Tag Archive for resources

June 7: Implementing Shared Services: Best Practices and Case Studies

Implementing Shared Services: Best Practices and Case Studies

Friday, June 7, 2013
8:30 am – 12:00pm
Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission
8th Floor l ACP Building
190 N. Independence Mall West l Philadelphia, PA 19106

RSVP by Friday, May 31 at http://dvrpc.ticketleap.com/sharedservices/

Join DVRPC and municipal leaders at a half-day forum on the intricacies of municipal shared services. In many cases, sharing services allows municipalities to decrease both the cost and the complexity of the services they provide to their constituents while providing a higher level of service overall. In the DVRPC region, there are many examples of service sharing; it has been embraced by members of both political parties as a fiscally responsible method of service delivery. This forum will address legal issues related to sharing services and present some of the latest research on best practices and performance measurement in service sharing. Local leaders who have implemented service sharing in their communities will share their stories.

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Now Hiring: This Week’s Job Postings

job

Brand-new website. Same awesome job listings.

1) Township Manager – Township of Easttown – Devon, PA

2) Commercial District Revitalization Manager – Cornerstone West CDC – Philadelphia

3) VISTA Volunteers – Department of Commerce – Philadelphia

4) Americorps VISTAS – New Kensington CDC – Philadelphia

5) Transportation Engineer/Modeling Intern – Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission – Philadelphia

6) Community Development Director – Lower Providence Township – Eagleville, PA

7) Planner I – Kent County Levy Court, Department of Planning Services – Dover, DE

8) Rebel Ventures Team Manager – Agatston Urban Nutrition Initiative – Philadelphia

9) AUNI Garden Assistant Supervisor – Agatston Urban Nutrition Initiative – Philadelphia

Full descriptions after the jump!

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CM Credits Approved for May 22: Land Use Planning Matters: Planning for Disaster Resilient Communities

The PA Chapter of the American Planning Association and the PA Local Government Training Partnership are cosponsoring training on planning for disaster resilient communities.  There are six training sessions statewide, kicking off with a session at the new Chester County Public Safety Training Campus on May 22nd.

As natural and man-made events teach us over and over, it’s too risky NOT to consider hazard mitigation and disaster resiliency, especially with hazard mitigation being an essential component of site planning, comprehensive planning, stormwater management and numerous other planning practices.  Building resilient communities is not just a product of emergency management and emergency services personnel, but also a responsibility of planners as they assist communities with comprehensive planning and development of and updates to zoning and subdivision and land development ordinances.  The session will cover details on creating a hazard mitigation plan as well as review how to incorporate emergency management and emergency services planning in other municipal plans and ordinances.  A key concept of the training will be how to ensure that land use and community planners and emergency management personnel/emergency responders are coordinating their efforts.

The training will use Pennsylvania specific case studies and examples to convey relevant information to attendees.  The presenters will review tools, resources, and guidance provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency to help you match resources to their challenges.  The target audience for this training session includes professional planners and elected officials, municipal staff, emergency management personnel, and citizen planners who are well-versed in planning and seeking advanced information on hazard mitigation planning and emergency management to improve the safety and resiliency of residents and business for current and future hazard risks. There will be ample opportunities for Q&A.

 

Please see the brochure for details or the PA Chapter website for full details and registration:  http://planningpa.org/news/land-use-planning-matters/

Central Section Event: Meeting the Letter and Spirit of the Law – 5.75 CM

Central Section Event: Meeting the Letter and Spirit of the Law: Legal Components of Comprehensive Plans | 5.75 CM

This workshop will provide participants with an understanding of the legal connection between Comprehensive Plans and the PA Municipalities Planning Code. Matthew J. Creme, Jr., Esq. will cover all of the applicable laws that are noted in Article III, Section 301(a)(6) which require municipalities to plan for the protection of natural and historic resources. Other applicable laws that are required to be followed when completing a municipal, regional or county comprehensive plan will also be covered Community planning documents that impact the development of comprehensive plans and how these plans including recreation plans, sewerage plans, and housing plans can complement each other will also be discussed. In addition, this workshop will discuss the five key components to developing plan content and the process to create a comprehensive plan more likely to be implemented and provoke action and results will be a key topic.

This workshop has been approved for 4.25CM credits and 1.5 Law .

 

Start: May 2, 2013 8:30 am

End: May 2, 2013 4:15 pm

Organizer: APA PA, Central Section

Venue: Pennsylvania Newspaper Association Community Room

Address: 3899 N. Front Street, Harrisburg, PA, 17110, United States

Registration fee is $40.00 for APA PA members and $45.00 for non members.

For more information and to register for this workshop, click here>>

May 3: Planning for Livable Communities

The PA Chapter and Temple University School of Environmental Design are pleased to announce Planning for Livable Communities: Incorporating an Aging Perspective. The one day planning institute will be held May 3, 2013 at the Temple Harrisburg campus. The institute will provide planners, policy makers and other stakeholders with the tools to incorporate an aging perspective in community planning, thereby creating livable communities that support people of all ages. Planners will learn to recognize impediments to the aging population and techniques to avoid and minimize these impediments. The event will address transportation, zoning, development standards, parks and recreation, accessibility, and planning ethics. AICP CM credits are pending approval. Over lunch attendees will be able to review the work of three Temple University Planning Studios that spent the 2013 spring semester focusing on community planning for aging in Lebanon and Montgomery counties. Full registration information and agenda: http://www.ambler.temple.edu/news/planning-institute.htm

Field Trip!: APA Prez in Bethesda

Vibrant Streets Learning Lab
April 29 & 30, 2013
Bethesda, MD
6 CMs, $325

You can’t learn about what makes a Vibrant Street work in a conference room. From speaker sessions in the Row’s Arts Theater to walking tours to dining in Bethesda’s restaurants and wine bar, this Learning Lab will send you home with an authentic Vibrant Street experience. More importantly, you will return to your community with an ACTION PLAN you have crafted with our Vibrant Streets specialists.

Attendees will learn from presenters about current Vibrant Streets best practices and the future of Vibrant Streets around the world, land banking for retail redevelopment, creating a pop-up gallery space through the ArtPlace program, creating a temporary retail district, how communities can collect data through an app called LocalData, how existing suburban developments can be redesigned into more urban and more sustainable places, and how a foundation works with a community and the American Sign Museum to create effective and creative district branding.

Mitchell Silver, AICP and current APA President will be one of the instructors for the Learning Lab.

 

For full details and to register:  http://www.vibrantstreets.com/learninglab/

Now Hiring: This Week’s Job Postings

job

Seems the job listings are coming fast and furious now that spring is finally here:

1) Development Coordinator – Bartram’s Garden – Philadelphia

2) Benefits Budget Analyst – SEPTA – Philadelphia

3) Executive Director – Lehigh Valley Planning Commission – Allentown, PA

4) Development Associate – Congreso – Philadelphia

5) Get Healthy Philly Healthy Supermarkets Coordinator – Health Commissioner’s Office, Philadelphia Department of Public Health – Philadelphia

6) Project Analyst – Transportation Resource Associates – Philadelphia

7) Senior Project Architect, Facilities Engineering – SEPTA – Philadelphia

8) Program Analyst, Operating Budgets – SEPTA – Philadelphia

9) Development Associate – RPM – Montclair, NJ

10) Energy & Climate Change Intern – Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission – Philadelphia

11) Comprehensive Planner – Adams County Office of Planning and Development – Gettysburg, PA

12) Economic Development Specialist – Adams County Office of Planning and Development – Gettysburg, PA

13) Recovery and Resiliency Coordinators and Managers – Sustainable Jersey – Ewing, NJ

14) Associate – Fairmount Ventures, Inc. – Philadelphia

15) Communications Intern – Facilities and Real Estate Services, University of Pennsylvania – Philadelphia

Full descriptions, as always, are after the jump!

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May 22: Land Use Planning Matters: Planning for Disaster Resilient Communities

The PA Chapter of the American Planning Association and the PA Local Government Training Partnership are cosponsoring training on planning for disaster resilient communities.  There are six training sessions statewide, kicking off with a session at the new Chester County Public Safety Training Campus on May 22nd.

As natural and man-made events teach us over and over, it’s too risky NOT to consider hazard mitigation and disaster resiliency, especially with hazard mitigation being an essential component of site planning, comprehensive planning, stormwater management and numerous other planning practices.  Building resilient communities is not just a product of emergency management and emergency services personnel, but also a responsibility of planners as they assist communities with comprehensive planning and development of and updates to zoning and subdivision and land development ordinances.  The session will cover details on creating a hazard mitigation plan as well as review how to incorporate emergency management and emergency services planning in other municipal plans and ordinances.  A key concept of the training will be how to ensure that land use and community planners and emergency management personnel/emergency responders are coordinating their efforts.

The training will use Pennsylvania specific case studies and examples to convey relevant information to attendees.  The presenters will review tools, resources, and guidance provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency to help you match resources to their challenges.  The target audience for this training session includes professional planners and elected officials, municipal staff, emergency management personnel, and citizen planners who are well-versed in planning and seeking advanced information on hazard mitigation planning and emergency management to improve the safety and resiliency of residents and business for current and future hazard risks. There will be ample opportunities for Q&A.

 

Please see the brochure for details or the PA Chapter website for full details and registration:  http://planningpa.org/news/land-use-planning-matters/

April 14: Emerging Professionals Meeting

Are you a planner who has graduated from planning school but is relatively new to the profession? Have you recently transitioned to a career in planning and are looking for ways to get involved? Join the APAPASE Emerging Professionals Committee! We plan events that are of interest to “emerging planners,” including happy hours, tours, book groups, workshops, and trainings. Our next committee meeting will be on Sunday, April 14, 2013 at 4:30pm at Old City Coffee Company (221 Church Street, Philadelphia, PA 19106). Join us!

Now Hiring: This Week’s Job Postings

job

Lots of internships, as well as a few far-flung jobs to be found this week:

 

1) Preservation Compliance Coordinator – Chester County Department of Open Space Preservation – West Chester, PA

2) Interns – Next City – Philadelphia

3) Planner – Lehigh and Northampton Transportation Authority – Allentown, PA

4) Program Officer – The Fund for New Jersey – Princeton, NJ

5) Assistant Director of Coordination & Policy Research – Wharton Public Policy Initiative – Philadelphia

6) Director of Program Evaluation and Quality Assurance – Project H.O.M.E. – Philadelphia

7) Sustainability Intern (Graduate level) – University of Pennsylvania, Facilities and Real Estate Services – Philadelphia

8) Internship – Cairone & Kaupp – Philadelphia

9) Research Intern – The McDevitt Company – Philadelphia

10) Internship – Heritage Consulting Inc. – Philadelphia

Full descriptions after the jump!

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