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Implementing Sustainable Development In Your Community - Charlotte, NC
Date: January 21 - 22, 2009
Time: 8:00 AM
Venue: Charlotte-Mecklenburg
Location: Government Center, Room 267, 600 East Fourth Street, Charlotte, NC
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A Workshop for Local Public Officials

In partnership with ULI Charlotte
Serving the Charlotte, Piedmont, and Western regions of North Carolina

Sustainable development policies and practices are becoming a high priority for local governments. Conserving energy, reducing carbon emissions, protecting natural resources, and balancing economic and social opportunities, while meeting constituents’ needs, require vision, leadership, and collaboration. This new two-day workshop will provide valuable tools and strategies for local public officials eager to learn how they can leverage more sustainable development practices in their communities.

The workshop includes definitions, measurements, case studies, and group exercises that focus on best practices and the most effective role that public officials can play in creating more sustainable communities while enhancing constituents’ quality of life.

What You Will Learn
  • New trends in public sector sustainability programs and policies
  • Emerging tools and best practices for sustainable development
  • Lessons from successful programs for setting goals and measuring what matters
  • How private sector sustainable development can create public economic benefits
  • Models for public/private leadership and collaboration
  • Barriers to sustainable development practices and ways to overcome them


Who Should Attend
Elected and appointed officials, agency directors and staff, water and school district trustees, and other policy makers; and planners, developers, designers, appraisers, real estate professionals, finance specialists, and other professionals interested in seeking a deeper understanding of the complex interplay of land use decisions, economic viability, and sustainability.

ULI Public Officials Workshops are offered in metropolitan regions around the country. Course content is tailored to the sustainability context of each region. Workshop format is designed to encourage regionwide networking and collaboration.

Day One may be of special interest to elected officials.

Keynote Speaker

Ed McMahon
Senior Resident Fellow, ULI/Charles Fraser Chair on Sustainable Development
Urban Land Institute
Washington, D.C.



Principal Instructor

Charles A. Long
Principal
Charles A. Long Properties LLC
Berkeley, California

Charles A. Long is a developer specializing in mixed-use infill projects, including acquisition, entitlement, consulting, and development. He has 31 years of diverse experience in local government and development, with an emphasis on economic development, finance, and public/private partnerships.

Since 1996, Long has worked as a consultant to public and private clients on development and management. He has held interim positions for several cities in finance, redevelopment, and management, including, most recently, interim town manager of Mammoth Lakes, California.

Long is a full member of the Urban Land Institute and serves as faculty for ULI Professional Development Workshops on Real Estate Development Process and Decision Making for Developers.

Long has a BA in economics from Brown University and a master of public policy degree from the University of California at Berkeley. He served in the U.S. Army as an infantry platoon sergeant.



Local Experts
Developers and Public Officials from the region will provide case-study examples of sustainable development in the region.

About the ULI Daniel Rose Center for Public Leadership in Land Use

In May 2008, ULI announced a gift from New York developer Daniel Rose of $5 million over four years to underwrite the establishment of the ULI Daniel Rose Center for Public Leadership in Land Use. The ULI/Daniel Rose Center will initially undertake three programs:

  • The Daniel Rose Fellowship Program: to provide city leaders with the information, insights, peer-to-peer learning, best practices, and experience they need to successfully build and sustain their cities;
  • Professional development workshops for public officials; and
  • Public/private forums on key land use issues.

An Advisory Board, composed of top business and political leaders and policy experts from across the country, including representatives from ULI’s leadership, provides strategic direction and ongoing program guidance to the Center.

The mission of the ULI Daniel Rose Center for Public Leadership in Land Use is to encourage and support excellence in land use decision making. By providing public officials with access to information, best practices, peer networks, and other resources, the Rose Center seeks to foster creative, efficient, practical, and sustainable land use policies.

Stay in Touch: The ULI Daniel Rose Center is pleased to offer all workshop participants the opportunity to stay in touch with each other and remain current on best practices and emerging models of sustainable development policies through an online resource center on sustainable development resources coming early in 2009.



About ULI–the Urban Land Institute

ULI–the Urban Land Institute is an independent, nonprofit, education and research organization that is supported by its members. Its mission is to provide leadership in the responsible use of land and in creating and sustaining thriving communities worldwide.

ULI sponsors educational programs and forums to encourage an open international exchange of ideas and sharing of experience; initiates research that anticipates emerging land use trends and issues and proposes creative solutions based on that research; provides advisory services; and publishes a wide variety of materials to disseminate information on land use and development.

Established in 1936, the Institute today has more than 40,000 members and associates worldwide representing the entire spectrum of the land use and development disciplines.



Register for this event

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Registration
You can register four ways:

1. Online, visit www.uli.org/register

2. Call 800-321-5011 or 410-626-7500 with credit card information.

3. Fax your form with credit card information to ULI at 202-624-7147.

4. Mail completed registration forms to: Workshop Registration, ULI-the Urban Land Institute, 1025 Thomas Jefferson Street, N.W., Suite 500 West, Washington, D.C. 20007-5201.
Cancellation and Refund Policy

Registrants who send a written cancellation that is received at ULI’s Meetings and Events Department (Fax to 202-624-7147) at least five business days before the workshop will receive a refund, subject to an administrative fee of $25. You may transfer your registration, without penalty, to another member of your organization.

Registration Fee

Day One Only: $75
This option may be of special interest to elected officials.

Day One and Day Two: $100

Continuing Education Credits: AICP CM Pending

Membership in ULI is held by individuals, not companies. Membership benefits, therefore, cannot be transferred to other individuals within the same company or public agency. For membership information, visit www.uli.org/joinuli or call ULI Customer Service at 800.321.5011.

Questions? Special needs?

For additional information, contact ULI Customer Service at 800-321-5011 or call 714-628-2856.

Schedule and Program

Day One - Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Registration
7:30– 8:00 a.m.

Program
8:00 a.m.– 4:30 p.m.

What Is Sustainability at the Community Level?

  • The context for sustainable development
  • Commonly used definitions and how they are evolving
  • The driving factors and imperatives for sustainability at the community level
  • The two-pronged role of the public sector
  • The benefits and challenges of certification systems
  • What really matters in sustainability at the community level
  • What ULI has learned on the subject
  • Key barriers for communities that want to move toward sustainability

Building a Business Case

  • Dealing with climate change, including energy, and other resource limits
  • Gaining a competitive advantage in attracting jobs, development, and residents
  • Sustainability and rising infrastructure costs
  • Achieving fiscal viability in providing services

Policy Tools Overview

  • An overview of resource-based tools and measures
  • Energy, transportation, water, materials, waste, and carbon
  • An overview of quality-of-life tools and measures
  • Place making, streets, open space, built environment, “third” places

Leadership and Collaboration

  • Sustainable development starts with community consensus
  • Sustainable development requires connecting systems to planning
  • Most systems serving development require regional action
  • Sustainable development is achieved through public/private partnerships

Day Two - Thursday, January 22, 2009

Program
8:00 a.m.– 4:30 p.m.

The Economics of Sustainable Development

  • Sustainable development and the economics of private development
  • Using sustainable development to compete on value
  • How sustainable development can enhance local economic vitality

Tools for Sustainability: Resource-Based Issues

  • Resource issues: energy, transportation, water, materials, waste, and carbon
  • Why they matter; what is included when discussing them
  • Indicators, measurements, and drivers

Tools for Sustainability: Quality-of-Life Issues

  • Why quality of life is a critical sustainability issue for public officials
  • Achieving an inspirational place to live, as well as a sustainable one
  • Place-making techniques and sustainability
  • The challenge of measuring the intangible qualities of community

Getting Started: Community Assessment and Goal Setting

  • Gaining commitment
  • Assessing current sustainability programs
  • Setting goals
  • Implementing an action plan
  • Measuring, tracking, and improving the program

Continental breakfast provided both days.
Lunch provided on Day One.