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Integrated Community Sustainability Planning. Chris Ling Post-Doctoral Scholar Canada Research Chair in Sustainable Community Development Royal Roads University. Integrated Community Sustainability Plans for Canadian Municipalities.
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Integrated Community Sustainability Planning Chris Ling Post-Doctoral Scholar Canada Research Chair in Sustainable Community Development Royal Roads University
Integrated Community Sustainability Plans for Canadian Municipalities The development of a template to support integrated community sustainability planning
What is the template about? • Engagement • Reconciliation • Dynamics • Guidance • Integration • Tools and Techniques
Principles • Governance: proactive planning rather than reactive planning • Inclusion: early and full engagement of the community • Integration: linking sustainability and planning policy • Scale: moving beyond municipal boundaries and short term policies
The stepwise approach • Engage with the community • Understanding the place • Creating a plan • Implementation
Creating a planframeworks for development and change • What is the community vision? • Timeframe: long-term vision linked to short term cycles and goals • Scale: links to neighbouring jurisdictions, nested systems
Questions to consider • Are municipalities able to deliver integrated planning? • What barriers are there? • Does this template contain the right ideas, priorities and foci?
Two Case Studies • Prince George – medium sized industrial city • Queen Charlotte Village – Small rural community, recently incorporated
Prince George • Planned on starting ICSP process Winter 2007/2008 • Held up by ice jam • Now again on hold due to mill fires • Unlikely to advance significantly until after elections • Strategic and long-term planning: hampered by short-term crises and political concerns.
Positive signs • ICSP will be a major operating document for the City • Comprehensive multi-sectoral and inter-disciplinary approach • Degree to which plan will be overridden by significant and current political concerns
Concerns • What will the time scale for visioning be – currently undefined? • Is developing as a summary document of pre-existing policies - will the necessary cross sectoral linkages be created? • What will be the community engagement process? • Strategic and long-term planning of any sort always hampered by short-term crises and political concerns.
Queen Charlotte Village • Incorporated in 2006 • Need for control • Poor relationship with Regional District • Need for planning to address challenges • First order of business was Official Community Plan (OCP) – land use planning. • Then ICSP – started in spring 2007
QCV: Community engagement • Set up volunteer planning committee using open recruitment of volunteers from village. • Limited use of engagement after that – single survey on walkability. • Fear of town meetings – unproductive , confrontational. • Lack of knowledge of other more constructive and inclusive engagement methods.
QCV: Understanding the place • Poor legacy of data from Regional District • Knowledge based on assumption and local experience, quality mixed and sporadic in topic. • Dependant on natural resources and tourism outside their immediate control and jurisdiction and ultimately knowledge [Provincial Government prevented the inclusions of a wider boundary due to fear of development]
QCV: Governance • Village has 0 bylaws • Enforcement and implementation are going to be a major challenge
QCV: Integration • OCP and ICSP are seen as parallel and the senior operating documents for the village – although the integration between them has yet to be observed • Topics within plans largely dictated by the personal interests of the members of the advisory planning committee and council. These are not holistic (lack of understanding of the place?)
QCV: Scale • Working relationships with adjacent First Nations and other island municipalities and communities poor. • Boundaries very restrictive • Limited influence over Forestry and Tourism • Temporal scale yet to be decided
QCV: Concerns • The ICSP may become focused on personal agenda and concerns • Lack of working relationships with neighbours could reduce effectiveness and scope • Ideas and visions mainly based on developments outside village control
QCV: The Postive • Genuine desire to fully and constructively engage the community (the ‘fully’ is easy, the ‘constructively’ hard) • APC made up of diverse and motivated individuals • Recognition that this stuff is vital for the community
Conclusions for the Template • The template is most useful for smaller communities • It has material of use for most community sizes • Still requires outside assistance for the process, but increases the informed control exerted by even small communities • The general structure is relevant for ICSP planning in reality • Some of the detail may be more or less relevant – may depend on community size and personality
Questions for ICSPs in BC • Scale: Do smaller communities have the impact on and control over sufficient resources to provide a sustainable future? • Capacity: Do communities have the capacity internally to plan for sustainability? • What should/is the relationship between OCP and ICSP and do either of them really have sufficient impact on the development of communities