Contacts - Western Lands and Communities

 

Jim Holway
Program Director

602-393-4310 x 313

Susan Culp
Project Manager

602-393-4310 x 310

 

Upcoming Workshop

Workshop-CBI-and-WLC-2012 APA-Conference-Web-Notice FinalResponding to Change and Uncertainty: Innovative Tools for Planners and Decision Makers - a free day and a half workshop March 6-7, 2012 in Phoenix, Arizona.

 

Find out more and register today.

 

Resources - Western Lands and Communities

Building Trust E-News Alerts

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Publications - Western Lands and Communities

Planning for Climate Change in the West, 2010, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy

State Trust Lands in the West, 2006, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy

Building a Framework for Sustainable Development, 2011, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy

Watering the Sun Corridor, 2011, Morrison Institute for Public Policy

Dr. Jim Holway Biographical Statement
Growth Model Fact Sheet
“Urbanization Edges Up to Protected Public Lands”
“Year-End Victory for Montana State Trust Lands”

Presentations - Western Lands and Communities

Reshaping Development Patterns, 2011, Rocky Mountian Land Use Institute Conference

State Trust Lands in Arizona CDA PPT 3-25-09 V2


State Lands Pinal 09

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Kathy Borgen champions causes that help protect, care for, and nurture a love of our planet. She is also passionate about the work of the Institute

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Home Where We Work Westwide - Research & Tools Lincoln Institute Joint Venture

Western Lands and Communities

A Joint Venture of the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and Sonoran Institute

Western Lands and Communities (WLC) focuses on shaping growth, sustaining cities, protecting resources, and empowering communities in the Intermountain West. It addresses these challenges through applied research, tool development, exploring policy linkages between land and related natural resources, and engagement of policy makers. We regularly rely on demonstration projects to apply and test innovative approaches and focus on dissemination of the lessons learned through working papers, Policy Focus Reports, presentations, and engagement with policy and decision makers. The geographic scope of WLC is the Intermountain West, from the Sun Corridor megaregion in Arizona to Montana's Crown of the Continent. Partners since 2003, the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and the Sonoran Institute established the joint venture to further their complimentary and overlapping missions to shape the future of the Intermountain West by informing land use and related natural resources policy.

Western Lands and Communities efforts are organized into four major integrated areas:

  • Urban Form and Smart Growth Research
  • Visioning and Planning Tools
  • State Trust Land Management
  • Western Land, Water, Energy and Climate Policy Linkages

Urban Form and Smart Growth Research: Reshaping Development Patterns

Rapid population growth and development activity, as well as the recent economic downturn, have impacted quality of life, fiscal health of cities and towns, regional economies, sustainability, and ecosystem health throughout the Intermountain West. This program area focuses on research related to smart growth planning and policies that will lead to more sustainable urban form patterns in the West. Western Lands and Communities will continue the multi-year Reshaping Development Patterns effort initiated during FY10 to identify and address key land ownership, market, planning and fiscal consequences of excess development entitlements and best practices to address the challenges these raise for local communities, landowners, the real estate industry, and urban growth patterns. The goals of this project are:

  • Fully understand the nature and extent of these entitlements;
  • Partner with local communities on several place based demonstration projects;
  • Examine potential future markets; and
  • Document the best practices and lessons learned by communities throughout the West.

WLC will produce a Policy Focus Report from this work in 2013.

Visioning and PlanningTools

Planners and community leaders need affordable and accessible tools and resources that highlight best practices to envision and manage the future of their communities. This program area works to develop tools and applications that will promote smart growth and improve sustainability and urban form in western communities. Western Lands and Communities will continue the development and application of planning tools for conservation priority setting, creating growth projections, and community visioning and scenario development. We are also facilitating a network of tool developers, users, and funders that is creating open source products to expand access to these important tools. WLC will produce a Policy Focus Report on Open Source Tools in 2012. Additionally, our Sustainable Communities Online Toolkit information exchange (SCOTie) went live on July 1, 2011. We are actively incorporating new partners and content into this online searchable database of best practices. Visit the site at www.scotie.org or www.successfulcommunities.org.

State Trust Land Management

State trust land management, the principal focus area of Western Lands and Communities first four years, remains significant due to the extensive state trust land holdings and their importance for sustainable resource use and urban form patterns throughout the Intermountain West. In addition, many of the lessons learned from demonstration projects and research efforts conducted on state trust land are more generally applicable to other public and private lands throughout the intermountain west. Early WLC research resulted in a seminal Policy Focus Report, State Trust Lands in the West: Fiduciary Duty in a Changing Landscape. Current areas of focus include research on ecosystem services markets and frameworks, economic analysis of the "contributory value" of preserved lands to adjacent lands, and solar energy development on public lands. This work will be disseminated through ongoing working papers and a forthcoming Policy Focus Report in 2014 on Conservation Strategies for State Trust Lands. WLC also works with the Western State Land Commissioners Association to advance innovative practices regarding the planning, disposition, and management of state trust lands throughout the West.

Western Land, Water, Energy and Climate Policy Linkages

Land use and policy, water resources, and energy production are highly interrelated and critical to a sustainable economy for the Intermountain West. The highly variable climate of the West and potential for impacts due to global climate change greatly impact our land and natural resources, and highlight the need to address the interaction between land policy and natural resources. Water resources and electric utility infrastructure are two key issues that necessitate megaregional level coordination and likely provide the best way to introduce climate change challenges into the dialogue in western states. Our 2010 Policy Focus Report, Planning for Climate Change in the West, highlighted the role of local governments in addressing climate change challenges and implementing effective policies. Our current work is focused on developing best practices for integrating climate change adaptation and mitigation into land, water, and energy policy; and advancing development of renewable energy; and engaging a broader civic dialogue on water policy.

Responding to Uncertainty Workshop - Presenters

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Workshop Presenters

Stephen Aldrich - Stephen Aldrich, President, bio-era, is the founder of bio-era, and a business and strategy analyst with extensive experience in scenario planning applications to pandemic preparedness. Stephen is an authority on applying scenario planning to business decision-making. He has worked closely with many companies and institutions on their pandemic plans and is the author or co-author of numerous bio-era reports on emerging infectious disease and pandemic impacts, including “Thinking Ahead: The Business Significance of Avian Influenza”, and “Thinking Ahead: Using Scenarios in Pandemic Preparedness”.

Jim Holway, Ph.D, FAICP - Jim Holway is Director of Western Lands and Communities, a joint venture of the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy and Sonoran Institute. This program supports research, tool development, demonstration projects, education, and publications focused on managing growth, sustaining regions, protecting resources, and empowering communities throughout the intermountain west. Additionally, Jim serves on the Board of the Central Arizona Water Conservation District to which he was elected in November 2010. Prior to joining the Sonoran Institute in 2009, Jim directed the Sustainability Partnership in the Global Institute of Sustainability and taught as a Professor of Practice in the School of Sustainability and in the School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment at Arizona State University. He also served as the ASU coordinator for the Arizona Water Institute. Previously, as Assistant Director of the Arizona Department of Water Resources, Jim’s responsibilities included overseeing the state’s Active Management Area, conservation, assured water supply, recharge, well permitting, and groundwater and surface water rights programs. Jim’s principal areas of research, teaching, and practice include western water policy, linkages between water and growth, and land use management. Jim earned his bachelor’s degree in political science from Cornell University and both a master’s and Ph.D. in regional planning from the University of North Carolina.

Joe Marlow, Ph.D - Joe Marlow is the Sonoran Institute’s land and resource economist. He serves as a spokesperson on conservation and land use economics in the West; conducts research and economic analyses; and prepares reports on research results and to explain economic trends and concepts. Joe was a faculty member at a tribal college for five years, teaching economics, mathematics, statistics, and earth science. For 11 years, he was a principal in a resource economics consulting firm involved in quantitative mineral resource assessment, geographic information system design and programming, and satellite image analysis. Other experience involved extensive project management and fieldwork in mineral, oil and gas exploration, as well as geotechnical and civil engineering. Joe holds a doctorate in mineral economics with a minor in remote sensing, a master’s in mineral economics with a concentration in finance, and a bachelor’s in earth science.

Ralph Marra - Ralph Marra recently retired from the City of Tucson Water Department where he served for much of his 25 years as the Utility’s Chief Hydrologist and Water-Resources Administrator. During his tenure, he oversaw and facilitated the Utility’s transition from groundwater mining to conjunctive water-resources management. Ralph also oversaw strategic resource planning, recharge facility development, permit acquisition & regulatory reporting, aquifer monitoring, and inter-agency coordination.

He is now the Senior Principal at SouthWest Water Resources Consulting and his current professional interest is in developing integrative water-resources plans, facilitating scenario planning to address resource uncertainty, developing multi-benefit master plans for artificial recharge projects, and promoting climate-change adaptive planning to ensure future supply reliability.

Elizabeth Fierman - Elizabeth Fierman is an Associate at the Consensus Building Institute, where she assists with facilitations and mediations, develops and delivers trainings on international and domestic environmental and public policy topics, and conducts research. Recent projects include organizing and preparing materials for a workshop on climate change adaptation in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta; managing and delivering an online negotiation training course for the World Health Organization; and co-facilitating a public engagement process around the cleanup of the Housatonic River. Elizabeth holds a B.A. from Haverford College and an M.A. in Law and Diplomacy from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.


 

 

                        

 

 

 

Registration for Responding to Uncertainty Workshop

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Join us March 6-7, 2012 for a one and half day interactive course on
scenario planning and related techniques sponsored by:
Sonoran Institute, Consensus Building Institute, and Lincoln Institute of Land Policy.

 




 

 

                        

 

 

   

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