fear.


26. The FINANCIAL - JESSICA Holding Fund Agreement paves the way for urban renewal in Poland's Mazowieckie region


Urban renewal, energy efficiency, renewable energy and cluster development are the focus of the JESSICA Holding Fund being established in Poland's Mazowieckie regionThe Fund - which is managed by the EIB - will make use of the European Regional Development Fund.


An agreement signed on July 15, 2011 with the Mazowieckie region establishes a JESSICA Holding Fund for investment in economically deprived urban areas across the region. The fund will redevelop disused military bases and industrial areas, as well as regenerate town centres and residential districts. It will also support energy efficiency, renewable energy and cluster development projects in cities and towns of the region. EUR 40m will initially be invested by the Mazowieckie region, of which approximately EUR 34m is from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and EUR 6m from national matching funding.
...


27. 'Inadequate' regional growth fund needs cash boost - LocalGov.co.uk


Government's local economic growth strategy has been labelled 'inadequate' following news the second and final round of the Regional Growth Fund (RGF) has been oversubscribed by more than three times.


In response shadow business minister Gordon Marsden said the announcement demonstrates 'how inadequate this process is in satisfying the desires of hundreds of firms across the country who want to grow.' He also urged ministers top up the RGF by an additional £200m by repeating the bankers bonus tax.
...
Business secretary Vince Cable announced yesterday the £950m cash-pot available received 500 bids demanding some £3bn in total. Following the coalition's decision to abolish the English regional development agencies, the fund has been established to encourage private sector job creation, especially in areas whose economies are deemed overly dependent on public sector.
...


More links: http://www.delicious.com/I.see.regions.work

#458 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Fri Jul 22, 2011 5:18 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - July 18-21, 2011
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1. State reveals economic 'blueprint' | Boulder County Business Report


Colorado officials will focus on nurturing innovative companies, improving access to capital and aggressively recruiting and retaining businesses, according to an economic development plan released Wednesday by Gov. John Hickenlooper.


The plan, named "The Colorado Blueprint," was developed by the Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade with consultation of county and regional economic development organizations. The blueprint was the result of Hickelooper's campaign promise to create a "bottom-up" economic plan for Colorado.


The plan outlines six focus areas to promote the state economy. They are creating a business friendly environment; recruiting, growing and retaining businesses; increasing access to capital; creating and marketing a stronger "Colorado brand," work force education and training; and cultivating innovation and technology.


...
The report can be read online at www.colorado.gov/coloradoblueprint 


2. Regional Planning Efforts Have Friends in High Places | New Jersey Future


The State of New Jersey has identified three areas where special circumstances justify the creation of regional planning bodies to oversee development and preservation decisions: the Meadowlands (1969), the Pinelands (1979) and the Highlands (2004). Together these areas comprise 2,800 square miles, fully 37 percent of the state's land area.


Recently, however, some have questioned whether the regional planning bodies in these areas really matter, or whether they just add an unnecessary layer of government or red tape.


In their latest Star-Ledger column, Govs. Brendan Byrne and Tom Kean made it clear where they stand on regional planning. ...


Gov. Kean's comments touched more broadly: "Regional planning in the state is absolutely vital — in the Highlands, in the Pinelands, in the Meadowlands. We cannot go backwards, so you're right. We have to pay attention here and make sure we have a livable state to pass on to our children."
...


 3. Slumps in Consumer Spending - Graphic - NY Times


Slumps in Consumer Spending During economic downturns, consumers usually spend less on what the Fed calls "discretionary services" — items like education, entertainment, restaurant meals and insurance. But in the chart below, it's clear that consumers today are cutting back much more sharply. Part of the reason: In previous years, households often added debt to continue spending. Now the bill has come due.


 4. Marion CAN DO! joins Columbus regional group | The Marion Star 


Described as a "potential game changer" by the city/county regional planning director, Marion CAN DO!'s joining of a 10-county regional economic development initiative is already showing promise, ...


Columbus 2020 is a private/public partnership in which the Columbus Partnership joined with many people and groups including more than 500 community leaders in the 10-county region to improve economic development in central Ohio.


The organization identified central Ohio's key assets and challenges, visited peer cities, compiled a fact base on the region's current economic development efforts and developed a case for regional change.


Columbus 2020 ... Marion and Knox counties were added to the central Ohio region, which initially comprised only Franklin, Delaware, Union, Morrow, Licking, Fairfield, PIckaway and Madison counties. He said including Marion and Knox counties "makes a lot of sense because of the proximity to the Port Columbus Airport. ... I think it's fantastic."


 5. Bagging AMBAG | Monterey County Weekly


There's more to road rage than angry drivers. Transportation and planning agencies in the region are butting heads when it comes to who does what, and some of them are proposing to eliminate the regional Association of Monterey Bay Area Governments.


As a federally designated metropolitan planning organization, AMBAG oversees long-range growth strategies for San Benito, Santa Cruz and Monterey counties. After both the Transportation Agency for Monterey County and Santa Cruz County Regional Transportation Commission boards directed staff to consider realigning planning functions, AMBAG board members have been on the defense.
...


The AMBAG board ousted Director John Doughty in May, and on July 13 directed his interim replacement, Les White, to create a restructuring proposal.


"One of the first things I was faced with is the fact that various agency executives and some elected officials were talking about the dissolving or modifying of AMBAG," White says. ...


 6. Off the bus - Bites - Opinions - July 21, 2011 - Sacramento News & Review


Mayor Kevin Johnson and his merry band took their Think Big Sacramento show on the road last week.


The bus tour was of course part of the effort to drum up public support for public subsidies for a new Kings arena, and the Big kids unveiled yet another study—the "Capitol Corridor Impact Report"—which shows that most of the patrons at Arco Arena over the last few years have been from outside the city of Sacramento.


Nothing we didn't know there, but Bites supposes the idea is to show a new NBA arena will be an asset for the whole region, and so the whole region should want to help pay for it.


The booster club's own math shows a new arena isn't really going to generate much new spending. And Think Big's "Economic Engine Report" ... biggest impact will be right around the site of a new facility.


As a general rule, Bites is all for that. But out in the burbs, where the word regionalism is often translated as "redistribution of wealth," Bites can't imagine they'll be on board.


 7. Twelve smart people, plus three smart ideas | Cincinnati.com


Sharing services, combining operations and even merging governments were the hot topics ... Nothing brought more sense of urgency from our panel of experts, many of whom insisted our region must transcend its traditional political subdivisions - cities, townships, villages, counties, even states - in order to thrive.


Former mayor and council member Ken Blackwell framed it as a matter of economic survival, allowing us to compete with other areas, such as Indianapolis, Louisville and Lexington, that have combined.


"This is an issue of growth - either you grow or decay," Blackwell said. "We need a structure that fosters economic growth. That means we need to aggregate communities of interest who understand the importance of growth. People have to see what their interest is in development."


... former city manager ... "I believe you need significant change at the state level. We need to get rid of townships as a form of government. The state's going to have to force the issue."


 8. 'Sun Corridor' partners hire contractor to promote Arizona in California market - TriValley Central


Regional economic development and governmental agencies across the state today announced a significant advancement in their alliance, known as the Arizona Sun Corridor Partnership (ASCP). The partnership, composed of the Greater Phoenix Economic Council (GPEC), the Greater Yuma Economic Development Corporation (GYEDC), Tucson Regional Economic Opportunities, Inc. (TREO), the City of Flagstaff and Pinal County, has pooled funds to hire a private contractor to focus on business development efforts in California.
...


"The Sun Corridor is one of only 10 U.S. markets expected to see most of the nation's growth in the next 35 years. We need to work together as Arizonans, aggressively leveraging this unique position in attracting businesses looking for growth in the Southwest," said Joe Snell, president and CEO of TREO.
...


 9. NIU participates in effort to win federal funding to strengthen areospace industry in Rockford | NIU Today


Seven area groups collaborated and applied for a federal grant that could significantly strengthen the region's aerospace industry. ... "We are here to celebrate a milestone in the increasingly strong, local collaboration among higher education, economic development and workforce development. In today's economic climate, collaboration is not just a good idea, it is an imperative."


The grant application was for the "Jobs and Innovation Accelerator Challenge" (JAIC) that is funded by the Department of Commerce Economic Development Administration (EDA), Department of Labor Employment Training Administration (ETA) and the Small Business Administration (SBA).


The organizations submitting the grant application are Northern Illinois University, Rock Valley College, Rockford Area Economic Development Council and EIGERlab. Additional partner groups include the Rockford Region Economic Development District, Rockford Metropolitan Agency for Planning and Workforce Investment Board.


10. Defunct planning council faces bankruptcy - Calaveras Enterprise


The Central Sierra Planning Council closed its doors June 30, but leaves a slew of problems in its wake that must be sorted out before the council members can move forward.


"Basically, the council is now functionally defunct. It's not operational any longer," said Tuolumne County District 2 Supervisor Randy Hanvelt.


It was Hanvelt who called for the council to be audited, which revealed that it was spending significantly more than it was taking in. The discovery eventually led to the dissolution of the council.


"I think it's sad," Hanvelt said. "This is a case where a joint powers authority, a government agency, mismanaged funds."


Tuolumne County Auditor-Clerk Debi Russell told the board at its July 7 meeting in Angels Camp that the council could face up to $1.6 million in unfunded pension liabilities.


District 4 Supervisor ... said there is little to no money to pay for the liabilities and thus the council is considering a municipal bankruptcy, among other options.


11. RDA fight is over


The Indiana Supreme Court brought an end Wednesday to Porter County's attempts to withdraw as a member of the Northwest Indiana Regional Development Authority.


The court voted 4-1 not to accept the county's request to hear the case, following the county's defeat at the state appellate court level.


"It's time to move forward," said Porter County Council member Laura Blaney, D-at-large, who helped trigger the attempted withdrawal in April 2009. The move resulted in a legal battle with the council losing at both the trial and appellate court levels.
...
While pleased with Wednesday's ruling, RDA Executive Director Bill Hanna said the case already was becoming history.


"We've already moved past this issue," he said.


That was made possible by the council's appointment of Good, along with the re-establishment of communication between the RDA and the County Council and commissioners, Hanna said.
...


12. Land-of-Sky Regional Council receives national award for Linking Lands project | The Asheville Citizen-Times 


The Land-of-Sky Regional Council, based in Asheville, received a 2011 Innovation Award from the National Association of Development Organizations Research Foundation for its Linking Lands and Communities in the Land-of-Sky Region initiative.


The Linking Lands and Communities Project emerged from a need for better tools to help the region plan for growth and development while sustaining healthy natural systems. Land-of-Sky Regional Council, along with over 40 local and regional partners, worked together to gather information about the region's natural and cultural resources and identify opportunities to link these systems into a regional "green infrastructure" network.


... For more than 20 years, NADO's Innovation Award has provided regional development organizations throughout the nation a unique opportunity to showcase their important work and their critical role in promoting economic development for rural and small metropolitan communities," said NADO President Tim Ware...


13. Regional development councils seen as progress » Press-Republican


Gov. Andrew Cuomo unveiled part of his economic-development plan Wednesday that could have a big local impact.


The plan calls for 10 regional economic-development councils that will be able to apply for state funding to support projects they deem part of their local strategy.


The applications will go to a new consolidated funding application, which will provide grant funds and tax credits from dozens of existing programs, which have a pool of $1 billion available.
...
Previously, projects needed to make separate applications to various potential sources.


Now, one application will provide access to nine state agencies: Empire State Development; New York State Canal Corp.; New York State Energy Research and Development Authority; Environmental Facilities Corp.; Homes and Community Renewal; Department of Labor; Division of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation; Department of State; and Department of Transportation.


14. What's The Opposite of Smart Growth? - Palmer-Forks, PA Patch


... if human-scale, walkable development is "smart," it's worth reflecting on what's not smart: the low-density sprawl, McMansions and Big Box shopping centers the region was building furiously in the outlying townships before the housing bubble burst.


The reason this kind of development isn't smart is that it's simply not sustainable, economically, fiscally or environmentally.


Over the past 10 years, the Lehigh Valley has built miles and miles of infrastructure with no regard for how residents would pay for the lifelong maintenance costs.


No one has priced in the toll unrestrained outward growth will take on the environment, or the vampiric impact of job sprawl on the region's productivity and GDP.


Just look to the east to see how this will end: New Jersey is quickly running out of horizontal space, and eastern Pennsylvania could easily find itself in a similar situation if we don't get a handle on sprawl. These development practices are "unsustainable" because they ...


15. Regionalism doesn't work for Palm Beach County - South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com


Ever run up against ideas that sound good, but don't seem to pan out? For example, it "sounds" good for the South Florida business community to engage in "regional cooperation." There's even a regional business alliance that has been engaged in efforts since 2003.


At some point, it is fair to ask if Palm Beach County has been treated fairly by regionalism partnerships in a Dade/Broward/Palm Beach trifecta. ...


Regional cooperation requires that a coalition be built, which only works when a true partnership is in play. Creating a coalition among the counties of Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade is not hard to do, and has been done. But the coalition begins to lose value if the work of the group unduly benefits one or more members over others. Another bugaboo threatens if the coalition achieves some successes, and it's time to divvy up the prizes. Then, economic chauvinism emerges, and too often the divvying ends in one or more of the coalition members getting the shaft.


16. Regional Water Supply Plan Shows Long-Term Shortfall


Due to new state requirements, the Hampton Roads Planning District Commission (HRPDC) has drafted a regional water supply plan through the next several decades that includes current and estimated future water needs for Hampton Roads localities along with suggestions on coping with future shortages. Though most of the region will likely have adequate water supply through the period, the York-James Peninsula will fall short around 2040, according to the draft of the report set to be adopted by the HRPDC Wednesday.


The York-James Peninsula includes James City County, York County, and the Cities of Hampton, Newport News, Poquoson, and Williamsburg. Based on current trends, demand will exceed supply in 2041 under average conditions. By 2050, the water supply plan estimates a shortage of about 6 million gallons per day (which could be up to 21 million gallons per day under extreme conditions).


... projected shortage "I expect we will pursue this regionally, ...


17. Ardmore Will Host Local Business Owners as Regional `Classic Town' - Ardmore-Merion-Wynnewood, PA Patch


In just its second annual "Classic Towns Trolley Tour," scheduled for Wednesday, July 27, the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission has chosen to spotlight Ardmore, starting the day with a breakfast hosted by the Ardmore Initiative.


About three dozen local business owners and representatives from other DVRPC-designated "Classic Towns" throughout the region will also tour Ardmore's downtown business district, and visit the Frank Lloyd Wright "Suntop" homes on Summit Road.


One of the homes, built in 1939 with the ambition of being a cornerstone for a new type of community planning, is currently for sale, as first reported by Patch last month. The group will be able to take a walk-through.


The DVRPC, which works within a nine-county area in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, defines characteristics of a "classic" town to be "vibrant residential neighborhoods, diverse architecture, bustling business and entertainment districts, and remarkable recreational opportunities."
...


18. Northeast Indiana Regional Partnership and Leadership Fort Wayne Announce New Strategic Collaboration | Indiana's NewsCenter


A pair of organizations will now be working together to develop sustained regional leadership throughout Northeast Indiana.


The Northeast Indiana Regional Partnership, through its Vision 2020 program, ...announced a new strategic collaboration with Leadership Fort Wayne, Inc.


Collaborative regional leadership has been identified as a key tenet for achieving success in improving the regional economy in addition to the five focus areas of Vision 2020: 21st Century Talent, Competitive Business Climate, Entrepreneurship, Infrastructure and Quality of Life.


NEIRP and LFW's first significant activity will be to orchestrate a community visit to Denver, Colorado, .... The 2011 Regional Leadership Experience will bring together Northeast Indiana's preeminent business and community leaders to learn from the experiences and practices of Metro Denver's Economic Development Corporation-an organization that is internationally known for its collaborative approach to economic development.
...


19. SunRail Breaks Ground After Years Of Planning - News Story - WFTV Orlando


SunRail is under way on Monday as the federal government officially signed its part of the construction paycheck after years of talking and planning.


Local, state, and federal officials held a groundbreaking ceremony on Monday as the Federal Secretary of Transportation signed off on a $178 million agreement to build the rail line.


That money would pay for the first 31 miles of the commuter rail line, from DeLand to Orlando.


... Florida Hospital is spending $3 million of its own money to build a rail stop for its 17,000 employees.


Federal Secretary of Transportation Ray Lahood and local leaders signed a joint funding agreement on Monday that allows construction to start on phase one. The train will eventually run 61 miles, connecting DeLand to Poinciana.
...


20. Nominations being accepted for new award | Martinsburg, WV  - The Journal


Region 9 Planning and Development Council is accepting nominations for its inaugural Neal Carpenter Community Service Award.


Carpenter was appointed to the council in 2004, representing Jefferson County. He devoted a great deal of time and energy to the organization, greatly assisting the staff. After battling cancer, Carpenter died in September 2010.


Council members established the award last year, naming it in honor of Carpenter. It "is intended to recognize, reward and encourage activities that have a significant impact in meeting the needs of local communities or schools in the region."


Mary Jo Carpenter said that her late husband thoroughly enjoyed his involvement with Region 9, the challenges and the friendships.


"Neal would be humbled that Region 9 is instituting this community service award in his honor," she writes. "He recognized early on an obligation to give back to the community for the opportunities he had to live an extraordinary life."


21. Esri Opens Enterprise License Agreements to Regional Governments - Directions Magazine


With encouragement from the National Association of Regional Councils, Esri is now offering enterprise license agreements (ELAs) to regional governments in the United States. Thousands of federal, state, and local governments already leverage Esri's government ELAs to centralize geospatial data and enhance operations across departments. Extended availability of government ELAs brings unlimited use of ArcGIS software to the staffs of councils of governments, associations of governments, and regional and metropolitan planning organizations.


Organizations such as the Georgia Association of Regional Commissions have already recognized the value of an enterprise-wide GIS and made special arrangements to obtain ArcGIS ELAs. The newly expanded government ELA program will make it easier for regional governments to obtain similar agreements. Because the ArcGIS system supports desktop, mobile, web, and cloud implementations from one integrated geospatial platform, regional government ...


22. Atlantic Canadian Energy Ministers Reaffirm Commitment to Regional Priorities | Canada Views


Energy Ministers from the Atlantic provinces continue to make progress on energy priorities and initiatives with regional significance.


Ministers from Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island met ...  before the Energy Minister and Mines Conference in Kananaskis, Alta.


The ministers discussed the Atlantic Energy Gateway, which will provide opportunities for development of clean energy projects in the region, the Lower Churchill project, the outcomes of the New Brunswick Energy commissioned report, and establishment of the commission on the future of electricity in Prince Edward Island.


"Our work through the Atlantic Energy Gateway will allow us to better understand how regional planning, generation and system operation will save ratepayers money and help us advance our cleaner energy agenda, especially for hydro, wind and tidal," said Energy Minister Charlie Parker.
...


23. Report `alarming' says Lynch - Local News - News - General - Cooma Monaro Express


THE board representing 12 south east regional councils, including Cooma, has refuted claims by an independent report which proposes changes to the way the Federal Government invests in regional development.


South East Regional Organisation of Councils (SEROC) has written to all relevant government ministers opposing the Grattan Institute Report which it believes contains radical conclusions that may be incorrect.


The Grattan Institute at the Melbourne University released a report titled "Investing in Regions: Making a Difference" in May.


In the report the Institute calls for the federal government to re-evaluate its investments in decentralisation, regional jobs, regional higher education and regional infrastructure. Cooma Mayor Dean Lynch said the report was alarming and could be damaging for regional towns.


The Institute is campaigning for more government funding to be directed to "bolting" towns that are experiencing high and sustained population growth on the coast, ...


24.  The bush has been rorted - Opinion - Editorial - General - The Canberra Times


Australia must invest in the regions that are the source of our wealth. It is nauseating to hear the pejorative ''pork barrelling'' used for what is strategic investment. We must think of the benefits of regionalism logically: where are the coal mines, the iron ore mines, wheat paddocks, cotton fields, the cattle and many of the tourism attractions?


Why is a bus network in a capital city ''nation-building investment'' but a road in regional Australia welfare?


Ask yourself a very simple question: how many of the consumer items that reflect your standard of living came from overseas? So who is sending something in the other direction to pay for all of this?


While only one-third of Australians live in regional areas, over half of our exports come from regional Australia. If a person with $2 goes to a table of four and kicks off a series of transactions that move the coin around the table, then broadly speaking the gross domestic product of that table would be $10. ...


25. Regional alliance guidelines released | The Australian


Victoria's $20 million fund to expand the regional delivery of degrees through alliances between universities and vocational providers requires proposals to be closely linked to regional economic development strategies.


"Proposals developed in partnership with and/or endorsed by local industry, employers, chambers of commerce and local councils will be regarded favourably," say fund application guidelines ...


The fund isn't limited to universities and TAFEs. Private providers who already receive government funding are also able to apply so long as consortia include as least one accredited higher education provider.


The fund also extends to the adult and community education sector.


...


26. Mineral-Rich Mongolia Prepares for Flood of Money - Bloomberg
...
"We are very aware this is transforming Mongolia's economy," says David Paterson, vice president for regional development and communications at Oyu Tolgoi, also noting that capital spending on the project's first stage alone is equal to Mongolia's annual gross domestic product.


Simply getting ready to mine is supercharging the tiny economy. GDP grew 6.1 percent last year and was up 9.7 percent in the first quarter of 2011 from a year earlier.


"The mining sector could very well carry Mongolia for the next 50 years," says Parmeshwar Ramlogan, the Ulaanbaatar-based resident representative for Mongolia at the International Monetary Fund.


Ramlogan predicts Mongolia could grow at double-digit rates for at least the next 10 years, raising per capita income -- now at $2,470 -- fourfold within a decade and making it one of the fastest-growing economies in the world.
...


27. Water buses proposed for Fraser River in Metro Vancouver | Vancouver, Canada


Here's one idea to get people out of their cars and off the roads: how about a new water bus on the Fraser River?


According to Jeff Malmgren, this mode of transportation connecting communities from Richmond to Maple Ridge would also lessen the strain on the transit system as well as cut the commuting time of many who travel from the suburbs.


Malmgren, a director with the Fraser RiverBus Society, will present the concept at a meeting of the regional planning committee of Metro Vancouver ...


28. Regionalism and school connections - The Korea Times


... what has still remained unsolved in my heart during the 10 years is regionalism and school connections that close ranks. While teaching in a southern province, I came to know that regional antagonism between the southeastern and the southwestern regions goes beyond hatred. While working in a central district, I also came to know that almost all the teachers in the county I worked, both who had graduated from the same university and whose hometown is in the county, formed a mafia to try to monopolize everything related to promotions. Teachers' ability was at the bottom of the list of priorities there.
...
Here, we need to rethink the American society. Where does its strength come from, which makes it possible that America still remains the most powerful nation economically and militarily? I am sure that is because the principles of democracy, free-market economy and the rule of law work well.
...


29. Govt responds to review of regional development - State News - Agribusiness and General - General - Farm Weekly


THE State's nine Regional Development Commissions (RDCs) will be streamlined to provide greater focus on developing regional investment blueprints after analysis of a review into the commissions' structure.


Regional Development Minister Brendon Grylls said the review was requested by State Cabinet's Economic Expenditure and Reform Committee and examined ways the delivery of Western Australia's regional development agenda could be improved.


The review is the first comprehensive examination of the Regional Development Commission since its inception in 1993.


"The State Government has determined the RDCs will remain as individual statutory authorities but the will be asked to work closely with the WA Planning Commission to produce detailed blueprints to identify service gaps and investment opportunities," Mr Grylls said.
...


Further information on the Government's response to the RDC review is available at www.rdl.wa.gov.au


30. Grant funds new places to see art - Worcester News


FIVE artists will get the chance to display their work in a slightly more unusual setting thanks to a grant.


The artists, who will all be recent graduates, will benefit from almost £26,000 given to Worcestershire County Council by Arts Council England to put on shows in non-gallery spaces.
...
The project will be managed by 5x5x5=creativity, an organisation which has developed this model over the last 11 years and has worked with 140 settings in eight different local authorities.
...
Jenny Peevers, relationship manager for regional planning with Arts Council England in the West Midlands, said: "The organisation behind this project is well respected for delivering high quality work with young people.


"This project represents a new challenge for them by extending their work to all age groups, including elderly in care homes, hospital patients and library users.


31. Local artists invited to apply for regional grants | Independent Tribune 


One of the Cabarrus Arts Council's goals is to support outstanding artists and one of the ways we do that is to join with other arts councils in sponsoring the Regional Artist Project Grants.


Applicants must have lived for at least 12 months in Cabarrus, Cleveland, Gaston, Iredell, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, Rowan or Rutherford County in North Carolina or York County in South Carolina. They also cannot have received a Regional Artist Project Grant in the past two years.


32. 8 things you should know before starting your own convention - Intervention, The Internet Culture Convention


This post is meant to help those of you who have a great idea for a convention or event and want to know if you should go ahead and do it.


1. You must be OK with working an unpaid full time job until your event becomes sustainable. Cons are not cheap to start. I advise saving up at least $5,000-$10,000 to invest into an event that is a 3 day, full featured event like Intervention. More, if you can. Scale that down if you intend to start off small. No, you probably won't make any money in the beginning. Yes, you will have to work harder than you do at your day job.


2. It might take 5 years for your event to become sustainable. You have to be OK with taking a short term loss your first few years. Let's face it – you and I both know that people are more willing to support an event that they complain about that has been running for 10 years rather than try something new. It is human nature. 
...


33. 2011 City and Regional Magazine Survey - City and Regionals @ FolioMag.com


When the Mass market magazine industry plunged into recession in 2008, city and regionals were an oasis in the waste land of magazine advertising, thanks in part to a clientele that wasn't as eager as national advertisers to jump into digital.


However, by 2009-2010, city and regional magazines were no longer immune. Historically, the ideal target margin for a city and regional magazine was around 20 percent. That's shrunk in recent years (along with revenue and staff).


The majority of respondents (39 percent) to the 2011 FOLIO: City & Regional Magazine survey are single title publishers; 15 percent publish two titles while 10 percent publish seven or more [Chart 1]. Another 15 percent offer four to six titles, while 11 percent publish up to three magazines.
...


34. The State of Metropolitan America: Suburbs and the 2010 Census - Brookings Institution


During a conference exploring the 2010 Census and the country's suburbs, Alan Berube delivered a presentation on the demographic convergence between cities and suburbs within metropolitan areas.


First, the initial results from the 2010 Census signal a continuing demographic convergence within U.S. metropolitan areas, one that is blurring the lines that have long separated cities and suburbs.


Second, this convergence results from a complicated mix of economic, social, and physical changes in metro areas, and raises a host of consequences for suburban communities at the front lines of change.


And third, in light of these growing and shared challenges, we must adopt a metropolitan approach to managing and making the most of demographic change in an increasingly metropolitan world.


...


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#459 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Tue Jul 26, 2011 3:31 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - July 22-25, 2011
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 1. Lessons for Atlanta in Denver's transportation tax  | ajc.com

If Atlanta taxpayers vote next year for a new transportation buildout, will they get the investment of a lifetime?


Or do they risk driving their dollars off a cliff?


The debate over how careful to be is suddenly raging here, among the very officials tasked with putting the plan together. And the answer may lie 1,400 miles away — in Denver.


If voters in the 10-county metro Atlanta region approve a penny sales tax next year to raise $7 billion over 10 years for transportation — likely the biggest single infrastructure investment in the region's history — they will be treading new ground. But Denver has done it before, with a 122-mile "FasTracks" ... approved in 2004.


The first passengers should step on FasTracks-funded trains in about two years. While the promise of FasTracks has some big fans in Denver among commuters and employers, its failings regarding cost and timetable also offer harsh lessons, which Georgia officials are trying to heed.
...


 2. Tax Justice Network: 16 French regional councils involved in the fight against tax havens


One year after the adoption by the regional council of Paris of a resolution on banks' country by country transparency, 16 French regions are now taking concrete action against tax havens.


This is a result of the 'Stop Tax Havens' campaign, launched in September 2009 by CCFD-Terre Solidaire, Oxfam France, ATTAC, some French Trade Unions (CGT, CFDT, SNUI, Solidaires) and the French platform against tax havens.


Template letters were produced in order to encourage activists to write to their regional representatives to get them involved in this campaign. And we have also been very active during the regional elections in spring 2010 to present our proposals to all candidates.


We are now working closely with the regional councils to help them implement these measures of transparency. Nine of them have been asking their financial partners to provide country by country disclosure of information such as: name and number of subsidiaries, numbers of staff employed, profits and ...


 3. Government collaboration can produce huge savings - Canton, OH - CantonRep.com


Spending a billion dollars is almost as tricky as earning it. But what if Northeast Ohio found a $1 billion windfall – enough to pay for a college education for every graduating high school senior, hire more great teachers or increase research at our universities?


It sounds too good to be true, but such opportunity exists. It is found through sensible regional collaboration.


Regionalism has already shown us the power to grow new industries and support a new breed of entrepreneur. Regionalism is not a political ideology; it is a prudent fiscal strategy.


We often blame the state and region's fiscal crisis on a tired story about an aging Rust Belt economy that has undermined government's ability to raise revenues. But that narrative is, thankfully, outdated.


Our economy is larger than ever, with new industries creating jobs and profits. Greater Cleveland's unemployment rate has generally been below the national average for almost three years. ...


Connecting Stark County: cantonrep.com/stark2020


4. Team NEO back to its roots in JobsOhio role - Northeast Ohio and Cleveland - Crain's Cleveland Business


With planning under way to serve its role as one of six regional economic development offices under the JobsOhio nonprofit created by Gov. John Kasich, Team NEO is coming full circle.


... the nonprofit appears positioned to play the central role in a collaborative economic development effort that was envisioned for it by its founders nearly a decade ago.


The plan is for the Cleveland-based nonprofit to oversee economic development for 18 counties, only slightly more than was planned for the original Team NEO.


It was never able to play that central role because local politicians and economic development officials were reluctant to share responsibility — and credit — for bringing jobs and industry to their particular corners of the state.


JobsOhio is Gov. John Kasich's vehicle for channeling state incentives to induce businesses to invest in Ohio. It eventually will get as much as $100 million annually from state liquor profits to invest in job creation.


...


 5. It's official: Rail line from Kenosha to Milwaukee is dead - JSOnline


Meeting for the final time Monday, the Southeastern Regional Transit Authority ended plans for a commuter rail line linking Milwaukee to Kenosha, Racine and the southern suburbs.


The RTA also voted to request that $6 million in federal money congressionally earmarked for the KRM Commuter Link be redirected to the Milwaukee County, Racine and Kenosha bus systems, if legally possible.


Much of Monday's agenda was dictated by the Legislature. In the 2011-'13 state budget, lawmakers ordered that the Southeastern RTA and its Dane County counterpart be dismantled, along with two other regional transit authorities that had been authorized but never formed.


The three-county body had been charged with planning the $283.5 million KRM and would have run the rail line had it been created.


But the Federal Transit Administration has held off for more than a year on approving the RTA's request to start preliminary engineering on the KRM. ...


 6.  Arena effort gets regional business support - Sacramento Press


In what Mayor Kevin Johnson called an unprecedented event, 14 chambers of commerce from the Sacramento region announced Thursday that they support an entertainment and sports complex in downtown Sacramento.


Johnson said the backing of the regional business community, which came after a four-county bus trip for Think Big Sacramento, is a commitment to the promise he made to the National Basketball Association earlier this year in New York City that Sacramento is an NBA city and can build a new arena.


"I did not sell Sacramento, I sold our region," he said, adding that a common commitment to a downtown sports and entertainment complex will provide a more vibrant community.


The major obstacle facing the Think Big Sacramento coalition is developing a financing plan for the $386 million arena, something that was expected from the ICON-Taylor arena development team but was not a part of the report released after a nearly four-month feasibility study.
...


 7. Regional eco dev by the numbers - Times Bulletin - Van Wert, Ohio


At a meeting ... representatives of the West Central Ohio Network - an eight-county regional economic development group consisting of Van Wert, Paulding, Mercer, Allen, Auglaize, Putnam, Hardin and Hancock counties - described how the group had become a formal organization over the past several months and been accepted as one of only 22 pilot programs within the Stronger Economies Together (SET) nationwide project. The WCON is also slated to become a sub-group within the Toledo region for the JobsOhio program, along with Wyandot County.


One of the key items to emerge from the formation was the chance to have produced a data set for the region. This is essentially a set of numbers and statistics that represent the demographics of an area. Prospective employers, especially those looking to employ larger numbers of workers, ask for this type of information as a part of their decision-making process on where to locate a new facility.


These data sets can be used ...


 8. TRPA rejects biomass power plant at Tahoe - Sacramento Bee


Lake Tahoe's land use regulatory agency has rejected plans for a biomass power plant on the lake's north shore.


Tahoe Regional Planning Agency Executive Director Joanne Marchetta says her staff concluded the Kings Beach site is "unworkable."


Placer County Supervisor Jennifer Montgomery says the plan generated widespread citizen complaints.


Mike and Dawn Baffone, who Kings Beach home is near the proposed site, initiated a grassroots movement against the plant.


They say opponents are not against biomass technology, but believe Tahoe is an unsuitable location because of a variety of environmental and social reasons.
...




 9. Regional transit plan identifies future needs | Tulsa World


It's time to rethink how we get around in Tulsa - not only because future needs demand it, but also because the federal government does too.


Local transportation planners last week unveiled a draft version of this area's regional transit system plan, known as "Fast Forward." It's not the kind of reading material most Tulsans would take to the beach. But whether we know it or not, transportation planning is important to all our daily lives - as well as our pocketbooks.


The 25-year regional plan looks at the needs and demands of this area's top-priority travel corridors and sets the stage for identifying how each corridor's challenges might be best addressed in the decades ahead. Ideas include such modest and basic measures as tinkering with the existing bus system to more exotic options such as light rail. (For more, visit www.tulsaworld.com/forward)


... if we want to preserve such options as light rail 20 or 30 years from now, we'd better get the work started now.


...


10. Economists stress deeper regional links


Economists in a commemorative lecture on Swadesh Ranjan Bose yesterday stressed the need for increased regional connectivity to achieve expected economic growth.


"The cost of non-cooperation is very high," said Prof Mustafizur Rahman, executive director of Centre for Policy Dialogue at the city's BRAC Centre Inn.
...


Bose, whose life spanned from 1928 to 2009, was an economist who served the World Bank, the then Pakistan Institute of Development Economics and Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies (BIDS). He completed his MA in economics in 1960 from Dhaka University.


"The works of Bose could have been a massive source of information for regional cooperation, had they been published earlier," Rahman said.


The time has come for regional connectivity and regional cooperation, he said. Bose realised the importance of regional cooperation and regional connectivity in the early 1960s, he said.


...


11. Steve Keen's Debtwatch


As an economist, I do something very unusual: I treat money seriously. Though this may be hard for those who have not done an economics degree to believe, economists have it schooled into them that "money doesn't matter"– that it is just a "veil over barter", there to make it easier to swap commodities than it would be if you actually had to find someone who had what you wanted, and wanted to sell what you wanted to buy. ...


Finance Education "After" the Crisis - Steve Keen - YouTube Video


Finance theory, since it takes neoclassical economics as its starting point, is even more flawed than neoclassical economics itself. Here I point out how absurd its abuse of the English language has been--using "Efficient" and "Rational" to describe behavior that any sensible person would see as "prophetic"--and discuss how it should be reformed.


12. Real Estate 4 Ransom - new documentary about global property speculation


Real Estate 4 Ransom is a new documentary about global property speculation and its impact on the economy. Real Estate 4 Ransom considers changing motivations behind property investment and challenges the notion that the Global Financial Crisis was caused by bank lending. ... What role did real estate play in the crashing of the global economy?
Co-Directors Karl Fitzgerald and Gavin Emmanuel - Premier - August 10, 2011


13. New Data Shows Slowing Migration in America - The Urbanophile


The Internal Revenue Service just released its benchmark place to place migration data for 2009. This tracks moves from county to county and state to state for people who filed tax returns between calendar year 2008 and 2009. My initial look at the data confirms what other sources such that Current Population Survey have shown, namely that migration has slowed during the Great Recession. I'm going to cheat though and not actually show much of that despite my enticing title, and instead illustrate a few other points the come out from this data.


As I've said before, this data is a gold mine of information. Few people seem to use it though, probably because it is so cumbersome to work with for non-specialists. One of the biggest reasons I built my Telestrian system was to create a platform that would actually make this data usable for me. ...


Megaregional Migration


... I'd previously showed a chart of gross migration between Chicago and other major Midwest metros. Gross migration is one of the better measures of true human capital circulation between cities, and indicates which metros have the tightest talent linkages with Chicago. ...


14. Why States Matter - The Urbanophile


This is the second part of my point-counterpoint series on the usefulness of states. You can read the "anti" state side at "Are States an Anachronism?." Today we look at the opposite case.


There are a lot of reasons why, despite their obvious flaws, states continue to play a crucial role in our nation. The first is that in a huge, multi-regional, multi-polar country like the United States, we can't effectively govern the entire place from a single city on the east coast (with perhaps administrative subdivisions), nor would we want to. Our federal system provides independent sovereignty for states that are part of the general principle of separation of powers in our system, one that provides a check and balance against excesses of various types in Washington. Cities and regions, no matter what their economic rationale, simply cannot play that role. It takes something like a state to be able to stand up to the federal government.


... their problems arguably hold no candle to Washington ...


15. If the World Lived Like New Yorkers, We'd All Fit Into Texas | INFRASTRUCTURIST


The wonderful density blog Per Square Mile gives us a graphic rendering of how much space the world's population of 6.9 billion would need if it were as dense as certain cities. If everyone on earth were packed together like Parisians (above, click to enlarge), we'd only need about 128,000 square miles — an area roughly the size of Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi. To live like Singapore we keep Louisiana but swap the others for Texas and Oklahoma. Like San Francisco, keep the Singapore lineup and bring back Arkansas. Like London, keep San Francisco's states and add New Mexico. Houston requires most of the Midwest, Great Plains, Southwest, and Rocky Mountains.


To live like New York all we need is Texas: ...


16. Human Transit: how urbanist visionaries can muck up transit


Architects and urban visionaries play an incredibly important role in a leadership-hungry culture. They have to know a little bit about almost everything, which is hard to do. But for some reason, certain segments of the profession have decided that the basic math and geometry of transit isn't one of those things they need to know, even when they present themselves as transit experts.


To see what I mean, I encourage you to watch this short video from Gensler Architects in Los Angeles. It's a concise summary of all the crucial mistakes that you'll need to confront in much "visionary thinking" about transit. ...


* Disinterest in costs and efficiency.


* Fixation on transit technologies ...


* Confusion about scale. ...


* Confusion about "flexibility,"


* Ignorance about what's already working, leading to premature demolition fantasies. ...


17. Renewables Rule Transmission | RenewablesBiz
...
The rule establishes three requirements for transmission planning:


• Each public utility transmission provider must participate in a regional transmission planning process that satisfies the transmission planning principles of Order No. 890 and produces a regional transmission plan.


• Local and regional transmission planning processes must consider transmission needs driven by public policy requirements established by state or federal laws or regulations. Each public utility transmission provider must establish procedures to identify transmission needs driven by public policy requirements and evaluate proposed solutions to those transmission needs.


Public utility transmission providers in each pair of neighboring transmission planning regions must coordinate to determine if there are more efficient or cost-effective solutions to their mutual transmission needs.


18. Waldrop calls for more national, regional cooperation - Thoroughbred Times


While noting that factors such as added gambling competition and racetrack ownership conglomerates have forced a shift in focus of the National Thoroughbred Racing Association, NTRA President Alex Waldrop is calling for more national and regional cooperation in building the sport's fan base.
...
Waldrop said the NTRA is focused on finding ways to get the 50-million people it estimates have some interest in racing to move up from casual fans to participating horseplayers and eventually owners. He said current fans, owners, and trainers can help in those efforts, building interest through social media.


"We do have a passionate fan base and that will be a key to building racing," Waldrop said, adding that bringing in new fans can best be accomplished by a national body such as the NTRA through a cooperative industry effort. "We all have to be at the table."
...


19. Surveying Northwest Regional Surveys Part II - PORT - Portland art
...
Generally there is no incentive for Northwest institutions to do an excellent (therefore potentially redefining) regional survey as doing so only makes the next one tougher and positions the institution as too crucial in deciding area heirarchies (a political can of worms with every gallerist, artist and collector lobbying like mad). Also, the curators who assemble these shows are generally not trying to establish themselves as bleeding edge practitioners in contemporary art (many active artists in Portland are). Instead, most institutions shoot for a survey that draws a decent audience promotes a little good will and ingratiates itself amongst a broad array of patrons artists and other creatures of culture ... In other words the shows are about the institutions position in the region, not the state of cutting edge contemporary art in the region. ...


Artists often don't understand institutional politics but regional survey's leave curators vulnerable like nothing else ...


20. Recalling Moses: Bridging the Red Sea - New Europe


If ever a region needed creative new thinking, new dialogue and indeed an improvement in regional collaboration, the Red Sea littoral surely is one. The active Saudi diplomacy on political unrest in Yemen and Egypt ... marker of the need for and potential of a stronger Red Sea political community.


Critics might complain that we do not need yet another regional organisation. There are, after all, a number of institutions in which these countries can meet to promote dialogue, common political interests and economic prosperity, if they were so inclined. For the moment, they are not.


... Of the littoral countries, only Saudi Arabia has the resources to fund such a regional dialogue.


... there can be a useful role for external actors, either governmental or non-governmental, to promote new regional dialogues on security and economic relations among Red Sea states and communities. The idea of a Red Sea community can be used as a unifying and peace-building idea in this troubled region.


21. Doomed EEDA creates 22,000 jobs in three years | Business Weekly


The East of England Development Agency has had a lively final year for a dead man walking – creating or safeguarding 8,800 jobs in the ideas region of the UK and Europe.
...
In its last full year before the Government axe falls, EEDA has also helped 2,800 local businesses to start up and grow; supported 31,800 people in learning new skills and backed nearly 100,000 local businesses and entrepreneurs through the regional Business Link service.


The Government decided to scrap Regional Development Agencies – apart from Tory-controlled London – because it was perceived that despite billions of pounds of funding, they had `failed to close the North South divide.'


They were replaced by under-funded and out-of-touch local Enterprise partnerships, many of them built on inter-city alliances that make little economic sense.
...
While much of the activity undertaken by EEDA will cease, several important programmes will be continuing under new delivery arrangements.
...


22. Number of reported attacks on ships in Asia reach new high - TODAY online | Singapore


The number of reported piracy and armed robbery attacks against ships in Asia for the first half of this year has reached a new high, compared to the same period over the last four years.


According to regional piracy watchdog the Regional Cooperation Agreement on Combating Piracy and Armed Robbery against Ships in Asia (ReCAAP), 82 such incidents - 64 armed robbery and 18 piracy attacks - were recorded between January and last month. In contrast, 70 such incidents were reported in the same period last year.


ReCAAP's half-yearly report said about 84 per cent of the incidents occurred during hours of darkness when it was difficult for the crew to detect the robbers' boats approaching their vessels, as they were less alert and vigilant during this period.


...
ReCAAP said at least two different syndicates or groups of robbers were responsible for the attacks and observed that tug boats appear to be more vulnerable compared to other type of ships due to its slow speed.


23. Samoan PM renews push for Pacific regionalism - Radio Australia:Pacific Beat


Samoa's Prime Minister, Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi says Polynesian countries should revisit the idea of forming a subregional group to deal with issues of common interest to them.


The idea of forming a Polynesian subregional body like the Association of Small Island States and the Melanesian Spearhead Group has been talked about in the past, but has never materialised.


Mr Tuilaepa says besides the preservation of languages culture and traditions, sub-regionalism can also provide better platforms for the effective delivery of programs in the sub-region and in the wider region as a whole.


The Samoan Prime Minister said this while speaking on the theme of Pacific Regionalism in an address to mark the Pacific Islands Forum 40th Anniversary Leaders' Lecture Series.


24. Park could possibly permeate two cities


Thompson County Park in West St. Paul and Kaposia Park and Kaposia Landing in South St. Paul could be linked as part of a regional park sometime in the future as the result of a decision by the South St. Paul City Council Monday night.


The Metropolitan (Met) Council -- the regional planning agency serving the Twin Cities seven-county metropolitan area -- had prompted the council to update the city's comprehensive plan to include some language about the possible formation of a regional park between the two cities.


"We just got done doing our comprehensive plan updates and we got notification that we need to change it once again -- we have to update our comprehensive plan to make sure it's in line with (the Met Council's) policy plans," South St. Paul City Planner Peter Hellegers said at the meeting.
...

Hellegers explained that even though the council voted to accept the amendment, that doesn't mean the city will be required to link it's two park with West St. Paul's.


"This does not necessarily mean this will become a regional park," he said. "It's just something they're looking at."
...



25. Regional forensics computer crime lab opens in Orange County | 89.3 KPCC


Law enforcement agencies throughout Southern California now have a new tool for fighting crime: a new regional computer forensics crime lab in Orange.


Inside, a blue machine about the size of a box of Girl Scout cookies whirs as it quickly copies a hard drive.


In a room down the hall, computers can extract that data and file them into categories, including e-mail, pictures and documents.


More and more, this is how law enforcement investigates crime. And the new Orange County Regional Computer Forensics Lab lets local law enforcement team up with the FBI to trace the digital footprints of criminals.


"There is not a case that we have now where you do not have a hard drive, a thumb drive, a cell phone or some other mechanism for either communicating or storing data," said FBI Director Robert Mueller at the lab's unveiling yesterday.


... The Orange County lab is the 15th in the country, ...


More stories: http://www.delicious.com/I.see.regions.work

Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - July 18-21, 2011


1. State reveals economic 'blueprint' | Boulder County Business Report


Colorado officials will focus on nurturing innovative companies, improving access to capital and aggressively recruiting and retaining businesses, according to an economic development plan released Wednesday by Gov. John Hickenlooper.


The plan, named "The Colorado Blueprint," was developed by the Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade with consultation of county and regional economic development organizations. The blueprint was the result of Hickelooper's campaign promise to create a "bottom-up" economic plan for Colorado.


The plan outlines six focus areas to promote the state economy. They are creating a business friendly environment; recruiting, growing and retaining businesses; increasing access to capital; creating and marketing a stronger "Colorado brand," work force education and training; and cultivating innovation and technology.


...
The report can be read online at www.colorado.gov/coloradoblueprint 


2. Regional Planning Efforts Have Friends in High Places | New Jersey Future


The State of New Jersey has identified three areas where special circumstances justify the creation of regional planning bodies to oversee development and preservation decisions: the Meadowlands (1969), the Pinelands (1979) and the Highlands (2004). Together these areas comprise 2,800 square miles, fully 37 percent of the state's land area.


Recently, however, some have questioned whether the regional planning bodies in these areas really matter, or whether they just add an unnecessary layer of government or red tape.


In their latest Star-Ledger column, Govs. Brendan Byrne and Tom Kean made it clear where they stand on regional planning. ...


Gov. Kean's comments touched more broadly: "Regional planning in the state is absolutely vital — in the Highlands, in the Pinelands, in the Meadowlands. We cannot go backwards, so you're right. We have to pay attention here and make sure we have a livable state to pass on to our children."
...


 3. Slumps in Consumer Spending - Graphic - NY Times


Slumps in Consumer Spending During economic downturns, consumers usually spend less on what the Fed calls "discretionary services" — items like education, entertainment, restaurant meals and insurance. But in the chart below, it's clear that consumers today are cutting back much more sharply. Part of the reason: In previous years, households often added debt to continue spending. Now the bill has come due.


 4. Marion CAN DO! joins Columbus regional group | The Marion Star 


Described as a "potential game changer" by the city/county regional planning director, Marion CAN DO!'s joining of a 10-county regional economic development initiative is already showing promise, ...


Columbus 2020 is a private/public partnership in which the Columbus Partnership joined with many people and groups including more than 500 community leaders in the 10-county region to improve economic development in central Ohio.


The organization identified central Ohio's key assets and challenges, visited peer cities, compiled a fact base on the region's current economic development efforts and developed a case for regional change.


Columbus 2020 ... Marion and Knox counties were added to the central Ohio region, which initially comprised only Franklin, Delaware, Union, Morrow, Licking, Fairfield, PIckaway and Madison counties. He said including Marion and Knox counties "makes a lot of sense because of the proximity to the Port Columbus Airport. ... I think it's fantastic."


 5. Bagging AMBAG | Monterey County Weekly


There's more to road rage than angry drivers. Transportation and planning agencies in the region are butting heads when it comes to who does what, and some of them are proposing to eliminate the regional Association of Monterey Bay Area Governments.


As a federally designated metropolitan planning organization, AMBAG oversees long-range growth strategies for San Benito, Santa Cruz and Monterey counties. After both the Transportation Agency for Monterey County and Santa Cruz County Regional Transportation Commission boards directed staff to consider realigning planning functions, AMBAG board members have been on the defense.
...


The AMBAG board ousted Director John Doughty in May, and on July 13 directed his interim replacement, Les White, to create a restructuring proposal.


"One of the first things I was faced with is the fact that various agency executives and some elected officials were talking about the dissolving or modifying of AMBAG," White says. ...


 6. Off the bus - Bites - Opinions - July 21, 2011 - Sacramento News & Review


Mayor Kevin Johnson and his merry band took their Think Big Sacramento show on the road last week.


The bus tour was of course part of the effort to drum up public support for public subsidies for a new Kings arena, and the Big kids unveiled yet another study—the "Capitol Corridor Impact Report"—which shows that most of the patrons at Arco Arena over the last few years have been from outside the city of Sacramento.


Nothing we didn't know there, but Bites supposes the idea is to show a new NBA arena will be an asset for the whole region, and so the whole region should want to help pay for it.


The booster club's own math shows a new arena isn't really going to generate much new spending. And Think Big's "Economic Engine Report" ... biggest impact will be right around the site of a new facility.


As a general rule, Bites is all for that. But out in the burbs, where the word regionalism is often translated as "redistribution of wealth," Bites can't imagine they'll be on board.


 7. Twelve smart people, plus three smart ideas | Cincinnati.com


Sharing services, combining operations and even merging governments were the hot topics ... Nothing brought more sense of urgency from our panel of experts, many of whom insisted our region must transcend its traditional political subdivisions - cities, townships, villages, counties, even states - in order to thrive.


Former mayor and council member Ken Blackwell framed it as a matter of economic survival, allowing us to compete with other areas, such as Indianapolis, Louisville and Lexington, that have combined.


"This is an issue of growth - either you grow or decay," Blackwell said. "We need a structure that fosters economic growth. That means we need to aggregate communities of interest who understand the importance of growth. People have to see what their interest is in development."


... former city manager ... "I believe you need significant change at the state level. We need to get rid of townships as a form of government. The state's going to have to force the issue."


 8. 'Sun Corridor' partners hire contractor to promote Arizona in California market - TriValley Central


Regional economic development and governmental agencies across the state today announced a significant advancement in their alliance, known as the Arizona Sun Corridor Partnership (ASCP). The partnership, composed of the Greater Phoenix Economic Council (GPEC), the Greater Yuma Economic Development Corporation (GYEDC), Tucson Regional Economic Opportunities, Inc. (TREO), the City of Flagstaff and Pinal County, has pooled funds to hire a private contractor to focus on business development efforts in California.
...


"The Sun Corridor is one of only 10 U.S. markets expected to see most of the nation's growth in the next 35 years. We need to work together as Arizonans, aggressively leveraging this unique position in attracting businesses looking for growth in the Southwest," said Joe Snell, president and CEO of TREO.
...


 9. NIU participates in effort to win federal funding to strengthen areospace industry in Rockford | NIU Today


Seven area groups collaborated and applied for a federal grant that could significantly strengthen the region's aerospace industry. ... "We are here to celebrate a milestone in the increasingly strong, local collaboration among higher education, economic development and workforce development. In today's economic climate, collaboration is not just a good idea, it is an imperative."


The grant application was for the "Jobs and Innovation Accelerator Challenge" (JAIC) that is funded by the Department of Commerce Economic Development Administration (EDA), Department of Labor Employment Training Administration (ETA) and the Small Business Administration (SBA).


The organizations submitting the grant application are Northern Illinois University, Rock Valley College, Rockford Area Economic Development Council and EIGERlab. Additional partner groups include the Rockford Region Economic Development District, Rockford Metropolitan Agency for Planning and Workforce Investment Board.


10. Defunct planning council faces bankruptcy - Calaveras Enterprise


The Central Sierra Planning Council closed its doors June 30, but leaves a slew of problems in its wake that must be sorted out before the council members can move forward.


"Basically, the council is now functionally defunct. It's not operational any longer," said Tuolumne County District 2 Supervisor Randy Hanvelt.


It was Hanvelt who called for the council to be audited, which revealed that it was spending significantly more than it was taking in. The discovery eventually led to the dissolution of the council.


"I think it's sad," Hanvelt said. "This is a case where a joint powers authority, a government agency, mismanaged funds."


Tuolumne County Auditor-Clerk Debi Russell told the board at its July 7 meeting in Angels Camp that the council could face up to $1.6 million in unfunded pension liabilities.


District 4 Supervisor ... said there is little to no money to pay for the liabilities and thus the council is considering a municipal bankruptcy, among other options.


11. RDA fight is over


The Indiana Supreme Court brought an end Wednesday to Porter County's attempts to withdraw as a member of the Northwest Indiana Regional Development Authority.


The court voted 4-1 not to accept the county's request to hear the case, following the county's defeat at the state appellate court level.


"It's time to move forward," said Porter County Council member Laura Blaney, D-at-large, who helped trigger the attempted withdrawal in April 2009. The move resulted in a legal battle with the council losing at both the trial and appellate court levels.
...
While pleased with Wednesday's ruling, RDA Executive Director Bill Hanna said the case already was becoming history.


"We've already moved past this issue," he said.


That was made possible by the council's appointment of Good, along with the re-establishment of communication between the RDA and the County Council and commissioners, Hanna said.
...


12. Land-of-Sky Regional Council receives national award for Linking Lands project | The Asheville Citizen-Times 


The Land-of-Sky Regional Council, based in Asheville, received a 2011 Innovation Award from the National Association of Development Organizations Research Foundation for its Linking Lands and Communities in the Land-of-Sky Region initiative.


The Linking Lands and Communities Project emerged from a need for better tools to help the region plan for growth and development while sustaining healthy natural systems. Land-of-Sky Regional Council, along with over 40 local and regional partners, worked together to gather information about the region's natural and cultural resources and identify opportunities to link these systems into a regional "green infrastructure" network.


... For more than 20 years, NADO's Innovation Award has provided regional development organizations throughout the nation a unique opportunity to showcase their important work and their critical role in promoting economic development for rural and small metropolitan communities," said NADO President Tim Ware...


13. Regional development councils seen as progress » Press-Republican


Gov. Andrew Cuomo unveiled part of his economic-development plan Wednesday that could have a big local impact.


The plan calls for 10 regional economic-development councils that will be able to apply for state funding to support projects they deem part of their local strategy.


The applications will go to a new consolidated funding application, which will provide grant funds and tax credits from dozens of existing programs, which have a pool of $1 billion available.
...
Previously, projects needed to make separate applications to various potential sources.


Now, one application will provide access to nine state agencies: Empire State Development; New York State Canal Corp.; New York State Energy Research and Development Authority; Environmental Facilities Corp.; Homes and Community Renewal; Department of Labor; Division of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation; Department of State; and Department of Transportation.


14. What's The Opposite of Smart Growth? - Palmer-Forks, PA Patch


... if human-scale, walkable development is "smart," it's worth reflecting on what's not smart: the low-density sprawl, McMansions and Big Box shopping centers the region was building furiously in the outlying townships before the housing bubble burst.


The reason this kind of development isn't smart is that it's simply not sustainable, economically, fiscally or environmentally.


Over the past 10 years, the Lehigh Valley has built miles and miles of infrastructure with no regard for how residents would pay for the lifelong maintenance costs.


No one has priced in the toll unrestrained outward growth will take on the environment, or the vampiric impact of job sprawl on the region's productivity and GDP.


Just look to the east to see how this will end: New Jersey is quickly running out of horizontal space, and eastern Pennsylvania could easily find itself in a similar situation if we don't get a handle on sprawl. These development practices are "unsustainable" because they ...


15. Regionalism doesn't work for Palm Beach County - South Florida Sun-Sentinel.com


Ever run up against ideas that sound good, but don't seem to pan out? For example, it "sounds" good for the South Florida business community to engage in "regional cooperation." There's even a regional business alliance that has been engaged in efforts since 2003.


At some point, it is fair to ask if Palm Beach County has been treated fairly by regionalism partnerships in a Dade/Broward/Palm Beach trifecta. ...


Regional cooperation requires that a coalition be built, which only works when a true partnership is in play. Creating a coalition among the counties of Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade is not hard to do, and has been done. But the coalition begins to lose value if the work of the group unduly benefits one or more members over others. Another bugaboo threatens if the coalition achieves some successes, and it's time to divvy up the prizes. Then, economic chauvinism emerges, and too often the divvying ends in one or more of the coalition members getting the shaft.


16. Regional Water Supply Plan Shows Long-Term Shortfall


Due to new state requirements, the Hampton Roads Planning District Commission (HRPDC) has drafted a regional water supply plan through the next several decades that includes current and estimated future water needs for Hampton Roads localities along with suggestions on coping with future shortages. Though most of the region will likely have adequate water supply through the period, the York-James Peninsula will fall short around 2040, according to the draft of the report set to be adopted by the HRPDC Wednesday.


The York-James Peninsula includes James City County, York County, and the Cities of Hampton, Newport News, Poquoson, and Williamsburg. Based on current trends, demand will exceed supply in 2041 under average conditions. By 2050, the water supply plan estimates a shortage of about 6 million gallons per day (which could be up to 21 million gallons per day under extreme conditions).


... projected shortage "I expect we will pursue this regionally, ...


17. Ardmore Will Host Local Business Owners as Regional `Classic Town' - Ardmore-Merion-Wynnewood, PA Patch


In just its second annual "Classic Towns Trolley Tour," scheduled for Wednesday, July 27, the Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission has chosen to spotlight Ardmore, starting the day with a breakfast hosted by the Ardmore Initiative.


About three dozen local business owners and representatives from other DVRPC-designated "Classic Towns" throughout the region will also tour Ardmore's downtown business district, and visit the Frank Lloyd Wright "Suntop" homes on Summit Road.


One of the homes, built in 1939 with the ambition of being a cornerstone for a new type of community planning, is currently for sale, as first reported by Patch last month. The group will be able to take a walk-through.


The DVRPC, which works within a nine-county area in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, defines characteristics of a "classic" town to be "vibrant residential neighborhoods, diverse architecture, bustling business and entertainment districts, and remarkable recreational opportunities."
...


18. Northeast Indiana Regional Partnership and Leadership Fort Wayne Announce New Strategic Collaboration | Indiana's NewsCenter


A pair of organizations will now be working together to develop sustained regional leadership throughout Northeast Indiana.


The Northeast Indiana Regional Partnership, through its Vision 2020 program, ...announced a new strategic collaboration with Leadership Fort Wayne, Inc.


Collaborative regional leadership has been identified as a key tenet for achieving success in improving the regional economy in addition to the five focus areas of Vision 2020: 21st Century Talent, Competitive Business Climate, Entrepreneurship, Infrastructure and Quality of Life.


NEIRP and LFW's first significant activity will be to orchestrate a community visit to Denver, Colorado, .... The 2011 Regional Leadership Experience will bring together Northeast Indiana's preeminent business and community leaders to learn from the experiences and practices of Metro Denver's Economic Development Corporation-an organization that is internationally known for its collaborative approach to economic development.
...


19. SunRail Breaks Ground After Years Of Planning - News Story - WFTV Orlando


SunRail is under way on Monday as the federal government officially signed its part of the construction paycheck after years of talking and planning.


Local, state, and federal officials held a groundbreaking ceremony on Monday as the Federal Secretary of Transportation signed off on a $178 million agreement to build the rail line.


That money would pay for the first 31 miles of the commuter rail line, from DeLand to Orlando.


... Florida Hospital is spending $3 million of its own money to build a rail stop for its 17,000 employees.


Federal Secretary of Transportation Ray Lahood and local leaders signed a joint funding agreement on Monday that allows construction to start on phase one. The train will eventually run 61 miles, connecting DeLand to Poinciana.
...


20. Nominations being accepted for new award | Martinsburg, WV  - The Journal


Region 9 Planning and Development Council is accepting nominations for its inaugural Neal Carpenter Community Service Award.


Carpenter was appointed to the council in 2004, representing Jefferson County. He devoted a great deal of time and energy to the organization, greatly assisting the staff. After battling cancer, Carpenter died in September 2010.


Council members established the award last year, naming it in honor of Carpenter. It "is intended to recognize, reward and encourage activities that have a significant impact in meeting the needs of local communities or schools in the region."


Mary Jo Carpenter said that her late husband thoroughly enjoyed his involvement with Region 9, the challenges and the friendships.


"Neal would be humbled that Region 9 is instituting this community service award in his honor," she writes. "He recognized early on an obligation to give back to the community for the opportunities he had to live an extraordinary life."


21. Esri Opens Enterprise License Agreements to Regional Governments - Directions Magazine


With encouragement from the National Association of Regional Councils, Esri is now offering enterprise license agreements (ELAs) to regional governments in the United States. Thousands of federal, state, and local governments already leverage Esri's government ELAs to centralize geospatial data and enhance operations across departments. Extended availability of government ELAs brings unlimited use of ArcGIS software to the staffs of councils of governments, associations of governments, and regional and metropolitan planning organizations.


Organizations such as the Georgia Association of Regional Commissions have already recognized the value of an enterprise-wide GIS and made special arrangements to obtain ArcGIS ELAs. The newly expanded government ELA program will make it easier for regional governments to obtain similar agreements. Because the ArcGIS system supports desktop, mobile, web, and cloud implementations from one integrated geospatial platform, regional government ...


22. Atlantic Canadian Energy Ministers Reaffirm Commitment to Regional Priorities | Canada Views


Energy Ministers from the Atlantic provinces continue to make progress on energy priorities and initiatives with regional significance.


Ministers from Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island met ...  before the Energy Minister and Mines Conference in Kananaskis, Alta.


The ministers discussed the Atlantic Energy Gateway, which will provide opportunities for development of clean energy projects in the region,the Lower Churchill project, the outcomes of the New Brunswick Energy commissioned report, and establishment of the commission on the future of electricity in Prince Edward Island.


"Our work through the Atlantic Energy Gateway will allow us to better understand how regional planning, generation and system operation will save ratepayers money and help us advance our cleaner energy agenda, especially for hydro, wind and tidal," said Energy Minister Charlie Parker.
...


23. Report `alarming' says Lynch - Local News - News - General - Cooma Monaro Express


THE board representing 12 south east regional councils, including Cooma, has refuted claims by an independent report which proposes changes to the way the Federal Government invests in regional development.


South East Regional Organisation of Councils (SEROC) has written to all relevant government ministers opposing the Grattan Institute Report which it believes contains radical conclusions that may be incorrect.


The Grattan Institute at the Melbourne University released a report titled "Investing in Regions: Making a Difference" in May.


In the report the Institute calls for the federal government to re-evaluate its investments in decentralisation, regional jobs, regional higher education and regional infrastructure. Cooma Mayor Dean Lynch said the report was alarming and could be damaging for regional towns.


The Institute is campaigning for more government funding to be directed to "bolting" towns that are experiencing high and sustained population growth on the coast, ...


24.  The bush has been rorted - Opinion - Editorial - General - The Canberra Times


Australia must invest in the regions that are the source of our wealth. It is nauseating to hear the pejorative ''pork barrelling'' used for what is strategic investment. We must think of the benefits of regionalism logically: where are the coal mines, the iron ore mines, wheat paddocks, cotton fields, the cattle and many of the tourism attractions?


Why is a bus network in a capital city ''nation-building investment'' but a road in regional Australia welfare?


Ask yourself a very simple question: how many of the consumer items that reflect your standard of living came from overseas? So who is sending something in the other direction to pay for all of this?


While only one-third of Australians live in regional areas, over half of our exports come from regional Australia. If a person with $2 goes to a table of four and kicks off a series of transactions that move the coin around the table, then broadly speaking the gross domestic product of that table would be $10. ...


25. Regional alliance guidelines released | The Australian


Victoria's $20 million fund to expand the regional delivery of degrees through alliances between universities and vocational providers requires proposals to be closely linked to regional economic development strategies.


"Proposals developed in partnership with and/or endorsed by local industry, employers, chambers of commerce and local councils will be regarded favourably," say fund application guidelines ...


The fund isn't limited to universities and TAFEs. Private providers who already receive government funding are also able to apply so long as consortia include as least one accredited higher education provider.


The fund also extends to the adult and community education sector.


...


26. Mineral-Rich Mongolia Prepares for Flood of Money - Bloomberg
...
"We are very aware this is transforming Mongolia's economy," says David Paterson, vice president for regional development and communications at Oyu Tolgoi, also noting that capital spending on the project's first stage alone is equal to Mongolia's annual gross domestic product.


Simply getting ready to mine is supercharging the tiny economy. GDP grew 6.1 percent last year and was up 9.7 percent in the first quarter of 2011 from a year earlier.


"The mining sector could very well carry Mongolia for the next 50 years," says Parmeshwar Ramlogan, the Ulaanbaatar-based resident representative for Mongolia at the International Monetary Fund.


Ramlogan predicts Mongolia could grow at double-digit rates for at least the next 10 years, raising per capita income -- now at $2,470 -- fourfold within a decade and making it one of the fastest-growing economies in the world.
...


27. Water buses proposed for Fraser River in Metro Vancouver | Vancouver, Canada


Here's one idea to get people out of their cars and off the roads: how about a new water bus on the Fraser River?


According to Jeff Malmgren, this mode of transportation connecting communities from Richmond to Maple Ridge would also lessen the strain on the transit system as well as cut the commuting time of many who travel from the suburbs.


Malmgren, a director with the Fraser RiverBus Society, will present the concept at a meeting of the regional planning committee of Metro Vancouver...


28. Regionalism and school connections - The Korea Times


... what has still remained unsolved in my heart during the 10 years is regionalism and school connections that close ranks. While teaching in a southern province, I came to know that regional antagonism between the southeastern and the southwestern regions goes beyond hatred. While working in a central district, I also came to know that almost all the teachers in the county I worked, both who had graduated from the same university and whose hometown is in the county, formed a mafia to try to monopolize everything related to promotions. Teachers' ability was at the bottom of the list of priorities there.
...
Here, we need to rethink the American society. Where does its strength come from, which makes it possible that America still remains the most powerful nation economically and militarily? I am sure that is because the principles of democracy, free-market economy and the rule of law work well.
...


29. Govt responds to review of regional development - State News - Agribusiness and General - General - Farm Weekly


THE State's nine Regional Development Commissions (RDCs) will be streamlined to provide greater focus on developing regional investment blueprints after analysis of a review into the commissions' structure.


Regional Development Minister Brendon Grylls said the review was requested by State Cabinet's Economic Expenditure and Reform Committee and examined ways the delivery of Western Australia's regional development agenda could be improved.


The review is the first comprehensive examination of the Regional Development Commission since its inception in 1993.


"The State Government has determined the RDCs will remain as individual statutory authorities but the will be asked to work closely with the WA Planning Commission to produce detailed blueprints to identify service gaps and investment opportunities," Mr Grylls said.
...


Further information on the Government's response to the RDC review is available at www.rdl.wa.gov.au


30. Grant funds new places to see art - Worcester News


FIVE artists will get the chance to display their work in a slightly more unusual setting thanks to a grant.


The artists, who will all be recent graduates, will benefit from almost £26,000 given to Worcestershire County Council by Arts Council England to put on shows in non-gallery spaces.
...
The project will be managed by 5x5x5=creativity, an organisation which has developed this model over the last 11 years and has worked with 140 settings in eight different local authorities.
...
Jenny Peevers, relationship manager for regional planning with Arts Council England in the West Midlands, said: "The organisation behind this project is well respected for delivering high quality work with young people.


"This project represents a new challenge for them by extending their work to all age groups, including elderly in care homes, hospital patients and library users.


31. Local artists invited to apply for regional grants | Independent Tribune 


One of the Cabarrus Arts Council's goals is to support outstanding artists and one of the ways we do that is to join with other arts councils in sponsoring the Regional Artist Project Grants.


Applicants must have lived for at least 12 months in Cabarrus, Cleveland, Gaston, Iredell, Lincoln, Mecklenburg, Rowan or Rutherford County in North Carolina or York County in South Carolina. They also cannot have received a Regional Artist Project Grant in the past two years.


32. 8 things you should know before starting your own convention - Intervention, The Internet Culture Convention


This post is meant to help those of you who have a great idea for a convention or event and want to know if you should go ahead and do it.


1. You must be OK with working an unpaid full time job until your event becomes sustainable. Cons are not cheap to start. I advise saving up at least $5,000-$10,000 to invest into an event that is a 3 day, full featured event like Intervention. More, if you can. Scale that down if you intend to start off small. No, you probably won't make any money in the beginning. Yes, you will have to work harder than you do at your day job.


2. It might take 5 years for your event to become sustainable. You have to be OK with taking a short term loss your first few years. Let's face it – you and I both know that people are more willing to support an event that they complain about that has been running for 10 years rather than try something new. It is human nature. 
...


33. 2011 City and Regional Magazine Survey - City and Regionals @ FolioMag.com


When the Mass market magazine industry plunged into recession in 2008, city and regionals were an oasis in the waste land of magazine advertising, thanks in part to a clientele that wasn't as eager as national advertisers to jump into digital.


However, by 2009-2010, city and regional magazines were no longer immune. Historically, the ideal target margin for a city and regional magazine was around 20 percent. That's shrunk in recent years (along with revenue and staff).


The majority of respondents (39 percent) to the 2011 FOLIO: City & Regional Magazine survey are single title publishers; 15 percent publish two titles while 10 percent publish seven or more [Chart 1]. Another 15 percent offer four to six titles, while 11 percent publish up to three magazines.
...


34. The State of Metropolitan America: Suburbs and the 2010 Census - Brookings Institution


During a conference exploring the 2010 Census and the country's suburbs, Alan Berube delivered a presentation on the demographic convergence between cities and suburbs within metropolitan areas.


First, the initial results from the 2010 Census signal a continuing demographic convergence within U.S. metropolitan areas, one that is blurring the lines that have long separated cities and suburbs.


Second, this convergence results from a complicated mix of economic, social, and physical changes in metro areas, and raises a host of consequences for suburban communities at the front lines of change.


And third, in light of these growing and shared challenges, we must adopt a metropolitan approach to managing and making the most of demographic change in an increasingly metropolitan world.


...


More links: http://www.delicious.com/I.see.regions.work Feed option.

#460 From: "regionswork" <tom.christoffel@...>
Date: Wed Aug 3, 2011 7:18 am
Subject: Regional Community Development News - Stories by Region - July 26 - Aug 1, 2011
regionswork
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Note: This is issues is organized regionally using the global geocodes noted at the end of the issue. For the U.S., the State geocode is added. Information about the gecodes prototype is available from the Slideshare link at the end. The geocode based tags are also used to regionally organize Delicious bookmarks based on units of government of global political geography. Ed.

Europe - 1000 - United Kingdom 1116-00


1. Simplified planning regime designed to promote growth | Construction News | The Construction Index


The draft National Planning Policy Framework replaces the regional planning policy councils and push planning down to a more local level.


Under the draft, councils will be compelled to work closely with communities and businesses to seek opportunities for sustainable growth; helping to deliver homes, jobs, and infrastructure while protecting the environment. A presumption in favour of sustainable development means that proposals should be approved promptly unless they would compromise the key sustainable development principles set out in the draft Framework, according to ministers.


The draft National Planning Policy Framework slims down the current planning guidance – which is more than 1,000 pages – to just 52 pages.


It maintains the government's commitment to protecting the built and natural environment, including the green belt, Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty and Sites of Special Scientific Interest.


...


2. Big plans but no money... the road schemes going nowhere - Belfast Telegraph


Northern Ireland's road infrastructure could "suffer badly" through tough cuts to the Executive budget, politicians have warned.


Fears were voiced last night after the Transport Minister Danny Kennedy unveiled a new route for an Enniskillen bypass - but admitted there were no funds to build it.


Mr Kennedy said the Department for Regional Development faced "real strain, financially".


Now concerns have been raised about a number of other key road projects being left in limbo - along with road maintenance services being affected - right across the... country.
...


Americas - 5000 - U.S. 5140


Northeast - New York 5140-07


 1. Inaugural economic development meetings set | Politics on the Hudson


The ten regional economic development councils charged by Gov. Andrew Cuomo with coming up with plans to spark their individual economies will meet starting Wednesday, with the Western New York region meeting first at the University at Buffalo.


Each of the 10 councils will put together a five-year strategic plan to compete against each other for a slice of $1 billion in grants, tax breaks, bonds and other funding sources from the state. Each is chaired by Lt. Gov. Robert Duffy and has two co-chairs—one from the business community, and one from higher education—as well as between 20 and 30 other members who will provide input.
...
New York Economic Development Councils







Note: Alignment Strategy - 8 of 9 current RPCs are intact or expanded to include adjacent counties; only five counties are aligned with other multi-county regions than the historic ones. See list from press release below. Good use of existing relationships of regional communities emerging along the geography of historic regional councils. Ed. 


... 10 Regional Economic Development Councils

Capital Region (Albany, Columbia, Greene, Rensselaer, Saratoga, Schenectady, Warren, Washington)
Central New York (Cayuga, Cortland, Madison, Onondaga, Oswego)
Finger Lakes (Genesee, Livingston, Monroe, Ontario, Orleans, Seneca, Wayne, Wyoming, Yates)
Long Island (Nassau, Suffolk)
Mid-Hudson (Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Sullivan, Ulster, Westchester)
Mohawk Valley (Fulton, Herkimer, Montgomery, Oneida, Otsego, Schoharie)
New York City (Bronx, Kings, New York, Queens, Richmond)
North Country (Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Hamilton, Jefferson, Lewis, St. Lawrence,)
Southern Tier (Broome, Chemung, Chenango, Delaware, Schuyler, Steuben, Tioga, Tompkins)
Western New York (Allegany, Cattaraugus, Chautauqua, Erie, Niagara)





 3. Regional Development Councils Cheat Sheet - New York


An administration source forwarded this memo of talking points on the 10 regional economic development councils that are in mid-rollout by Gov. Andrew Cuomo and LG Bob Duffy. (I believe we're at 6 and counting 0).


There's nothing earth-shattering here, but it is interesting to note the timeline being "suggested" by the second floor.


There are 10 "tasks" – starting with implementing a public participation strategy that includes at least two forums in addition to council meetings and ending with submission of the 5-year strategic plan and grant applications by Nov. 14. As has been noted by a number of people now, that's a very ambitious agenda.