1 / 17

Environmental Planning

Environmental Planning. Evolution of Planning. Planning as Design (1850-1950) Planning as regulation 1925 – Planning as Applied Science 1940 – Planning as Politics 1965 – Planning as Communication 1975 – Planning as Collaboration 1990 –

aggie
Télécharger la présentation

Environmental Planning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Environmental Planning

  2. Evolution of Planning Planning as Design (1850-1950) Planning as regulation 1925 – Planning as Applied Science 1940 – Planning as Politics 1965 – Planning as Communication 1975 – Planning as Collaboration 1990 – Planning as Integration of Policy, Science, Collaboration, Design 2000 -

  3. Approaches to Management • Reactive • Whack-a-Mole • Proactive • Environment-first. • Taking measures to protect and enhance the environment • Participatory • Early consideration of natural and social factors

  4. Approaches to the Process • Rational-comprehensive • Five (basic) steps of a scientific method • Objectives • Gathering Information • Specifying Alternatives • Analyzing Impacts • Evaluation

  5. Approaches to the Process • Incrementalism • Lindblom’s “Muddling Through” • Rational approach unrealistic and unworkable • Baby Steps

  6. Approaches to the Process • Participatory • Bringing stakeholders into the process • Advocacy • Recognizing that some stakeholders have access to the process only in theory • Mobilization and representation needed

  7. Interdisciplinary Considerations Engineering Economics Politics Participatory Law

  8. Environmental Economics • Cost-benefit • Equity • Risk / Uncertainty • Present Value of Money or Resources • Recognizes that the nominal value of something in the future is less than what it is today • Utility • The usefulness of a thing or an activity. • Individual utility, social utility

  9. Environmental Economics • Value • Existence value • Value of resource merely because it exists among us • Bequest value • Value to future generations • Insurance value • Value to the future of unknown benefits

  10. Environmental Law (common law) • Common Law (case law and custom, not statutes) • Use of Nuisance Doctrine • Use of Public Trust Doctrine • Nuisance • Non-physical trespass • Involving Negative Externalities • Private vs Public

  11. Environmental Law (common law) • Public Trust Doctrine • Ancient doctrine • Sovereign as trustee of commonly held resources • Tidelands • Navigable waterways • Air resources

  12. Environmental Law (property law) • Constitutional Law • Private property (individual rights) • Eminent Domain (public powers) • Police Powers (public control over privately held property)

  13. Role of Planner Technician Facilitator Regulator Negotiator Political advisor Designer/Visionary Advocate

  14. Evaluation • Partial evaluation (see spreadsheet) • Comprehensive evaluation • Criteria • Physical & biological feasibility • Economic efficiency • Distributional equity • Social and cultural acceptability • Administrative feasibility

  15. Evaluation (cont) • Decision rules (for comprehensive eval) • Maximize one criteria • Meet minimum levels of all criteria • Maximize one, meet minimum of all other • Rank criteria and maximize from high to low • Weight each criterion & use sum of weighted factors • Matrix approach (very subjective)

More Related