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Roundtable 5 November 7, 2008 Tom Christoffel, AICP, Editor Regional Community Development News A Mid-Atlantic Overview – The Roundtable Process.

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Presentation on theme: "Roundtable 5 November 7, 2008 Tom Christoffel, AICP, Editor Regional Community Development News A Mid-Atlantic Overview – The Roundtable Process."— Presentation transcript:

1 Roundtable 5 November 7, 2008 Tom Christoffel, AICP, Editor Regional Community Development News A Mid-Atlantic Overview – The Roundtable Process

2 States, Major Cities & Connecting Highways Traditional Mid-Atlantic Map

3 New View – States, County & Multi-County Regions

4 Roundtable I – October 21, 2005 - Middletown, Virginia - Northern Shenandoah Valley Northern Shenandoah Valley Regional Commission response to Wash COG 2030 projections –Impacts perceived of continued growth –Strong impact since 9/11 –Region may not want to continue to supply labor and be affordable housing solution –Other outlying regions interested in the conversation –Why were we concerned about the Mid-Atlantic?

5 Area – Roundtable I Begin looking at the Mid-Atlantic as Regions This is where we started

6 Super-Region Label - Issue Areas Multi-State Transportation Corridors - 9/340/I-81/270/I-95/ Hazard mitigation Metro Evacuation Homeland Security Air Quality Water - ground and surface (ICPRB) Vision/Scenario/Alternatives (from a local region process related to those in other regions) Infrastructure Broadband Regional Policy No new bypasses in metro region puts more pressure on existing roads. Freight & Multi-modal/multi-state freight/rail and ports Labor chain - everyone imports labor from outside their region - no surplus of labor even at the fringes

7 Roundtable II – Expanded Area Co-sponsors – NARC, NADO, AMPO Location – Washington, D.C.

8 Roundtable III – Baltimore Participation area grows – NARC, NADO & AMPO Co-sponsor

9 County to County Work- flows: 2000 CTPP Region to Region work flow like WILMAPCO

10 Roundtable 4 – Fredericksburg - November, 2007 Regional and Intergovernmental Planning Division, American Planning Association and State Chapters work with Regional Councils for the Mid-Atlantic Regional Planning Roundtable as a model for the U.S. Regional level recognized as a level or coordination needed for smart growth with the participation of Governor Parris Glendenning. Mid-Atlantic Regional planning analysis prepared with region coding I developed.

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12 % change – provides a different picture.

13 2005 Population density by region.

14 Loss of countryside – viewshed? Region land area less Federal and State Lands – including Urban Areas

15 Overall density in 2005 drops when Urban areas pulled out – with time series we could see better the sprawls as build out occurs.

16 Consider Regional Councils as a Unit of Analytical Geography This could be extended to the U.S. to enable comparative multi-county regional analysis over time on standard regional geography. It can adapt to many levels of multi-jurisdictional planning.

17 I-95 Corridor Shameless Plug: Please consider joining the Regional and Intergovernmental Planning Division, American Planning Association Today we’ll get examples of what regional planning is being done at broader scales.

18 Local Planet Contact Information “Think Local Planet, Act Regionally.” Contact Tom Christoffel, AICP, Editor, Regional Community Development News Regional Intelligence – Regional Communities, LLC Box 1444 Front Royal, Virginia (VA), USA 22630 E-mail: Tom.Christoffel@gmail.comTom.Christoffel@gmail.com Phone: 1- 540-635-8582 Blog: http://regional-communities.blogspot.com/http://regional-communities.blogspot.com/ --


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