So how should we measure regional excellence in homeland security? Your suggestions are critical. - Request for input.

Regional Excellence
Measuring Regional Excellence

by Bill Dodge

   
    The U. S. Congress has asked the National Academy or Public Administration (NAPA) to develop quantifiable measures for assessing the effectiveness of grants administered by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).  (Redundancy Elimination and Enhanced Performance for Preparedness Grants Act  --  Public Law No: 111-271)  The measures are to focus on the State Homeland Security Grant Program  and the Urban Area Security Initiative (UASI), the key sources of federal largesse for building the capacity of state and local governments, and their partners, to safeguard citizens against terrorist and other disasters. 

    This task is being overseen by a panel of NAPA fellows, including yours truly.  The Congressional mandate is especially demanding and its success requires your suggestions for measuring regional excellence.

    The U.S. Congress is requesting only 3 to 7 measures and a roadmap for their implementation.  It wants hard evidence that can be printed on a pocket card and makes a convincing case with lay persons in an “elevator speech”. 

    The tough part of this task is dealing with the unknown and unpredictable. 

In some ways, homeland security is like other efforts.  The  efficiency, effectiveness, and even equity of the processes for using FEMA funds can be measured.  How many first providers were trained, how much equipment was purchased, how many exercises were conducted? And at what cost?  How many communities  --  large and small, rich and poor  --   are covered by homeland security plans?  How many partners, across all sectors, are participating in the strategies to safeguard their communities?

    However, the impact of homeland security is more difficult to measure.  Unlike transit systems or health services, no clear path can be easily drawn between expenditures made and results accomplished.  It is difficult to predict the timing or frequency of natural disasters.  Witness the plethora of tornadoes this year, even before the traditional heart of tornado season.  Manmade incidents, especially terrorist attacks, do not even have seasons.  And the nature of these events range from the unpredictable to the totally unexpected
“black swans”.  Witness the simultaneous impact of a massive earthquake and tsunami on the supposedly-protected Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.

    Finally, federal funding is not a given.  There is a strong likelihood that UASI funds will be concentrated in a smaller number of regions, those  allegedly more prone to terrorist  attacks, potentially eliminating funding for over 30 participating regions in the coming year.

    In the first meeting of the NAPA panel, I discovered that I had been especially selected to help measure regional excellence in homeland security.

Regions have emerged as the most local level for addressing disasters and attacks.  Only at the regional level can sufficient first providers be assembled to respond to major disasters and attacks, especially in the first 24 hours.  Individual jurisdictions, even the largest, need to reach out to neighbors.  Witness the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon.  Across the country, many states have mandated the preparation of regional homeland security plans and, even where they haven’t, local governments and their private, nonprofit, and civic partners have voluntarily come together to develop regional plans. 

    State and national governments are critical to providing follow-up recovery assistance, but regions need to develop the capacity to be first providers.  In fact, some regions are negotiating protocols with surrounding regions, creating a network of regions prepared to respond, depending on the magnitude of the event.

    So how should we measure regional excellence in homeland security?  Your suggestions are critical.

    Currently, UASI grant recipients are required to create some form of a regional mechanism for planning and monitoring the use of federal funds as well as designate an official liaison with FEMA.  Should there be minimal expectations for regional governance, such as adopted processes for setting strategic goals and prioritizing the use of funds, tested systems for managing complex activities  --  such as interoperability communications, regional exercises, incident evaluations, and mutual aid protocols with other regions  --  and regular reporting on progress in strengthening homeland security? 

Is there a single measure, even a proxy, which describes the regional governance capacity needed to address disasters and attacks? 

For example, should there be a requirement that local governments and their partners in each region, including state and federal government agencies, design and adopt a regional governance agreement, a Homeland Security Regional Compact, which creates and empowers the regional governance capacity needed to safeguard the region?  Or, given that federal funds might not go on indefinitely, should there be a requirement to institutionalize a minimal regional governance capacity with federal funding --  the “muscle” as David Robertson, Executive Director of the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments, calls it  --  that does not atrophy if federal funding declines.

    Is there a combined measure of regional excellence?  Such as a combination of indicators of readiness  --  adopting a Homeland Security Regional Compact,  #/% of priority actions implemented in regional plans, #/% of first providers trained,  # of regional exercises conducted, #/%  of recommendations from exercise evaluations implemented, #/% of recommendations from incident evaluations implemented, etc.  Maybe, it could be called the Homeland Security Regional Readiness Index, with ratings from 0 to 100 and measured regularly to assess changes over time.

    Or, are there other ways to measure regional excellence?

Your thoughts on potential measures, and suggestions for their implementation, are welcome.  WilliamRDodge@aol.com.  And as soon as possible.  The NAPA panel will next meet in early August to consider candidate measures for its report to the Congress.

Thanks to the National Association of Regional Councils for surveying its members.  If you responded to its survey, you do not have to respond again;  the survey results will be sent to NAPA.
   
    Thanks for helping to make measuring regional excellence in FEMA programs a success.  And a precedent for all of the programs that depend upon achieving regional excellence for their success. 
***

Bill Dodge is looking for a few good regions that are interested in designing regional charters to strengthen their capacity to address tough common challenges.  He is the former Executive Director of the National Association of Regional Councils, author of Regional Excellence, and is writing a new book on regional charters.                

Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - July 7-10, 2011

 1. Webinar July 14: Applying for HUD Regional Planning Grants | Smart Growth America


The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) recently announced an additional $67 million investment in stronger, more sustainable communities that connect housing to jobs while fostering local innovation and building a clean energy economy.


If you plan to apply for this year’s round of HUD Sustainable Communities Regional Planning grants, join us for a webinar on Thursday, July 14, 2011 at 2:00 PM EDT. You will hear tips from past Partnership for Sustainable Communities grant recipients, receive advice from a firm that has written several successful applications, and learn the criteria that the Partnership uses to grade applications.


This event is hosted by Smart Growth America and the American Planning Association.


What: “Applying for HUD Regional Planning Grants”


When: Thursday, July 14, 2011, 2:00 PM EDT


Where: Webinar information will be sent to registrants


 2. Collaboration equals success | Vail Daily


We are not alone facing the regionalism vs. parochialism debate. Metropolitan Denver is currently struggling with the same exact regional vs. parochial issues (albeit on a much larger scale) related to a proposed Gaylord Resort property in Aurora. Downtown Denver supporters are scared it will drive business away, saying “regionalism and intergovernmental cooperation look great on a bumper sticker or in a speech, but actually we're all territorial animals” . Aurora officials are ecstatic about the opportunity ...


Stealing a line from Gov. Hickenlooper, “Wouldn't it be nice if regional collaboration becomes the new competition?”


What does this have to do with doing business in the Vail Valley?


Guests don't see political boundaries. Many locals don't see town boundaries, either. We might live in Eagle and work in Vail. Or vice versa. So at some level we're all in it together. And working together as one destination, as one regional business community, only makes sense.


 3. Valley long-term water needs OK | The News Leader


The Central Valley has plenty of water to meet its needs for the next three decades, a state-ordered study by the area's regional planning body found.


The study projects an 80 percent increase in demand for water in the region by 2040.


But the Central Shenandoah Regional Planning District Commission said there is enough water available in the area to meet its total needs — a piece of good fortune that not every part of Virginia shares.


The challenge, though, will be getting water from parts of the region where there's lots more water than people, to parts where the population is growing fast, the report said.


... first public airing ... Waynesboro's City Council ... will consider a drought ordinance recommended by the study.


That ordinance would allow the city to order restrictions on watering lawns, washing vehicles and filling swimming pools in times of drought.


Concerns about Virginia's long term water needs ... prompted the state to order such studies in 2005.


 4. SANDAG still has time to make meaningful change with its SB 375 plan. | Amanda Eaken's Blog


BREAKING NEWS: 60 years of government structures and polices that subsidize sprawl development have not been dismantled in nine short months by San Diego’s new regional plan! Like so many attention grabbing stories, Ethan Elkind’s blog post proclaiming California’s first Sustainable Communities Strategy (SCS) a “dud” is a poorly informed piece that doesn’t do justice to the movement for sustainable, equitable communities.


Yes, San Diego County’s draft SCS, compiled by its regional agency SANDAG, needs significant improvement. But we never expected SB 375 to work overnight. With some additional changes that can be made to SANDAG’s SCS by October, as well as commitments we would like to see SANDAG make for policy change over the next few years, it is still possible for this first SCS under SB 375 to provide a critical pivot away from the continued paradigm of poorly planned, unaffordable, sprawl development.


...one of SANDAG’s big constraints...40 year sales tax known as TransNet


 5. Palo Alto Online : Palo Alto challenges regional growth projections


A regional plan to promote "sustainable communities" is facing a chorus of opposition from Palo Alto and other cities, many of which would have to build thousands of houses to accommodate the latest vision for the Bay Area's future.


The debate over long-term growth and housing projections highlights the challenges facing regional agencies as they try to meet the goals of Senate Bill 375, a landmark 2008 bill that seeks to reduce green-house gas emissions by promoting development near transportation corridors. The scenario unveiled by the Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) has the goal of reducing per-capita gas emissions by 7 percent by 2020 and by 15 percent by 2035.


... Council members and planning officials have consistently argued that the regional housing projections are highly overstated and that the agencies' methodology is fundamentally flawed.
...


 6. N.J. development sprawl has continued, study says | MyCentralJersey.com


Despite a decades-long attempt to head off exclusionary zoning and development sprawl, New Jersey is still struggling to provide a mix of affordable housing choices near jobs, researchers at Rowan University have found.


Development patterns in Monmouth and Somerset ...In a better economy, the two counties will continue adding to inventories of large-lot homes and commercial properties based on current zoning, leaving little room for cheaper high-density residential development,
“Large-lot subdivisions lock in a residential land-use pattern that excludes many New Jersey residents that can’t afford large single-family homes and often prevents those people from living near their jobs,” ...


Hasse said regional planning efforts are often thwarted by New Jersey’s affinity for home rule, with municipal land-use boards opting for large-lot housing or quick ratable grabs from industrial and highway development. Meanwhile, plans for apartments and townhouses ... get chilly receptions.




 7. Study: Gas drilling will hurt local tourism | Star-Gazette 


Widespread Marcellus Shale drilling in the Southern Tier could substantially damage the long-term growth of the local tourism industry, according to a study released by the Southern Tier Central Regional Planning & Development Board.


Individual gas wells and drilling activity, while disruptive at the local scale, will likely have very little impact on the tourism sector, the study says. But increased traffic, air and noise pollution, industrial accidents, the decreased availability of hotel/motel rooms and seasonal lodging, disruptions to wildlife and hunting grounds, and other aspects associated with a large-scale drilling program "will change the pristine and rural character of the region to a gritty and industrial one."


... funded by a $7,000 Appalachian Commission Grant ... It focuses solely on Chemung, Schuyler and Steuben counties.


Marcia Weber, executive director of Southern Tier Central said the agency's goal was to create a balanced report.
...


Extra: Get ready for the North American gas shock - The Automatic Earth 



In this era of global bubble-blowing we have seen speculative fever flourish in relation to many different asset classes. ... We have been witnessing just such a dynamic playing out in the North American natural gas market in recent years, with a particular focus on the shale gas that is touted as being the key to energy independence. ... Thankfully there have been a few sober voices in the wilderness who were prepared to challenge the received wisdom, ...





 8. A huge step for regionalism: Chagrin Solon Sun editorial


Regionalism is the latest buzzword in Greater Cleveland, as communities try to figure out how to do more with less and cut costs wherever possible to save money and maintain the highest level of services possible. Partnering with neighboring communities to provide the same service at a lower cost is one way area cities are finding they can shave their budgets.


In the Chagrin Valley, regionalism is nothing new — we have been practicing this concept for decades and it works just fine. ...


Why the recent announcement about four local communities entering into a study to look at sharing more services is such a big story is because it takes regionalism to the next step and opens the door for a possible merger of the communities. This will be watched very closely throughout the region and will likely spur other communities to engage in similar talks.
We applaud ... this study and give serious consideration to all aspects of regionalism, including the possibility of a merger.
...


 9. Pioneering Green Legislation in New York a Model for Other States | Progressive States Network


... The new law, the Power NY Act of 2011 (AB 7006-A), establishes the first statewide “on-bill recovery” program — allowing charges for retrofitting a home or business to be included in a utility bill statement and paid over time, with monthly payments calibrated to include energy savings so that the loan doesn’t increase the bill. The passage of this bill is considered a next step to New York’s Green Jobs/Green NY Act, legislation that was enacted in 2009 to retrofit one million homes in five years and consequently create 14,250 full time jobs. The Power NY Act of 2011 comes at a time when most Americans believe that their government’s number one concern should be the creation of jobs.


Thanks to the 2009 law, New York homeowners now have access to convenient and safe loans for energy efficiency retrofits and are given over 15 years to pay back the cost of the retrofit. ...


10. Litchfield Hills council discusses advantages of shared services - and what's already in place - The Register Citizen


In the northwestern corner of Connecticut, following one of the heaviest snowfalls in recent memory, some towns are acting as a whole in assisting one another with costly road maintenance.
...
“Treated salt was our biggest saving this year,” said Torrington Mayor Ryan J. Bingham of one regional grant. “We’re saving $5 per ton, minimum — saving $100,000 for the region.


“That’s huge,” he added.


Regional planning organizations such as the Litchfield Hills Council of Elected Officials (LHCEO) have delved deeply into shared services recently, and through federal and state appropriated grants, some say they are coming out ahead of some tougher economical curves.


LHCEO — consisting of Barkhamsted, Colebrook, Goshen, Hartland, Harwinton, Litchfield, Morris, New Hartford, Norfolk, Torrington and Winchester — shares services from road maintenance with plows and highway signs to emergency personnel and educational outlets.


“We’re already semi-regionalized with schools,” ...


11. North Carolina, South Carolina collaborate on offshore wind energy projects - South Carolina


RALEIGH Representatives from South Carolina as well as North Carolina met in Charlotte in June to discuss opportunities for collaborating to accelerate a development of offshore wind appetite on a south Atlantic seaboard. The meeting is being heralded as a poignant first step towards regional collaboration for offshore wind in a Southeast.


The objective of a two-state meeting was to explore ways to leverage each states unique experience, knowledge, as well as resources to accelerate a deployment of offshore wind appetite in a way that is jointly beneficial to both states. Our states have been singly positioned with strengths as well as advantages that complement each other. said Elizabeth Colbert-Busch of a Clemson University Restoration Institute. Some of a initial opportunities that were discussed included enabling various research institutions to collaborate on future research projects as well as exploring a probability of an offshore wind appetite project along a NC/SC border.
...


12. Businesses net millions moving within Ohio metros - Forbes.com


Relocations that netted small- and medium-sized businesses at least $39 million in property tax breaks to move around within the Cleveland and Cincinnati regions largely sent jobs from areas of poverty into more affluent communities, according to a study released Thursday.


In "Paid to Sprawl: Subsidized Job Flight from Cleveland and Cincinnati," the Washington-based Good Jobs First nonprofit research center reviewed business relocations from 1995 to 2010 in the multi-county regions, finding data on 164 moves that involved an estimated 14,500 workers.


Report authors say the findings show that state officials should consider regional tax-revenue sharing and encourage regional economic-development cooperation to prevent "poaching" of companies between nearby communities. Such moves often transfer job opportunities from cities and areas with high minority populations to less diverse areas and often to sites inaccessible by public transportation, they say.




13. Dakota arts programs line up grants | StarTribune.com


The Metropolitan Regional Arts Council recently awarded more $500,000 in grants for arts activities, including three grants in Dakota County.


A total of 57 arts organizations in the seven-county metro area received some of the $535,419 in grants. They were selected based on their artistic quality and community need.
...
The council is one of 11 regional arts councils in the state. It is funded through an appropriation from the state Legislature and by funds from the Legacy Amendment, as well as a grant from The McKnight Foundation.
...


14. New CivicAction video captures the spirit of city building - a preview to the Greater Toronto Summit 2011 Report - CIVICACTION


What does city building look like in action? Find out in the video unveiled today by CivicAction that captures highlights of its Greater Toronto Summit 2011.


The video, produced by the innovative youth-led Hightop Studios, captures the essence of CivicAction's city building mandate and the energy of CivicAction's 2011 Summit, where more than 1,000 city builders tackled the tough issues and big opportunities facing the Greater Toronto region.


The video features interviews with CivicAction Chair John Tory and CEO Julia Deans and Summit highlights including Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi on embracing diversity, eco-entrepreneur Majora Carter on collaborating to further local economic development, Michael Littlejohn of IBM on building smarter cities, and Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion on the need for regional collaboration.
...
To view the Social Media Release, click here: http://smr.newswire.ca/en/civicaction/new-civicaction-video-captures-the-spirit-of-city-building


15. Reaching Past Borders to Protect the Mediterranean : TreeHugger
...
Graduate students from Israel and the Palestinian Authority, as well as Lebanon, Greece, Malta, Tunisia, Italy, and the United Kingdom, were among the participants in a two-week-long regional marine research project that took place in June off the coast of Italy. Organized by the Israel-based conservation group EcoOcean, the trip sought both to create bridges between the region's next generation of scientists and to research some of the threats to the Mediterranean, which is bordered by 21 different countries with wildly varying environmental laws and level of enforcement.


"Scientific cooperation between nations is imperative to successfully research, monitor, and manage the Mediterranean Sea, which has been invaluable in shaping the economic, technological, and cultural development of the nations surrounding it," said EcoOcean director Daniel Schaeffer, who came up with the idea for the workshop, titled "Environmental Impacts Know No Boundaries."


16. MCCI hails move to boost regional cooperation - Bangaladesh


The Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Dhaka (MCCI) on Saturday welcomed the initiative taken by the present government to enhance regional cooperation.


Reiterating the MCCI's appreciation for the landmark visit of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to Delhi in January 2011, the chamber said that the visit started the process of regional cooperation.


"Due to her sincere effort region cooperation will now be flourished", the President of the MCCI, Major General (retired) Amjad Khan Chowdhury said in a statement issued to the press.


The statement noted: "A number of dignitaries from our neighbouring country are visiting Bangladesh.


...


17. Port Strategy - UK development to rely on "volunteers"


The old Regional Development Agencies are being replaced by 36 voluntary organisations called Local Enterprise Partnerships (LEPs) – that are without any money of their own, having to bid for pots of money to win investment funds.


Doug Morrison, port director of Southampton ABP and chair of one of the new partnerships put it quite bluntly. At a recent event hosted by the Port of Southampton he said “If this LEP doesn't deliver what it needs to, businesses won't be involved in it for very long. We all have too much to do in our day jobs.”


Iain Shepherd chair of Marine South East said, “Everyone is on a limited timescale. If the LEPs can do something, and do it quickly, then we will be able to go forward. If we can't deliver, then they will die because businesses - who are the heart of this - simply won't think it worthwhile continuing to make the effort.”


...


18. What is regional policy? - Inforegio - EU Regional Policy


The purpose of EU regional policy is to reduce the significant economic, social and territorial disparities that still exist between Europe's regions. Leaving these disparities in place would undermine some of the cornerstones of the EU, including its large single market and its currency, the euro.


19. TRID - Transport Research International Documentation


TRID is a newly integrated database that combines the records from TRB's Transportation Research Information Services (TRIS) Database and the OECD's Joint Transport Research Centre’s International Transport Research Documentation (ITRD) Database. TRID provides access to over 900,000 records of transportation research worldwide.


20. SLOWTH: Or why it is so very important (and so very easy) to slow down traffic in cities | World Streets: A New Mobility Agenda


It is the consistent position of this journal that much of what is wrong with our current transportation arrangements in cities could be greatly alleviated if we can find ways just to slow down. It is very powerful — and it’s just not that hard to do. Get comfortable and have a look.


The use of a strange not to say rather ugly word like “slowth” in an attempt to draw attention to the importance of slowing traffic in cities, and why it is such a very good idea, may be counterproductive. Only you, the reader, can make that decision. ... it would be great if you would take pen in hand and add to and improve what follows here on this important subject.
...
Slowth is a new mobility transport planning concept, usually deployed in congested urban environments, where transport is calibrated for lower top speeds, but the result is shorter overall travel times across the entire system. ...






Suzerainty  occurs where a region or people is a tributary to a more powerful entity which controls its foreign affairs while allowing the tributary vassal state some limited domestic autonomy.[1] The dominant entity in the suzerainty relationship, or the more powerful entity itself, is called a suzerain. The term suzerainty was originally used to describe the relationship between the Ottoman Empire and its surrounding regions. It differs from sovereignty in that the tributary has only some (often limited) self-rule. A suzerain can also refer to a feudal lord, to whom vassals must pay tribute. Although it is a concept which has existed in a number of historical empires, it is a concept that is very difficult to describe using 20th- or 21st-century theories of international law, in which sovereignty either exists or does not. While a sovereign nation can agree by treaty to become a protectorate of a stronger power, modern international law



22. Jesse's Cafรฉ Amรฉricain: Pictures From a Non-Farm Payrolls Report - There Is No Such Thing As 'Free Trade'
...



Here's one for those who favor giving tax breaks on offshore funds for multinationals who use accounting gimmicks and loopholes to realize their income in tax haven countries. The program allows corporations like GE to repatriate their stashed cash on the cheap, and pay it out in tax free dividends to wealthy shareholders and bonuses for their executives. 


It is a powerful incentive to send even more employment and economic activity offshore, and for countries to engage in state directed mercantilism.  There are no Porterian 'natural competitive advantages' involved, but there is a strong artificial disincentive to allow domestic consumption and advancement of the mercantilist's own middle class.  There is, at the end of the day, the least common denominator of the health and freedom of the many as the unifying corporate objective, and the principle of one world government.


Trickle down is a canard. Globalization and 'free trade' is a means of beating down all independent public policy and local sovereignty.  There is no purely objective macroeconomics without major policy assumptions as to the public 'good.'  Naturally efficient and rational markets are the economic equivalent of  Piltdown Man.


And there is no such thing as sustainable 'free trade' between independent political entities under fiat currency regimes, without assuming a perfectly rational system run by angels.   The game is rigged and the regulators and politicians are bought, always and everywhere, under this type of artificial construct, with a nationless oligarchy as its ultimate objective.
...



23. The magic button to "Make Everything OK" - just for fun




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

Regional Community Development News - Top Stories - July 4 - 6, 2011

 1. In a Growth-Oriented System, Youngstown, Ohio Struggles to Shrink - Streetsblog Capitol Hill


Youngstown ... population dwindle from 115,000 residents to barely 67,000 over just three decades. ... 


Almost a decade ago, ... Youngstown was planning to shrink — but to shrink smart. 


... now — in 2011 — the city of Youngstown is just getting around to removing its first street. Part of the problem is that the state, regional and national policy framework is still oriented for growth. After all, Youngstown can’t go to the Ohio Department of Transportation and ask for money to tear out roads — yet. ODOT’s money is for building roads, and that fuels a dynamic that threatens what progress has made in Youngstown. 


... Youngstown’s population loss doesn’t stop at its borders; the overall Youngstown-Warren region lost 6 percent of its population in the last decade alone. As yet, however, there is no regional plan for right-sizing. In fact, the region continues with a campaign of widening roads in the ever-more-distant suburbs, while allowing its urban infrastructure to crumble.
...


 2. Pinole Snubs Regional Planning Agency - Pinole, CA Patch


The Pinole City Council voted unanimously Tuesday not to renew its 2011-12 membership in the Association of Bay Area Governments, the agency that oversees regional planning and other issues.


Pinole is the first city to withdraw from the 101-member organization for the new fiscal year, said ABAG assistant executive director Patricia Jones. City officials can attend association meetings but will lose their voting rights.


The association, founded in 1951, provides planning assistance, some funding and lobbying for cities and counties around the nine-county Bay Area. It also sets regional policy guidelines on housing and transportation issues.


In deciding not to pay the $4,030 dues, council members questioned the value of the regional organization for small cities. While council members noted that the association has helped to obtain some funding for the city ... they said they'd like to drop out for a year to test the value of membership.
...


 3. Wellington Webb: Don't let the stock show get away - The Denver Post


... For all of us who grew up with the National Western Stock Show in Denver and those who proudly call Denver home, we must consider all of the arguments before letting a 105-year-old institution leave the Mile High City.


"Regionalism" has become a buzz word, with supporters of the move to Aurora saying it is the best thing for both communities. But what many Denver residents may not remember is that this isn't the first time that Denver almost lost two of its vital assets, which would have changed the face of downtown.


As mayor, I believed strongly that a great city must have three priorities: public safety, a good educational system, and be the cultural and entertainment hub of the region. During my term, there was a real danger that Denver was going to lose the Denver Broncos, Denver Nuggets and Colorado Avalanche ...


... I know that I don't want to look back in a few years and say, "Remember when the Stock Show was in Denver? That's one we let get away."


 4. Ricky Mathews column: Leadership Council announces next steps | al.com


What may be the most ambitious regional collaboration in our recent history is underway. ...


... Coastal Recovery Commission (CRC) of Alabama, then the Coastal Alabama Leadership Council that grew from the CRC's December 2010 report. Now, we're ... about to apply our goals more broadly and grow our membership into an even more effective regional force.


The effort that began as Coastal Alabama's self-examination of vulnerabilities in the wake of the 2010 oil spill has evolved into a set of ambitious goals ... new Leadership Council ... Coastal Alabama Leadership Foundation (CALF), to raise funds and apply for planning and implementation grants. 


... we've deepened the understanding among business, academic, environmental and public health leaders about the critical value of a broad, regional perspective. The regional outlook we thought we had wasn't nearly broad enough or inclusive enough. Now we know.


... Leadership Council enjoys the passionate commitment of key corporate ...


 5. Leadership Triangle Elects Board Members - North Carolina


Leadership Triangle is a non-profit organization established in 1992 to educate and promote regionalism across the separate communities of the Triangle. It does this through regional and leadership development classes, seminars and awards. They strive to build leadership capacity, cooperation, and networking opportunities across the public, private and civic sector, preserving local uniqueness while acting regionally to deal with issues such as traffic congestion, water quality, housing affordability, open space, school funding, economic and social equity. Since 1992 Leadership Triangle has brought together emerging leaders from all corners of the Triangle, building bridges across Wake, Chatham, Durham and Orange communities and across business, government, nonprofit, academic, and grassroots leadership. They connect current and emerging community leaders, honoring differences, yet finding common ground on which to address regional issues and ... www.leadershiptriangle.com.


 6. Let's get new RTA bill done - Wisconsin


The same Republicans who just killed the Dane County Regional Transit Authority say they're willing to allow RTAs in Wisconsin if they're more consistent and accountable.
...
Dane County needs an RTA to encourage regional cooperation on transportation planning to avoid gridlock.


Assembly Speaker Jeff Fitzgerald, R-Horicon, and Rep. Robin Vos, R-Rochester, played key roles during the recent state budget process in nixing the legal status of several RTAs including Dane County's.


Yet they told the State Journal editorial board recently that they'll encourage more study and a compromise bill that can be approved as early as next year or by 2013.


We intend to hold them to that pledge.


Vos seems to want a one-size-fits-all approach to RTAs, which we don't understand. After all, the transportation needs in Dane County are different than in rural areas or, for that matter, southeastern Wisconsin.


Vos also said he wants to make sure property taxpayers are protected.
...


 7. Europe Stifles Drivers in Favor of Mass Transit and Walking - NYTimes.com


While American cities are synchronizing green lights to improve traffic flow and offering apps to help drivers find parking, many European cities are doing the opposite: creating environments openly hostile to cars. The methods vary, but the mission is clear — to make car use expensive and just plain miserable enough to tilt drivers toward more environmentally friendly modes of transportation.


Cities including Vienna to Munich and Copenhagen have closed vast swaths of streets to car traffic. Barcelona and Paris have had car lanes eroded by popular bike-sharing programs. Drivers in London and Stockholm pay hefty congestion charges just for entering the heart of the city. And over the past two years, dozens of German cities have joined a national network of “environmental zones” where only cars with low carbon dioxide emissions may enter.


Likeminded cities welcome new shopping malls and apartment buildings but severely restrict the allowable number of parking spaces. ...


 8. Parliament backs development funding for regions ‘in transition’


Plans to create a new category of regions to benefit from EU cohesion funding in 2014-2020 were supported ...Better targeted and more transparent European structural funds, to help reduce regional disparities while rising to the challenges of the Europe 2020 strategy, were among other demands made in the resolution.


A majority of MEPs voted in favour of creating a category of regions ‘in transition’ which have a “per capita GDP between 75% and 90% of the EU average” (…) “in order to avoid unequal treatment of regions in spite of their similar situations”. The argument for this is that some regions have risen above the 75% threshold that entitles them to receive “convergence” funding, while others that were previously better off have been hit by the crisis or by structural problems that have hampered their development.


The current ‘phasing-out’ and ‘phasing-in’ systems ... replaced by more predictable and balanced structural aid over seven years for around 50 regions


 9. Brussels penalises UK museums, firms and councils £500k for not flying EU flag | Mail Online


Fines for failing to display the EU flag and logos should be scrapped, a government minister said yesterday.


Brussels has imposed financial penalties of almost £500,000 on councils, museums, universities, travel firms and business groups.


Each had breached rules that require display of EU symbols in return for grant money – a system Eric Pickles said was unfair.


‘It defies common sense that the EU can hammer public bodies with huge fines for merely not flying their flag,’ said the communities and local government secretary.


‘This is a prime example of bureaucracy taking over, with organisations being hit for the most minor breaches for over-complicated rules.


‘The end result is British taxpayers’ money being wasted on design guidelines, form-filling and millions of pounds of red tape. These fines should be axed.’


The fines relate to money given to the UK by the European Regional Development Fund since 2000.


...


10. EDITORIAL: Transportation vital for economic development


When looking to the region's future, it's important to look at the big picture -- and the Northwestern Indiana Regional Planning Commission is doing exactly that.


For the first time in NIRPC's 45-year history, the agency has approved a blueprint that marries transportation and economic development.


The 2040 Comprehensive Regional Plan details 30 years of transportation projects along with land-use alternatives and other goals.


The NIRPC plan aims to revitalize the region's urban core -- a valuable aim that dovetails nicely with efforts like that of the Gary and Region Investment Project. GRIP, a major effort sponsored by The Times Media Co. and the Metropolitan Planning Council, in conjunction with groups like the Urban Land Institute, is looking at specific projects that hold promise in improving the quality of life in the region and boosting economic development as well.


NIRPC's plan aims to create livable communities throughout Lake, Porter and LaPorte counties.
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11. Regional Planning to Consider Six Areas of Annexation - KHGI-TV/KWNB-TV/KHGI-CA-Grand Island, Kearney, Hastings, Lincoln - Nebraska


The Regional Planning Commission ... hold six public hearings on whether land adjacent to Grand Island should be annexed into the city.


Specifics on the areas that are being proposed for annexation, as well as other information that will be presented at the meeting tonight, are available on the city's website at www.grand-island.com/annexation.


The six areas being considered for annexation will assume no increase in valuation; however there will be additional taxes paid when the property comes into the city and is subject to city property taxes and as tax shifts occur from Northwest schools to Grand Island public schools as a result of annexation.
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12. UNCC rolls out regional-indicators site - Earth & Energy


UNC Charlotte's Urban Institute has unveiled a new website that tracks how the Charlotte region's doing on the economy, environment, education and other indicators.


The institute launched its Charlotte Regional Indicators Project in 2007. The new version allows its database to be updated with fresh material as soon as it's released from the source.


"It is our hope that the Indicators website will become a sort of 'community commons,' where the data and commentary found here will spark more serious conversations and dialogue across the region – in city council meetings, neighborhood gatherings, corporate and nonprofit board rooms, in classrooms, and around the family dinner table – as we all strive for that elusive shared vision of what the Charlotte region can be," ...


13. Thawing Arctic opens up new shipping routes on the 'roof of the world' | Environment | guardian.co.uk


Cold is the new hot in shipping circles as melting sea ice opens up prospects for trade between China and the west to move across the roof of the world.


An increasing amount of seaborne traffic is beginning to move on the so-called Northern Sea Route which traverses the Siberian coast. There are also hopes of opening up more of the North West Passage above Canada.


The attraction of the voyage is that it is one-third of the distance of more traditional routes through the Suez Canal. This means less carbon-dioxide (CO2) emissions and less fuel. It also means less pirates.
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"Ships operating in or near the Arctic use advanced diesel engines that release black carbon into one of the most sensitive regions for climate change," ...


The study team's key conclusion, based on the modelling of future emissions in the region, is that "short-lived forcing of about 4.5 gigatons of black carbon from Arctic shipping may increase the global warming potential due to ships' carbon dioxide emissions by some 17 to 78%."
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14. Call for regional adaptation strategy


Broader regional collaboration on adaptation and joint meteorological data management and knowledge sharing to plan on water and food security must be achieved for water management in the face of climate change.


Water expert Dr Ainun Nishat, speaking as the chair, said the meeting agreed on greater collaboration on two blocks. One was on climate change and its impacts on regional water resources and another on sharing of knowledge and capacity building.
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The recommendations came at the end of a two-day consultative meeting yesterday between water experts of Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Bhutan.


Ministry of Environment and Forests and International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development ...


The meeting's outcome will be presented at Bhutan Climate Summit 2011 in Thimpu titled “For a Living Himalayas” at the end of this year, said speakers at the meeting.
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15. The Hindu : Opinion / Letters : Telangana issue - Letters


      a. Establishing a State will not eradicate poverty, illiteracy, unemployment and inequality (July 6). An amicable solution to the Telangana issue is the need of the hour. There has to be a mechanism where regionalism will be addressed without affecting national integrity. But the political class, instead of creating an amicable relationship among the regions, seems only to be fuelling implacable hatred.
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      b. The best that the Centre can do is iron out contentious issues through deft bargaining.
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      c. Telangana may be a so-called backward area but there are a number of such regions in India. Does this mean that all of them must be given statehood? Innocent youth spearheading the agitation appear to have become pawns in the hands of the political class. Eliminating corruption, and not a separate state, is the key to development.
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      d. The editorial “End this drift on Telangana” (July 6) was well-intentioned. The need of the hour is political consensus.
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16. RCC to host first meeting on implementation of regional strategy on justice and home affairs in South East Europe - Balkans.com


The first meeting of the Steering Group on Regional Strategy on Justice and Home Affairs, designed to facilitate the Strategy implementation, will open in Sarajevo ... under the auspices of the Regional Cooperation Council (RCC) Secretariat.


... discuss implementation of the South East European (SEE) Regional Strategic Document 2011-2013 on Justice and Home Affairs and its Action Plan, endorsed by the South-East European Cooperation Process (SEECP) ministers of justice and home affairs ...


It will review, update and consolidate regional strategic choices, challenges and priorities; and establish a monitoring and evaluation mechanism to assess the level of regional cooperation within justice and home affairs area.


...joint RCC-European Commission working group meeting on international cooperation in criminal justice and law enforcement cooperation in the fight against trans-border organised crime, within the Multi-Beneficiary Instrument for Pre-accession Assistance (IPA) Programme.




17. The trouble with transparency | TransConflict | Transform, Transcend, Translate - TransConflict Serbia


Two mirror myths obscure useful discussion of trajectories in the Balkans. The first, the notion that the region is dominated by primeval ethnic hatred, has been pretty well dispatched by critics and pundits. ...


The companion myth, unlike its twin, remains not only alive but a cornerstone of an international orthodoxy currently stunting regional development. It goes as follows. In many parts of the Balkans – especially but not exclusively Bosnia – there exists a robust tradition of multi-ethnic cooperation.  ...


... problem with this is that it neglects the bedrock of the region’s material history. Ethnicity certainly is not the determining factor in Balkan relationships, but it and other fault lines of communal relations have a solid basis in durable problems related to topography and associated issues around communication and transportation. It always has been easier to move into and out of the Balkans than among points within the region. Therefore, serial invasions and settlement patterns have tended to leave puddles of people who (according to the archaeological record) quickly lost touch with each other. Under these conditions, developing linguistic, religious, and – most of all – localist distinctions have created social differences and patronage-based patterns of subsistence and communal support that remain fiercely robust even in the face of international efforts to inundate them with civic rhetoric.


This baseline condition means in the Balkans – at all times and places – developments and decisions related to communications and transportation matter more than forming local versions of such political forms as monarchy, autocracy, or democratic constitutionalism. ...


18. IU releases blueprint for regional campuses to collaborate - News and Tribune


A new strategic planning process between Indiana University’s regional campuses means more opportunities for its students.


Sue Giesecke, executive vice chancellor for academic affairs at IU Kokomo, said the new Blueprint for Student Attainment, released in June, provides a way for the regional campus leaders to collaborate to make the campuses stronger as a whole, while maintaining individual identities.
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Now that the planning process is in place, Giesecke said the next year will be spent determining specific action steps to expand student opportunities. The Blueprint for Student Attainment sets priorities of collaboration, engagement and excellence to chart progress for the regional campuses.


19. Why Regional Pitching Can Leverage Big Success - Penny C. Sansevieri


With all the talk of Facebook, Twitter, blogging and other social media, we often forget how we used to promote a book: locally. Many books that hit big success did so by building a regional buzz. But regional seems a lot less sexy these days and often gets overlooked. If media is being pursued, it's often on a national level, bypassing individual markets altogether.


One of the things I've found about regional promotion is that it can often surprise you. When we worked on The Kennedy Detail last November, we had enormous success regionally, while major stations and national markets seemed to lag in interest for this exceptional title. In fact, I believe that part of the reason this book hit the bestseller list was because of the regional buzz.
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More links: http://www.delicious.com/I.see.regions.work