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Presentation before APA members at the National APA Conference in Los Angeles scheduled for April 2012.
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1. 2012 National Planning ConferenceCooperative Planning (S445)
2. Introductions Paul Bringhurst, AICP
Salt Lake County Planning & Development Services
Christie Oostema, AICP
Envision Utah
David D. White, AICP
Salt Lake County Community Resources and Development
Dwayne S. Marsh
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
3. Cooperative Planning and Sustainable Communities
Dwayne S. Marsh
Senior Advisor
Office of Sustainable Housing and Communities, HUD
4. What Is a Sustainable Community? 4
5. What Is a Sustainable Community? Balances social, economic, and natural assets to meet the diverse needs of residents now and in the future
Uses resources efficiently
High quality of life attracts residents and businesses
Transportation and housing options within neighborhood and to the region
Engages all residents in shaping the future of their communities
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8. HUDs Sustainable Communities Initiative Sustainable Communities Regional Planning Grant Program
$100 million in FY2010 (45 regions funded)
$70 million in FY2011 (29 regions funded)
$46 million requested in FY2013
Community Challenge Grant Program
$40 million in FY2010 + DOT funding (62 communities funded)
$30 million in FY2011 (27 communities + states funded)
$46 million requested in FY2013
Preferred Sustainability Status
Community Development Block Grants
Choice Neighborhoods
Energy Efficiency and Weatherization efforts (with DOE)
Capacity Building to support local and regional initiatives
Improving data and tool development and dissemination
9. HUD Sustainable CommunitiesPlanning Grantees Supporting work in 48 states and DC Covers all population ranges and community types.
Two statewide efforts in New Hampshire and Rhode Island.
More than 150 million Americans who live in grantee regions and communities.
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10. Other Elements Supported by HUD Sustainability Grants Economic Development as focal point (aligns with USDA and EDAs work)
Access to Housing and Opportunity
Connection to other local goals: disaster planning and recovery, access to local foods, public health, energy efficiency
Performance measures and locally defined outcomes
Core requirement: working partnerships that infuse authentic participation and decisionmaking into the planning process. 10
11. http://www.huduser.org/sustainability/home.html Sustainable Communities Resource Center
12. Cooperative county plan David D. White, AICP
Director
Sustainable Development, Salt Lake County
13. What is the Cooperative County Plan?
14. Forging Local Relationships Identified stakeholders
Door to door to visit municipal planning departments
Engaged the Council of Governments
Involved regional agencies to participate (MPO, UTA, UDOT)
Facilitate regular meetings
Encourage participation of all stakeholders
15. Tools & Communication
16. Outreach
17. Pursuing the Grant
18. The Beginning of a Consortium
19. Ideas & Actions Exchange
21. A Context for ENGAGEMENT
22. The face of America, and Utah, is changing. (Courtesy Dr. Nelson, University of Utah, Department of City and Metropolitan Planning)
23. The American Dream is now plural Dreams (Courtesy Dr. Nelson, University of Utah, Dept of City and Metropolitan Planning)
25% of Americans want walk/bike access to jobs, transit and errands.
50% of Americans want diverse, mixed-use neighborhoods.
75% of Utahns say the ideal community includes a mix of housing and lot sizes, mix of ages/life stages, and transit options.
Fewer than 10% have those options now.
27. Enhanced Mobility and Economic Growth
30.
Transportation Choices
Housing Strategies
Envision Tomorrow +
Innovative Zoning
Financing Strategies
Demonstration Sites
34. Growth in Centers responds to market demand Demographic trends:
First wave of baby boomers will be 65 in 2011
Largest number of millenials reaches 22 in 2012
The Vision puts more new homes and jobs in walkable developments near transit stations. This preserves the character of existing suburban neighborhoods.
35. Transportation Choices
36. Wasatch Front Regional Transportation Plan
38. Who are we planning for?
42. Transportation Effects
Building Energy Consumption
Water Consumption
Air Quality
Return on Investment
Tax Collections
Fiscal Impact
Public Health
Employment Growth
Development Capital
Transportation Safety
Workforce Housing
Public Assets
43. What is Envision Tomorrow? Suite of open source planning tools:
Prototype Builder
Return on Investment (ROI) model
Scenario Builder
Extension for ArcGIS
18 modules or apps under development
44. Scenario Building Process
45. Scenario Building Process
46. Scenario Building Process
47. Real-time Scenario Building and Evaluation
48. Monitor Indicators in Real-time
49. Design and Test Multiple Scenarios Test land use policies
Experiment with new development patterns
50. Scenario Building Process
51. Scenario Indicators Anything we can know about a building, we can know about a scenario
Housing and Jobs: mix and density
Land Consumption: vacant, agricultural, infill
Housing Affordability
Employment Profile: sq ft, jobs, income
Resource Usage: energy and water
Waste Production: water, solid, carbon emissions
Fiscal Impact: local revenue and infrastructure costs
54. Apply concepts in a real world setting
Evaluate different scenarios
Stakeholder and public process
Share lessons learned, approaches
55. Metropolitan Center
Urban Center
Suburban Center
Boulevard Community
Main Street Community
Station Community
56. Salt Lake City Depot District
57. Scenarios Development as an Engagement Process
59. Mid-rise office and R&D
Service focus: restaurants, daycare, etc.
Residential focused near Gateway
Pocket parks
Professional, working age
Higher education
1500 HH | 5400 Jobs
77. What are the strongest ideas?
What makes the most sense for
our region?
our city?
residents?
78. Ideas & Actions Exchange