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UF-SNRE Program in Land Use Dynamics

UF-SNRE Program in Land Use Dynamics. A new synthesis of disciplines for the delivery of science for a sustainable future. Rationale. Florida population to double by 2030, and is extremely dynamic with very high turnover Population pressure on resources worldwide

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UF-SNRE Program in Land Use Dynamics

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  1. UF-SNRE Program in Land Use Dynamics A new synthesis of disciplines for the delivery of science for a sustainable future.

  2. Rationale • Florida population to double by 2030, and is extremely dynamic with very high turnover • Population pressure on resources worldwide • Development is increasingly constrained by environment (land, water, stormwater, power, transportation, amenities, existing development…) • Changing significance of agriculture • Economic and market drivers of land value • Disaster mitigation • Public health reflects the structure of the urban and semi-urban environment • Many others…..

  3. Some assertions: • Besides pure research, part of our mission is the creation of the best science for application to emerging problems • Policy makers urgently need new ideas • We are not elected or paid to create policy • Policy makers often do not hear us because we do not offer them politically or economically viable options • To be more effective we need to communicate more effectively across disciplines and offer solutions that include consideration of policy, institutional, and legal constraints

  4. A new synthesisfinding value and efficiency in the overlaps Planning Design Construction Public Health Land Use Ecology Transportation Hydrology Natural Capital (valuation) Municipal Policy Agriculture

  5. Components for discussion • Florida Land Use Institute • History and progress to date. • UF/SNRE Program in Land Use Dynamics • Faculty Working Group in Land Use • Program goals

  6. History of the Florida Institute for Integrative Land Use • August 2005 - Developed collaboration with New College of Florida • December 2005 - Sarasota Board of County Commissioners votes unanimously to award $2 million in cash and donate land for construction. • February 2006 - Met with governor Bush who recommends that we apply for Centers of Excellence funding; President Machen indicates his willingness to make this a high priority for 2007-2008 UF funding requests. • March 2006 - Two foundations in SW Florida express willingness to fund an additional $1.5 to 4 million.

  7. Components of Land Use Institute • Land use ecology(ecologists, landscape architects) • Conservation design and integrative watershed management • Ecosystem restoration • Built environment(planners, architects, contractors) • Community design and regional planning • Transportation ecology • Natural capital & resource valuation(economists, property appraisers) • Land use and real estate economics • Environmental economics • Energy systems and energy distribution(engineers & economists) • Energy analysis & process engineering • Energy supply and distribution economics • Policy, institutional, and legal processes(lawyers, lobbyists) • Environmental and land use law • Innovative environmental policy and governmental regulation

  8. Critique of institute concept • My expertise is critically important and it is not represented. • Too broad (E. T. York). • Why do it in Sarasota? • We already do that and it is not needed. • An institute is not the best model for delivery of this service.

  9. Land institute timeline • Spring - fall 2006 - Acquire donor and foundation support. UFF is fully engaged. • July 2006 - Begin preparation of $10 million proposal for Centers of Excellence. • $16.5 million funding in place by 1 January 2007 • January 2008 - Begin first year of operation.

  10. UF / SNRE land use program • Participating units: • Sociology, Political Science, Zoology, Botany, Wildlife, Forestry, Law, Geology, Geography, Soil and Water, Economics, Food and Resource Economics, EES, Psychology, CEP, UF Water Institute, LUECI, PREC, NRLI, and ….? • Goals: • Integration of UF academics with the Land Institute as a venue for research • Hiring of new lines at the interface of disciplines. • Extramural funding for innovative interdisciplinary research and academic programs

  11. Funding opportunities • Creation of Legislative Budget Request for 2007. • SNRE Mini-grants to capitalize extramural proposals • NSF IGERT • NSF GK-12 • EPA Network for Sustainability • NSF Partnerships for Innovation • NSF Science and Technology Center (with Land Institute - longer term) • Center of Excellence (Institute, or at UF, or both?)

  12. LBR • Academic areas: • Land use ecology • Planning, design, construction, and management of the built environment • Energy systems and energy distribution • Natural resource valuation • Policy, institutional and legal processes • Human demographics and social organization • Emerging technologies and their associated business applications • Support staff: • 4-6 TEAMS staff members • Program and operating recurring dollars

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