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Highlights from the Conference
Starting Point: Report from the Louisiana Recovery and Rebuilding Conference
Highlights from Saturday, November 12
Highlights from Friday, November 11
Highlights from Thursday, November 10
Highlights from Wednesday, November 9, 2005
We Welcome Your Comments
Conference Speakers/Presentations
New Orleans
November 10–12 A collaborative
visioning conference for the long-range recovery and rebuilding of
Louisiana after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
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Highlights from Saturday, November 12
Day Three Report
Presentation
Materials from Day Two (in PDF format):
From the moment he opened the Louisiana Recovery and Rebuilding
Conference on November 10 in New Orleans, AIA Executive Vice
President/CEO Norman L. Koonce, FAIA, told the 600 participants
that the results of our work over the next three days cannot
and will not be dictated by outside experts. Success for this
conference demands that it must be a collaborative, inclusive, and
open process driven by local citizens and leaders of this state.
The visions we seek will be yours.
Three days
later, the citizens of Louisiana and the Gulf Region responded to
the challenge, ascertaining foremost that theyand their
political leadersmust speak with one voice to
create a single, comprehensive, and compelling regional plan with
participation from the full community, that offers leadership for
recovery and rebuilding.
Unique process encourages citizen
participation
On October 17, after she named her Louisiana Recovery Authority
team, Governor Kathleen Blanco prescribed this conference as one of
the top action items of its agenda. The AIA and its
cosponsorsthe American Planning Association, National Trust
for Historic Preservation, and the American Society of Civil
Engineershad three weeks to assemble the conference, and
priority number one was to engage the participants. The first
thing we did was invite representatives from every city and
neighborhood group we could locate, said David Downey, Assoc.
AIA, managing director of the Institutes Center for
Communities by Design. We asked people from civic
associations, school groups, government groups, church groups, and
business associations to participate.
To assure that
those voices could be heard, America Speaks, the nonpartisan,
nonprofit organization that conducts citizen engagement projects,
facilitated twice-daily small-group discussions and guided
participants in an electronic instant polling process
that allowed each participants voice to be heard. America
Speaks, which also facilitated New York Citys 2002
Listening to the City 4,300-citizen-strong public
debate about the rebuilding of the World Trade Center site, used
the process to conduct on-site tabulation and analysis of how
participants want the rebuilding to proceed.
In between the small-group breakouts, participants heard from
speakers who included technical experts from the region and around
the globe, as well as Xavier University President Dr. Norman
Francis, Gov. Blanco, Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu, Senator Mary
Landrieu, and Congressional representatives Charles
Melançon, Bill Jefferson, and Bobby Jindall. Norman
Robinson, the anchor of New Orleans WDSU, Channel 6, and a
native of New Orleans who brought eyewitness reports to his fellow
citizens during the hurricanes, served as emcee for the conference
and helped weave together the input from the experts and the
feedback from the participants.
What the
people want
Over the three days of the conference, a set of core themes began
to emerge, painting a vivid picture of rebuilding concepts. The
core themes include:
1. Speak with one voice . . . create a single,
comprehensive, and compelling regional plan, with participation by
the full community, that offers leadership for recovery and
rebuilding.
2. Create infrastructure that supports recovery by restoring
confidence, enhancing quality of life, and withstanding future
disasters:
- Category 5 protectionlevees, restored wetlands, and an
independent authority to insure ongoing maintenance and
funding
- Improved services, such as communications, energy, and other
key elements
- Sustainable, equitable, and transparent approaches to
rebuilding and future development
3. Promote economic growth that benefits everyone:
A diverse
economy encompassing traditional and emerging industries, supported
by both respect for the regions historic character and
innovative funding strategies (incentives and public/private
partnerships)
- A foundation for growth, including quality education and job
training, housing, transportation, and other key elements available
regardless of income Equity that includes living wages and career
tracks, benefits everyone in the region, and provides long-term
economic opportunity
4. Provide public services that enhance quality of life for
everyone:
- High-quality education at every level as a center for
rebuilding communities
- Regional transit, coordinated with opportunities for community
development
- Great parks and other public spaces that serve communities and
support flood control
5. Pursue policies that promote a healthy environment and
healthy people:
Deciding where
to rebuild, investing in protecting these areas, and dedicating
remaining areas to natural uses
- Sustainable approaches to every facet of
rebuildingenergy, transit, land use, building design, and
other elements
- Walkable communities that promote healthy lifestyles through
their planning and design
6. Plan and design communities that advance livability:
- Preserving the best of the past as the core for rebuilding
while anticipating future needs
- Mixed-income, mixed-use neighborhoods that foster diversity and
social equity
- Smart growth at an urban, suburban, and rural scale that
balances recovery and sustainability.
On the final
day of the conference, participants grouped themselves into
parishes to explore answers to two specific questions: What
is special and unique to our parish? and What changes
would we like to see in our parish? Each group also generated
a list of parish-specific principles for rebuilding. The groups, as
indicated on the map below, were: Orleans Parish (1) Jefferson
Parish (2), St. Tammany Parish (3), Baton Rouge/ Florida and
Central/ Northern Parishes (7 & 10), Plaquemines/St. Bernard
Parishes (4 & 5), South Coast Parishes (6, 8 & 9), and
Other. The feedback is rich and varied, with calls for strong
historic preservation efforts, comprehensive transit networks,
neighborhood health-care clinics, a wildlife preserve, co-located
permitting offices, schools raised to the top quartile by
2015, and many other visioning plans. While the feedback is
being compiled into a final set of recommendations, the complete
list of preliminary findings from the parishes is available on the
LRRC Web site.
What do we do now?
Koonce, and W. Paul Farmer, executive director and CEO of the
American Planning Association, wrapped up the program on Saturday
evening with a list of suggested actions, assembled by the
sponsoring groups, to further the good work of the conference.
Specifically, on the basis of what you have said,
Koonce remarked, we suggest that you:
Call for a
single entity to lead the states recovery efforts
- Work to make sure that all actionsfederal, state and
localembrace and embody the principles you have identified as
important to the rebuilding effort
- Ask the Louisiana Recovery Authority and local planning efforts
to make sure that they engage professionals who will implement the
principles of this conference, and that they are applied statewide,
regionally, and in each community.
As a group, the collaborating organizations say that they
will:
- Present principles to the Louisiana Recovery Authority, the
Bring Back New Orleans Commission, and all other local
entities
- Support the efforts of Louisianas congressional
delegation, the state of Louisiana, and local officials, to develop
a unified, consolidated federal legislative action plan that will
secure immediate commitments from the federal government
Maintain a
strong public information effort
- Meet with Don Powell, the presidents coordinator on
rebuilding efforts
- Urge the LRA to make a commitment to ensure that all parish
disaster mitigation plans are completed by August 29, 2006
- Seek legislation to move principles forward so that recovery
and rebuilding are facilitated, consistent with those
principles
- Make video proceedings available
- Publish principles (Web and print) and see that they are widely
distributed
- By the end of the next week make presentations from this
conference available on the Web
- Translate principles into practical actions that can be
implemented.
Finally,
We can:
- Take our principles and present them with the same passion and
commitment to everyone
Secure
approval of a unified state building code.
We will:
- Bring others into this conversation
- Demand congressional action
- Demand/call for one voice on rebuilding, a voice that follows
the principles.
- AIA Louisiana President Trula Remson, AIA, closed the
conference with thanks to participants and a pledge from the
chapter to keep the conferences momentum moving efforts
forward.
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