Ben Brown

We’re OK. Ya’ll, Not So Much: Your guide to understanding national polls

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Last week brought a barrage of polls about Americans’ attitudes. And despite the spins some of the sponsoring organizations offered, the underlying message is that we seem to be holding steady with our conviction that the farther we get from our own little corners of the world, the less confidence we have in the competence... Continue Reading
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This Just In from CNU20: World not yet saved

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
The Congress for the New Urbanism’s annual convergence of giganto ideas and fine-grained pragmatism wrapped Saturday night with a party in a bar. The four days in West Palm Beach, Florida, marked the 20th anniversary of such gatherings, most of which also involved spill-over debates in venues with liquor licenses. As... Continue Reading
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Stop Making Sense: A new strategy for community outreach

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Okay, I’m not confident David Byrne would be all that excited about turning an ironic subtitle from the Talking Heads’ 1984 tune into a community engagement tactic. But stay with me here. Over the last few months, the urban planning universe has been all atwitter (literally) with concern over how “those people,”... Continue Reading
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Cutting Edge, All-Purpose Comp Plan: Free (conditions apply)

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Pssst! You say you need a comprehensive plan? On the quick and on the cheap? If you pay retail, it can cost you tens of thousands, maybe millions, depending upon how many layers of wonk and weasel language you layer in. And it can take years. But I can offer you the best one you’ll ever get for free and for less time... Continue Reading
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Dream Home for the New Era: Compact, connected & mortgage-free?

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
The future is here. And it’s for lease. Even before the Great Recession, real estate market analysts Todd Zimmerman, Laurie Volk and Chris Nelson were patiently explaining the demography-is-destiny argument for an inevitable shift in American housing. It’s all about the numbers. (more…) Continue Reading
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Politics & Public Process: The Half-Life of Anger

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Maybe it’s like the argument that given enough time, a chimp with a keyboard would eventually hammer out Hamlet, but I’m thinking the messy GOP presidential campaign is inching its way towards clarity. Not that the process will produce outcomes extreme partisans will like. Disappointment is often the byproduct of... Continue Reading
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Getting Beyond ‘Mad as Hell’: Here’s hoping for a civic afterlife

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
On December 14, Time magazine announced its 2011 “Person of the Year.” And as it’s occasionally done in the past (Remember the choice of “You” in 2006?), the mag opted for a broad zeitgeist capture as opposed to settling on just one person. This time around it’s The Protester. “Is there a global tipping... Continue Reading
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Collaboration’s Failing so it’s Back to Hypocrisy

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
It’s a sad day when you have to start rooting for liars and hypocrites. That thought occurred to me when I read the news of Congress’s likely axing of the budget for the Sustainable Communities Initiative. That’s the two-year-old program that attempted to pull together goals of three federal agencies -- the Department... Continue Reading
Category Public Policy
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‘Show Me the Money!’ New bumper sticker for the New Normal?

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
There hasn’t been a New Urbanist Council gathering for a while. Which is why a lot of pent-up anxiety -- and hope -- found release in Council sessions in Montgomery, Alabama, October 14-16. These regionally organized Councils are intended to grapple with topics that should be on the table for annual Congress for the... Continue Reading
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After the Flood: Hard choices for communities and citizens

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Virginia Republican Eric Cantor, majority leader in the U.S. House of Representatives, caught a lot of grief for suggesting there should be budget cuts elsewhere to offset the extra federal dollars that FEMA needed to do its job as tornadoes, floods and winds assaulted the eastern U.S. But at least he was being consistent... Continue Reading
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