July 2008 Archives
Topics:
Greenprinting for Growth
Rick Wood, Trust for Public Land
Metro Birmingham Land Conservation In Action
Brian Rushing, Director of Land Conservation, Freshwater Land Trust
Metro Atlanta Greenways – Past, Present, and Future
Ed McBrayer, Executive Director, PATH Foundation
Preserving the Visual Qualities of Byways & Parkways
Kevin Fry, President, Scenic America
Green Infrastructure: Linking Landscapes and Communities
Edward T. McMahon, Senior Resident Fellow, Urban Land Institute
Registration will be coming your way soon. For more information contact Tom Maxwell, tmaxwell@rpcgb.org
On Thursday, Vandiver, and fourteen other participants learned how to monitor water quality by measuring pH, temperature, total alkalinity, total hardness, dissolved oxygen and turbidity. “I’ve been working with ph tests for years, especially when I was with NRCS. This one was a little more sophisticated than what I’ve been used to, and I enjoyed that. It was more updated,” Vandiver said. Katherine Patton, district administrative coordinator for the Walker County Soil and Water Conservation District, said she will use what she learned in the workshop in outdoor classroom activities sponsored by her office. “My goal is to be very active with the school system,” Patton said.
The six-hour workshop was held at Maddox Middle School and conducted by Patti Hurley of the Alabama Department of Environmental Management. Participants spent some time in the classroom, but they also took at field trip to nearby Town Creek to evaluate water quality and study some of the animals in the creek. Town Creek underwent an extensive revitalization this summer. Paul Kennedy, executive director of the Walker Area Community Foundation, said the Town Creek project provided an ideal setting for environmental workshops and outdoor classrooms.
It also attracted outsiders who came in to work on the project and left praising the support they received from community members. “It’s bringing people in,” Kennedy said. “People have a preconception of what Walker County is. We can’t dispel that unless we get them in the county. Once they get in here once, like those contractors, they want to come back.”
If you would like more information about the Warrior Clean Water Partnership or Alabama Water Watch, check out the websites at www.warriorcwp.com or https://aww.auburn.edu/
Provides links to tourism organizations and Federal agencies, planning information, best practices, funding programs, state tourism offices, data and online publication on rural tourism. Links include a variety of general information, planning resources, best practices, funding and program assistance, publications, and statistics. Great resources.
http://ric.nal.usda.gov/nal_display/index.php?info_center=5&tax_level=2&tax_subject=211&topic_id=1169
In addition to this interview, there are dozens of additional interviews you might enjoy listening to, including Joey Brackner interviewing some of the Gees Bend Quilters, Birmingham, Alabama's Sidewalk Moving Pictures Festival, and much, much more as far back as 2003. Enjoy!
http://arts.state.al.us/actc/1/radioseries.html
The buoys will help canoers and kayakers find the trails that allow boaters to carry their boats around the six Alabama Power dams on the route. They hope to install the buoys in the coming months. In June, Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne designated the trail a National Recreational Trail. The Scenic River trail is billed as the nation's longest one-state river trail.
From the article “Scenic River Trail wins designation” by Thomas Spencer in the July 22 edition of The Birmingham News. For the complete article see: http://www.al.com/birminghamnews/stories/index.ssf?/base/news/1216714551263470.xml&coll=2
“Lodgings tax dollars are up and have been for some time. That is fantastic, especially when you consider that two large hotels are currently closed for renovations.” The future of Eufaula tourism looks bright as several improvements and additions near completion. Quality Inn and Suites is scheduled to open in the next few months, says Kirkland, and the lodge at Lakepoint Resort State Park should re-open by July 2009.
We are in a very unique position in Eufaula as far as tourism,” says Kirkland. “We have a wonderful historic district with two homes that are available to tour year round, as well as the Pilgrimage tour of homes and the Christmas tour of homes. Our self-guided walking and driving tour brochure is very popular and on any given day, you can see visitor’s enjoying the historic district utilizing this tool.”
Eufaula’s abundant wildlife and dedication to protecting its natural resources have nurtured a different kind of tourism known as eco-tourism. “Eco-Tourism is increasingly popular in Eufaula,” says Kirkland. “As the nation’s first Audubon International Certified Sustainable Community, it is good to know that the city is mindful of preserving these natural resources through the Eufaula 2020 plan.”
From the article “Tournaments benefit local economy” by Tiffiny Woo in the July 17 edition of the Eufaula Tribune. For the complete article see: http://www.eufaulatribune.com/euf/news/local/article/tournaments_benefit_local_economy/27777
Statewide Comprehensive Outdoor Recreation Plan (SCORP)
Public meetings will be held in four locations across the state next week:July 28.....Monte Sano State Park (Huntsville).....9:00 AM to 12:00 PM
July 29.....Cheaha State Park (Near Talladega).....9:00 AM to 12:00 PM
July 31.....The Waters (Pike Road).....9:00 AM to 12:00 PM
August 1.....5 Rivers Delta Center (Spanish Fort).....9:00 AM to 12:00 PM
If you have not already done so, please RSVP by noon on Friday, July 25th to scadcplanning@bellsouth.net.
To view the meeting postcard with topic information and directions to the meeting locations, visit www.trails.alabama.gov.
Applications for this program must be submitted by August 1, 2008. The Fund also accepts applications on a rolling basis for the Katrina relief, technical assistance, and travel grants programs. Please go to http://www.spfund.org/.
The preponderance of arts participation in the East South Central region seems to focus on historical sites, art and craft fairs/festivals, and literature. Even so, participation is lower here than most other regions of the U.S. Focus on those areas where participation is already extant, with intensified effort in areas that will appeal to, and match the characteristics of, the local population are most likely to succeed in the Walker County setting. This study was produced for the Walker Area Community Foundation. (www.wacf.org). Download the full study here:
WACFFinal Report.pdf
Need a room? Beachside Resort Hotel in Gulf Shores is offering a room rate of $139 plus tax for the nights of July 22, 23, 24. Call 1-888-410-3812 for information.
CAPZO CERTIFICATION COURSES
Home Study Course: Community Planning in Alabama (Required-YOU MAY REGISTER FOR THE HOMESTUDY AT ANY TIME) $139 per person
The Legal Foundation for Planning and Zoning in Alabama
Wednesday, July 23, 2008: 8:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. (Course No. 08-PZ723A)
$82 per person/$79 per person when 3 or more register together from the same organization
Powers, Duties, & Responsibilities of Planning Commissions and Boards of Adjustment
Wednesday, July 23, 2008: 12:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. (Course No. 08-PZ723B)
$82 per person/$79 per person when 3 or more register together from the same organization
Comprehensive Planning: How to Prepare, Update, and Implement Your Plan
Thursday, July 24, 2008: 8:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. (Course No. 08-PZ724A)
$82 per person/$79 per person when 3 or more register together from the same organization
Basic Zoning & Subdivision Regulations
Thursday, July 24, 2008: 12:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. (Course No. 08-PZ724B)
$82 per person/$79 per person when 3 or more register together from the same organization
$89 for CLE for attorneys
Meeting Management and Dispute Resolution
Friday, July 25, 2008: 8:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. (Course No. 08-PZ725)
$169 per person/$159 per person when 3 or more register together from the same organization
Registration is now underway for "Sign Regulation and Manufactured Housing in Your Community" being offered by UNA's Continuing Studies and Outreach on Friday, October 17, 2008, at Lake Guntersville State Park Resort, 1155 Lodge Dr., Guntersville, AL 35976. This course meets the six-hour requirement for recertification in the CAPZO program.
Items of discussion: Sign Regulations: How to draft, get approved and enforce them.
Manufactured Housing in Your Community: What Do the Federal Regulations Say and How to Draft Appropriate Regulations for your Local Zoning Code.
You can register online at www.una.edu/conted (select Planning and Zoning, Sign Regulation and Manufactured Housing in Your Community, for agenda and registration form), or contact our office at 256-765-4862 to register by phone. Please share this email with others who may be interested.
World's Ten Best Biking Trails:
No 2. Underground Railroad Bicycle Route (U.S.A./Canada)
“Upon crossing into Ohio, the route enters Canada at the Peace Bridge
near Buffalo, New York. In Ontario, the route follows the shores of
Lake Ontario and ends at Owen Sound, a town founded by freedom seekers
in 1857.”
The Underground Railroad Bicycle Route honors the bravery of those who fled bondage and those who provided shelter. This route passes points of interest and historic sites along a 2,028-mile corridor. Beginning in Mobile, Alabama – a busy port for slavery during the pre-civil war era – the route goes north following rivers through Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Kentucky. Waterways, as well as the North Star, were often used by freedom seekers as a guide in their journeys to escape slavery. Upon crossing into Ohio, the route leaves the river to head toward Lake Erie and enters Canada at the Peace Bridge near Buffalo, New York. In Ontario, the route follows the shores of Lake Ontario and ends at Owen Sound, a town founded by freedom seekers in 1857. Owen Sound is located on the southern side of Lake Huron’s Georgian Bay.
http://www.adventurecycling.org/routes/undergroundrailroad.cfm
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2008/05/worlds-top-ten-bike-rides.php
Monday, September 8, 2008
Bruce R. Fraedrich, Ph.D., Vice President of Research
Bartlett Tree Research Laboratories, Mobile Botanical Gardens, 5151 Museum Dr. Mobile, AL 36608
Conference “Weathering Future Storms: Steps to a Storm-Resilient Community Forest”
9 ISA CEUs, Tuesday, September 9, 2008
Holiday Inn Hotel & Conference Center, Bienville Ballroom
Registration: https://ssl.acesag.auburn.edu/conference/ucfstorm2008/
Agenda:
Weathering-Future-Storms.pdf
The purpose of this project is to develop a Corridor Management Plan (CMP) for the Lookout Mountain Parkway that is consistent with the requirements laid out in the Alabama Scenic Byway Program Manual. The CMP is a key step in the Designation Phase of the Scenic Byway and it focuses on “protecting, enhancing and managing the resources identified in the Eligibility Application for both present and future conditions.”The Alabama Scenic Byway Program encourages a “grass roots” approach to the development as well as implementation of the CMP. This approach facilitates the active participation of the community and stakeholders in the Plan, while in the process empowering them to take ownership of the Byway. The consultant, HNTB Corporation,developed the Plan through a participatory process involving the Byway’s Corridor Advocacy Group. The goal of the Lookout Mountain Parkway Scenic Byway Corridor Management Plan is to provide a guide for the preservation and enhancement of this roadway and its intrinsic resources.
Real People, Real Places! Northeast Alabama’s Lookout Mountain Parkway Scenic Byway, named by Reader’s Digest as one of America’s Scenic Drives, serves as a gateway to your imagination. Envision a land where real people bring the past alive, with historic town squares, pioneer villages, confederate ironworks, antique shops and Native American folklore and artifacts. Imagine a land of real places burgeoning with untouched natural beauty, with gorges, rivers, lakes, wildlife and scenic waterfalls.
Picture a land ripe with recreational and cultural opportunities, from boating, fishing, skiing and hiking along miles of pristine trails to museums, opera houses and art galleries. All these dreams and more are here today and await visitors along Alabama’s Lookout Mountain Parkway Scenic Byway. Discover why it feels so right! The Lookout Mountain Parkway Corridor Management Plan: LMP_CMP2008.pdf (4 megs)
Governor Bob Riley praised the work of local communities in conducting this year’s Saturday Walking Tours. “Hometown pride really showed in the time and effort put in across the state,” said Riley. The top attended tours this year took place in Florence, Athens, Fairhope, Guntersville, Tuscumbia, Birmingham, Cullman, Huntsville, Mobile, Scottsboro, and Madison. More than 2,000 participants joined the tours.
“Alabama is the only state in the nation to hold statewide, simultaneous walking tours,” said Brian Jones with the Alabama Tourism Department. “The Saturday Walking Tours program has proven so popular that state tourism has decided to create a year-long marketing campaign based on it. The Year of Small Towns and Downtowns will take place in 2010,” said Jones.
More information on the Saturday Walking Tours program is available at www.alabama.travel. Representatives from cities and towns interested in joining the program next year can contact the Alabama Tourism Department at 1-800-Alabama.
But the evidence that urban sprawl is a problem continues to mount. Among the many considerations:
- More then 6 million acres - an area the size of Maryland - were taken out of agriculture and developed between 1992 and 1997 (American Farmland Trust)
- Within the next 32 years, this country will add 100 million people to its popultion, bringing the total to 400 million. How we use land in that growth will only become more of an issue.
- The argument that people have to live somewhere is easily countered by proof that we are planning spaces poorly. From 1982 to 1997, the US population grew by 17%, but land development grew by 47% (American Farmland Trust). Since 1994, 55% of developed land went into 10 plus acre lots.
The Project for Public Spaces (PPS) has identified ten qualities that contribute to the success of great streets. Streets account for as much as a third of the land in a city, and historically, they served as public spaces for social and economic exchanges. Great streets incorporate the elements described in the list below.
- Attractions & Destinations
- Identity & Image
- Active Edge Uses
- Amenities
- Management
- Seasonal Strategies
- Diverse User Groups
- Traffic, Transit & the Pedestrian
- Blending of Uses and Modes
- Protects Neighborhoods
Each quality is described in detail at the resource link below. PPS offers many more documents on great streets -- and great places -- on its website at www.pps.org/.
Resource: http://www.pps.org/info/newsletter/great_streets/qualities_of_a_great_street
Launched in 2007, the NACo Green Government
Initiative provides comprehensive resources for local governments on
all things green, including energy, air quality, transportation, water
quality, land use, purchasing and recycling. NACo serves as a catalyst
between local governments and the private sector to facilitate green
government best practices, products and policies that result in
financial and environmental savings.
Through the Initiative, NACo will:
- Increase education and outreach on all things green;
- Help educate counties and help them educate the public;
- Promote environmentally-preferable purchasing;
- Facilitate an open dialogue with the private sector;
- Reverse misinformed opinions that green techniques are too costly or of lesser quality; and
- Expand to schools and cities in the second and third years of the program.
Click here to read more about this initiative, or visit the NACo website at the resource link below.
Resource: http://www.naco.org
From the Smart Growth Network.
This SlideShowPro photo gallery requires the Flash Player plugin and a web browser with JavaScript enabled.
"Most Birmingham area families who traditionally vacation at Alabama's beaches won't cancel a trip this summer solely because gasoline cost more than last year," he said. "At $4.07 a gallon, a family traveling from Birmingham would only pay about $45 more and a family from Montgomery only $23 more than last year." Rather than being hurt by gasoline prices, Sentell said Alabama's beaches might actually be attracting more families who traditionally travel to central Florida. "Our beaches have an 85 percent return rate, which is among the highest loyalty rates among the nation's top destinations," Sentell said. http://www.al.com/business/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/business/1214554574111250.xml&coll=2
From the article “Alabama tourism officials marketing state as a cost-efficient vacation destination: Officials capitalize on rising gasoline costs” by Roy L. Williams
· What are retailers with a centralized plan going to do to withstand the economic conditions and gas prices?
· Can we expect to see smaller stores pop up closer to where people live?
· Will we see more neighborhood markets and fewer super centers?
· What can we do to entice retailers to blaze new trails into our more rural trade areas while we are in an economic downturn – without giving away the bank?
· The future of Brick and Mortar vs. Internet Retailing
· Importance of retail development in a community’s economic well being
· Strategies for retail economic development in Alabama
The cost for the day’s activities will be $75 for the Retail Awards Luncheon and the panel discussion. For more information, contact: Cassandra Walker walkerc@uab.edu 205.934.8840
Chilton County
July 17, 2008, Clanton City Hall, Clanton, Alabama, 9-11am
Blount County
July 22, 2008, Frank Green Building, Oneonta, Alabama, 9-11am
St. Clair County
July 22, 2008, Administration Building, Commission Chambers, Ashville, Alabama,
1-3pm
Walker County
July 24, 2008, Community Health Services Building, Jasper, Alabama, 9-11am
Your Town Alabama is in the news again. (Anytime you notice Your Town in the news, please let us know at info@yourtownalabama.org.)
Your Town Alabama has been working with small towns for 10 years. The West Alabama – East Mississippi (WAEM) Regional Initiative is seeking ways to help its small towns be more competitive. As a result, WAEM and Your Town are partnering to bring a new program to the WAEM Region. It is called “WAEM Town.”
“WAEM Town will greatly resemble Your Town,” explained Bill Crawford, director of the WAEM Regional Initiative. “But while it embodies the best of Your Town, WAEM Town will also add steps from Mississippi’s Main Street Program and from recent initiatives by the Appalachian Regional Commission.”http://waem.tmi.ms/yourtown.html