Regional Community Development News - June 10 & 11, 2011



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." 



Regional Community Development News - June 8 & 9, 2011




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." 

Regional Community Development News - June 7, 2011




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.


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.



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.
...


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.
...



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 & 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: 




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