Category: Public Policy

Community-Based Economic Development

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
This week my family enthusiastically celebrates both Canada Day and Independence Day, wishing Canada a happy 145th birthday, and the US a happy 236th. We honor the effective portions of the collective community vision that made these two nations great! The oldest continuously occupied settlements in each country are St. Continue Reading
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Tools for Trickle Up Economics

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
Several years ago I had the fortune of collaborating with architect Teddy Cruz, artist Joyce Cutler-Shaw, and landscape architect Michael Sears on a study of San Diego’s rich history of creating Visionary Planning documents. Our documents included John Nolen’s 1907 and 1926 City Plans, Kevin Lynch and... Continue Reading
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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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YIMSEO: Yes In My Sphere of Emotional Ownership

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
Last year about this time I wrote on the subject of NIMBYs and laid out a challenge to the NIMBY nation. It’s time to stop talking about what you don’t want, I said, and start talking about what you do want. In short, it’s time to develop the criteria under which a Not-In-My-Back-Yarder will say yes. And to that... Continue Reading
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The Passion of Place

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
David Byrne noted in last Sunday's NY Times that people get hooked on cycling because of pleasure, not health, money, or carbon footprint. "Emotional gratification trumps reason." Ben Brown agrees, using Byrne's "Stop Making Sense" as a blog title on the subject of community engagement and how special interest groups... Continue Reading
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Res Civitas non-Gratis: 21st century public realm

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
The rise of 21st century social technology, in combination with the loss of our 20th century economy, has contributed to the closing of many neighborhood civic buildings -- libraries and post offices -- and to the private development that inevitably replaces them. (more…) 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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Infrastructure Deficit Disorder: The doctor is in

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
This past week, Chuck Marohn and Justin Burslie of Strong Towns gave their Curbside Chat in the beloved San Diego neighborhood of Hillcrest. Chuck’s visit was possible through a fun collaboration between Walt Chambers of Great Streets San Diego, Ben Nicholls, Executive Director of the Hillcrest Business Association,... Continue Reading
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Urban Systems: Integration and the value of intersections

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
People have an extraordinary capacity for compartmentalization. Sometimes we call it attention span: the ability to focus on one task at a time. Sometimes we call it meditation: the ability to clear your mind. Sometimes we call it cognitive dissonance: the ability to pursue an action when in direct opposition to values. We... Continue Reading
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Why Generation Y is Causing the Great Migration of the 21st Century

Nathan Norris
Nathan Norris
Just after the close of World War II, the last Great Migration in the United States -- the move from the city to the new suburbs -- began to emerge, fueled by new roads, low congestion, and modest energy costs. It was a new beginning, a chance to shake off the past, and it came complete with the promise of more privacy,... Continue Reading
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