The Southern United States is facing great challenges involving land
use and growth management. With rapid economic and population growth
have come the challenges of suburbanization and urban sprawl. Rural
communities are searching for answers to these challenges such as planning
and zoning. At the same time, landowners are worried about their ability
to use private property.
Course Objective
To provide state specialists and county agents with awareness of current
issues and tools for addressing educational programming for smart growth
in the rural South. Emphasis will be on developing a foundation for
the navigation of land use issues in communities along with tools to
assist communities in the search for a balance between public and private
interests.
Course Outline
Participants will have a solid foundation in land use issues including:
1) what is "smart growth," 2) the legal basis for land use
planning, 3) multi-modal transportation planning, 4) downtown revitalization
concepts, 5) farmland and open space preservation strategies, and 6)
local government finances and land use.
Agenda
Faculty
Steve Austin, Bluegrass Tomorrow
Jeff Dorfman is an economist and professor at The University
of Georgia, where he has been since 1989. He teaches classes in economic
theory and the economics of the food industry and performs research
on productivity measurement, the economics of growth and sprawl, the
effect of e-commerce on agribusiness, and Bayesian econometrics. He
has been a consultant to a variety of business and foundations including
Sprint, the Turner Foundation, the American Farmland Trust, The Georgia
Conservancy, Pennington Seed, and Fulton County Schools.
Ron Fleming is an assistant professor in the Department of Agricultural
Economics at the University of Kentucky, where his research program
concerns the interaction between production agriculture, environmental
quality and environmental policy. His current research topics include
manure nutrient management, agricultural land use and precision agriculture.
Lori Garkovich, University of Kentucky
Ted Grosshardt, University of Kentucky
Barry Kew is an assistant professor of landscape architecture
at the University of Kentucky. His design focus has been urban program
and site design with built works, community design and planning, and
site construction detail. He has a practice background of built urban
projects throughout the United States and London. He has taught at the
University of Arkansas School of Architecture in both landscape architecture
and architecture studios and co-taught construction sequences while
at Virginia's Graduate School of Architecture. His research areas of
interest are community design in both the urban and rural context and
the environmental impact these communities have on the region.
Tad Long serves as senior advisor for business development with
the NewCities Foundation in Lexington, KY. Previously, he worked as
downtown development specialist for the Kentucky League of Cities. In
2002, he received national certification in Professional Downtown Management
from the National Trust for Historic Preservation in Washington, D.C.,
and has received certification from the Center for Nonprofit Management
at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota.
William (Bill) Park is a professor in the Department of Agricultural
Economics at the University of Tennessee, where he also holds an appointment
as a faculty associate with the Energy, Environment and Resources Center.
In addition to his interest in the role of land trusts in protection
of farmland and other open space land, he has done research in the areas
of nonpoint pollution control policy and rural solid waste management.
The general thrust of his research and teaching centers on examining
the role of market-based or economic-incentive mechanisms in resource
and environmental policy, along with other aspects of institutional
design that can improve the equity and political acceptability of economically
efficient policy measures.
Mitch Renkow is an associate professor and Extension specialist
in the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at North Carolina
State University. Dr. Renkow's research and extension activities focus
on community and rural development, rural-urban land use issues and
local public finance. He also teaches graduate courses in economic development.
Eric Scorsone is an assistant professor and state Extension
specialist in rural economic development at the University of Kentucky.
Scorsone previoulsy served as an economist for the Office of State Planning
and Budget, State of Colorado, and as senior economist for the City
of Aurora, CO. Scorsone's Extension and research work focuses on assisting
rural communities in understanding the impact of local, national and
international economic trends on economic development options. He has
particularly focused on community economic analysis, rural health care,
business retention and expansion, local government finances and land
use issues. He currently teaches a class in international economic development
and has trained and worked on international development projects in
Macedonia, Indonesia and Thailand.