Regional Community Development News - June 21-23, 2011


 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 Community Development News - June 19-20, 2011


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 Cable calling 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 communautรฉs 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 Community Development News - June 16-18, 2011


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).
...






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