|
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20410-7000
Office Of The Assistant Secretary For
Community Planning and Development
COMMUNITY SUSTAINABILITY; AGENDAS FOR CHOICE-MAKING
& ACTION
A Local Action "Roadmap" For Our Choices As Concerned
Citizens
A Draft Guide - Presented September 22, 1995, Washington, D.C. *
*Notes: This synthesis of local Community Sustainability organizing
frameworks, agendas, contexts and strategy options is drafted at the
personal request of the Honorable Wally N'Dow, Secretary General for
Habitat II, the U.N. urban-ecological summit of June, 1996 in
Istanbul, Turkey. It is a guide, or "sustainability roadmap," for
anyone seeking to focus on the transition from the unsustainable to
the sustainable for their own community. It is the work of Andrew
Euston, FAIA, Senior Urban Design Program Officer and the Leader for
Sustainable Community Development Explorations, U.S. Dept. of Housing
and Urban Development, as evolved over the past three decades in
continual cooperation with local innovators and leaders of the
emerging trans-disciplinary field of Sustainable Community Development
in the U.S.
As a draft guide it is prepared for initial public comment and
inquiry at the World Bank's Washington, D.C., third annual conference
on environmentally sustainable development, October 2-6, 1995.
Contact with the author, Andrew Euston, FAIA, may be made by mail at
Room 7244 HUD, Wash., DC 20410: by phone (202-708-1911): or by Fax
(202-708-3363). All comments are welcome.
COMMUNITY SUSTAINABILITY: AGENDAS FOR CHOICE-MAKING &
ACTION
A Local Action "Roadmap" For Our Choices As Concerned
Citizens
Summary: A COMMUNITY SUSTAINABILITY "ROADMAP"
The idea of a "roadmap" is used here to identify both the territory
(conceptual, organizational, physical, etc.) and the sense of
possibility or choice we have as the citizens of modern urban-rural
industrial society. The author's intent has been to provide a
definitive explanation of what "sustainable communities" (places), or
preferably the broader term of "Community Sustainability" (culture
plus places), can come to mean for modern society -- that others may
fill in the many "blanks" of omission and detail left by this
aggregation of operational parts of an overall local level
sustainability agenda.
Modern scientists say that modern society must significantly
rebalance itself in a generation or less (please see Conclusion).
Some people claim that ours is already a "post-industrial" society.
Others even argue society is soon to reach a "meta-industrial" time
(beyond industry). Here an alternative argument is asserted that: (a)
modern humanity is fast populating the entire global landmass: (b)
this means massive impacts on land, water and resources in order to
have the necessary industralized infrastructures that modern
communities demand; (c) this now means the impaction of massive
urbanization far past anything seen before apart from earth changes,
glaciers or asteroid collisions; and (d) the results are to demolish
much of nature's diversity and stability, unless a rebalance can be
attained - - an urban-rural industrial rebalance with ecology, as a
fundamental paradigm of authentic, meaningful national/global human
security.
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Two centuries of industrial revolution, led by the "developed"
world, have set the stage for modern society's transition to
sustainability. With the "developing" world intent upon catching up,
or at very least having its own industrial revolution, our collective
modern challenge is to build on the lessons of the first phase. It is
an ultimate challenge and it concerns the entire human family, whether
rich or poor, or of North or South. One choice is to go as we go and
do as we do - - without regard to the grave cumulative changes that
have undermined the earth as humanity's cornucopia, our bread basket,
our source of health, vitality and pleasure, and of hope for our
future. This, we are told by science, is the unsustainable choice.
The other choice is to create a deliberate transition to
sustainability - - that is, to design it, for one definition of the
word "design" is "to intend for a definite purpose".
Such rebalancing implies that: (a) we act with intent as
individuals according to our levels of understanding and concern about
these realities and the narrowing time frame in which modern society
may seek to work out its transition; (b) we shift our consumption,
extraction and harvesting patterns and technologies; (c) we even
reframe our ethical choices within the new reality that ecology
confronts us with in these circumstances; and (d) the level at which
people can be most hopefully focused is in their communities - - where
it is that the social, economic, ecological, and resource interests
must first be defined.
The vision offered here addresses all such considerations as
matters of hopeful possibility - - dependent upon on the actions taken
now by concerned citizens. The vision is for "Community
Sustainability", defined as the condition of social, economic and
ecological harmony that people require, deserve and must create where
they live, if their lives and their inheritors' lives are to be
meaningful, wholesome and hopeful. To mobilize meaningful responses
to our society's realities means that each community come to terms
with its choices, act integratively for the maximum effect and join
forces in common with other comunities where interests can be seen as
shared.
All places differ. There can be no universal formula for creating
Community Sustainability. There are certain generic aspects involved,
however, and these are the primary focus of this "roadmap". A
fundamental overall premise put forth and addressed in alternative
ways below concerns urbanization. Population, industrialization and
communities all mean urbanization today. It is our modern global
society's major physical system. Urbanization has to become a
coherent, explicit focus of our modern society's choices, if we are to
pass along an economically viable, a socially humane and acceptable,
and an ecologically workable future society. This is required of us
by sustainability, modern society's key Third Millennium paradigm.
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Introduction: SOCIETY'S TRANSITION TO COMMUNITY
SUSTAINABILITY
"Sustainability" is defined here as the reshaping of our modern
urban-rural industrial society's economics in accordance with the
dictates of the natural ecological systems of support upon which we
and our social and economic systems must depend. Modern society - -
our modern, global, urban-rural industrial society - - is already
embarked upon an imperative transition in values and assumptions that
addresses the realities of the long term health of the social,
economic and environmental systems necessary to support this explosive
modern society.
Underway is a fundamental human evolutionary cultural transition
about systems, ecology, diversity, integration and creative choice.
What differs from previous transitions (as from hunter-gatherers to
farmers or from agricultural to industrial society), today we must
anticipate the consequences of our choices or face grave setbacks for
the human family as a whole.
Humanity's collective imperative now is to shift modern society
rapidly onto a sustainable path or have it dissolve of its own
ecologically unsustainable doings. So says science. For society this
is a combined social, economic and ecological imperative. It can be a
hopeful imperative, for sustainability offers many benefits of
efficiency, conservation, partnership, enterprise and creative choice.
Necessary elements for this shift are laid out here as one of many
possible menus for action. The action called for here is focused on
the local community level of intentional individual and collective
choice.
Pursuit of society's imperative of sustainability is not merely a
prerogative of a powerful few, nor some 'fine-tuning' option of
free-wheeling status quo economic interests, nor the assignment of the
dominant structures of governance. Sustainability is a fresh ethical
paradigm for science, for society and for every responsible and
concerned individual - - one whose imperative devolves to the local
levels of place and community, where we each live. It is a shift
required of modern society as a whole.
We may see this shift as a hopeful prospect, if we are taking
positive action and making concrete choices for the good. The guiding
inquiry can be simple enough - - what are the true interests of our
community? Out of it modern society may choose for its present and
future well-being. We have to begin the dialogue. It can best begin
at home. There are an infinitude of options. Given both the
predicament of our inescapable ecological imperative to rebalance
ourselves, and the arrival of unprecedented electronic communications
tools, we are in fact already redefining our options. The question
is, for what ends? If not for Community Sustainability in its
broadest sense, then where else is the meaning of our modern exploits
to be found?
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Ours is to include a search for new forms, or revised forms, of
urban, rural and industrial development. How we shape and supply our
communities is the crux. How we respect and restore the land and its
natural diversity is dependent on the way communities are designed.
How industry proceeds and how technology is shaped will fix the future
outcome. Basically, communities (urbanization, that is) are society's
largest industrial products, ecological impacts and shapers of
consumption. These consequences are what we have to focus on in order
to become sustainable.
As the exploits of our vastly expanding industrial society shift
from those of raw exploitation into those of natural reintegration and
regeneration, the pace and integrity of the process must depend upon a
new sense of citizenship and personal commitment among concerned
people. This has always been the case for society whichever its modes
and paradigms of understanding. Now, in this "information age" of the
global "economic casino", only the focus and intent of concerned
citizens can serve to shape a coherent and meaningful outcome for
society as a whole.
Society can be successfully organized for concerted action on
differing levels of scale, and many places are. Complex? Yes! And
yet there can be highly constructive, highly creative and highly
preferable outcomes, when we gain a sense of where we can focus and
how. That is the purpose of the presentation of community
possibilities that follows - - the possibilities of Community
Sustainability, that is.
If you choose to act, then what becomes the universe of the issues
you may hope to influence? Resolved here is that for most individuals
the key "universe" is what we understand to be our communities - -
places, yes, yet ones of variable scales that depend on what we
understand to be our own interests With sustainability the interests
of a "community" could be at one time a focus on the immediate
neighborhood for some people, while for others living in the same
place it may be about their larger region. Offered, therefore, is a
framework for defining what your community's interests may be, if you
identify yourself as a citizen of a community you choose to make
sustainable. What this implies for us as individual citizens and what
can be done together is the focus of what follows below.
Concerned citizens in today's world can build a new basis for a
hopeful outcome. They can get acquainted with the ideas about
sustainability and see for themselves what is of primary interest to
bring about. Whether it is about changes in the way City Hall acts,
or how industrial products impact local ecology, or what we have to
choose from as consumers, people need to take an active part in the
direction of things that will determine the future for those they love
and for where they live.
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Community Sustainability is of a complex nature, to be sure, but it
can be made manageable. Certain concepts and basic menus are
involved. There is no one formula. It is more a matter of gaining in
perspective, like learning a challenging new game. 'Complexity and
change' are already the names of today's game. Fortunately, today's
information systems can be used to make complexities become far more
accessible.
Becoming "sustainable" is a challenge that is not to be resolved in
any hurry, but for hopeful communities it must become their
fundamental way of operating. For those actively concerned about
sustainability there is ample room for hope. Governance systems can
be intractable, yet today's trend is toward more and more local
citizen say. Such a trend serves those mobilized around common aims.
Concerned interdisciplinary-minded citizens are especially valuable to
the process of become sustainable. Does that imply credentials are
required? No, for there is ample room, as well, for individual
intention, commitment and invention.
All of modern society's possibilities involve choices, but what
guides the direction, if concerned citizens do not organize and take
positive action? And how better for people to concern themselves
directly than for their own community's future? Today we might say
that the future of the human family is being reshaped by seven basic
forces: human population expansion, urbanization, industrialization,
ecological degradation, resource depletion, information technology,
and human expectations. Redirecting these forces towards Community
Sustainability is a transition that has become central to any hopeful
possibilities modern society may aspire to create.
Each of the seven basic forces cited above can be influenced by how
communities choose to act as a whole about the outcomes they would
prefer. Making complex choices as a feature of sustainable community
life is to become the most fateful alternative we are to have as
citizens of modern society. Community Sustainability in America can
have tremendous pioneering influence upon the entire human family.
How can Americans, how can any citizens, become informed, motivated
and organized sufficiently to shape such complexities into forms that
get them where they want to be? This question is addressed below
through an overall framework of contexts and approaches - - a
sustainability roadmap - - where strategic emphasis is on shaping our
communities. What follows outlines and briefly expands upon the kinds
of subjects there are to choose about, some perspectives that can
guide our thinking and some approaches that can guide our actions.
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A New Challenge: THE SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITY
DEVELOPMENT CHALLENGE
Modern society's great challenge is that urbanization, including
the resulting physical infrastructures, land use patterns and the
consumption demands, is ecologically unsustainable as it stands.
Warnings from science have been issued. By science's consensus we
have but decades to recast the ways we operate as a modern society
with respect to earth's natural ecological systems of support. How
appropriately each nation, each metropolitan region, and in turn each
community designs itself now will determine how economically
competitive it is, as well as how socially and ecologically
sustainable.
That our communities can be reshaped, planned and designed to be
sustainable has become critical: to humanity's present cohesiveness
and its future well-being; to the viability of modern civilizations'
economics, and ultimately to the restoration of the earth's ecology
upon which both these fundamental human ends now depend.
We can and must get to the core of the matter - - the task of
rebalancing urbanization within nature. At the national level, we
must be focused locally. As a complex, whole physical system, each
modern community is formed of multiple sub-systems, networks,
structures and resource bases, both manmade and natural (identified
here as "Community Sustainability Infrastructures") that support our
diverse modes of modern life. It is locally in the technological,
scientific, cultural and economic rebalancing of these infrastructures
that our key options are to be found. This local rebalancing can be
done within the dictates of natural ecology, and this task has become
civilization's central challenge - - an enterprise termed here
"Sustainable Community Development (SCD)".
A New Vision: A VISION FOR MODERN SOCIETY'S
REDESIGNING ITSELF THROUGH COMMUNITY SUSTAINABILITY
Sustainable Development is becoming a significant idea both abroad
and here in America. It addresses the future in light of population,
resources or ecological diversity. "Sustainable Development"
describes a means. For society a means must have a goal. Stressed
here is the idea that community, and hence the advancement of
"Community Sustainability", is that fundamental goal. It is one that
people everywhere can readily accept.
The vision is for "Community Sustainability", defined as the
condition of social, economic and ecological harmony that people
require, deserve and must create where they live, if their lives and
their inheritors' lives are to be meaningful, wholesome and hopeful.
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Population when combined with community means urbanization.
Urbanization is addressed here as a larger system (in itself a new, if
unnecessarily destructive, sub-system of nature) that consists of a
broad set of sub-systems. These systems may be termed collectively as
"Sustainable Community Infrastructures". These infrastructures, and
the process of shaping our modern communities through them, is the key
to modern society's future sustainability.
Perhaps society's best physical options for sustainability lie in
the reshaping of its local community infrastructures to preserve and
restore their area's carrying capacitites for supporting human
settlements. These options can be manageable, preferable and
profitable. We have the needs of both people and nature to respect
and balance - - whether we are dealing with urban cores, suburbs or
"edge cities", or reclaiming toxic and hazardous urban "brownfields",
or encroaching upon unspoiled or agrarian "greenfields". To conserve
the carrying capacity of nature and land is to reconcile our
communities' infrastructures with their natural counterparts, such as
expanding the urban forest cover that greatly reduces summer heat or
safeguarding the underground water aquifers that store rain for our
use.
Whether it concerns their energy efficiency, or preserving land for
their food production or protecting their water and its quality,
communities have tremendous collective impact on society's future.
The reality is that urbanization has become modern civilization's
principal driver of negative impacts upon earth's natural ecological
systems and potentially upon humanity itself. It is society's major
industrial product. Hence dealing sustainably with urbanization is to
deal with a basic cause rather than with symptons. It is a challenge
to communities, a collective challenge. Making technology sustainable
can be seen as part of this challenge, particularly industrial
technology.
The rebalancing of the myriad local, county, region and state
levels of public and private choice that, when aggregated, shape our
communities must therefore be of central concern, as we look ahead.
The infrastructures of community development are a vast part of
industrial production. Then there is the consumption of "raw" land
for urbanization and for its rural extensions. The rebalancing of
urbanization with nature is critical to society's future economic
sustainability.
Active concern for this rebalancing can add a new depth of meaning
to modern society - - our presently fragmented, stressed and
economically stratified global society. If we are to heal socially,
we can get further along by attending to the economic and ecological
supports society knows it has to depend on as part of its healing
process.
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A New Perspective: COMMUNITIES ACTING FROM A FRESH
POINT OF VIEW
The transition from unsustainable to sustainable means action - - -
integrative public, profit and non-profit action. This means choosing
to act from a fresh, integrated point of view. By reframing their
local choices and investments, communities can create authentic
choices for sustainable living. How? Adopting integrative frameworks
for "Community Sustainability" is one means for understanding
interests and for identifying preferred options. There are four basic
components for such integrative local action - - specifically:
- THE SOCIAL COMPONENT OF ACTION or Community Partnership - whereby
public, profit and non-profit sector citizens create cooperative
ventures and agendas to uplift their community's level of dialogue,
awareness and action about their common interests and options for
making choices that benefit the present and support the future in
terms of sustainability;
- THE ECONOMIC COMPONENT OF ACTION or Community Enterprise -
whereby communities claim the great economic, cultural and social
benefits to come from the transition from unsustainability to
sustainability in the ways we build, consume, work, play and live.
The Community Sustainability Marketplace (see below) is a major part
of this component:
- THE ECOLOGICAL COMPONENT OF ACTION or Community Conservation -
whereby communities identify their longer term natural and
human ecological issues and address them, recognizing in the
process how sustainability is becoming the ultimate bottom
line for the economic decisions that direct their
environmental (built and natural), resource and consumption
options;
- THE INTEGRATIVE COMPONENT OF ACTION or Community Design -
whereby design means the active intention to integrate these above
three: the social, economic and environmental. Design involves all
three. It takes design, or intent, to weave these complexities into a
viable, sustainable whole. For example, today in America many see its
sprawling physical urban design land use patterns to be major drivers
of environmental pollution and resource over-consumption, of
uneconomic over-extended physical infrastructures and of wasted prime
agricultural land, as well as causing social and economic hardships
for the many without private mobility and public transportation.
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A New Framework: A BASIC THREE-CONTEXT FRAMEWORK
FOR COMMUNITY SUSTAINABILITY ACTION
To address the concerns of community sustainability there are three
local community contexts to consider:
- the local actions by which we can effect change in our society,
- the physical systems or physical infrastructures involved, and
- the physical scale or land uses of the tasks at hand.
What follows is an overall framework of terms and elements that
comprise the local process of Community Sustainability. These form a
three-dimensional matrix:
A. THE COMMUNITY'S CONTEXT OF ACTION;
As introduced above ("A New Perspective:"), local Community
Sustainability Action needs to happen within four basic arenas:
- Community Partnership, or the social contexts,
- Community Enterprise, or the economic contexts,
- Community Conservation, or the human resource, built and
natural ecological contexts, and
- Community Design, or the contexts of integration.
One can find communities, large and small, where pioneering efforts
have begun. Most Americans (80% or more) inhabit areas that combine
urban, suburban and rural areas, or metropolitan regions. It is
perhaps at this scale of land use where our greatest challenges exist.
Metropolitan area in the U.S. that have been successful within these
our contexts include: Minneapolis/St. Paul for Partnership:
Chattanooga for Enterprise; Austin for Conservation: and Portland,
Oregon for Design.
B. THE COMMUNITY'S CONTEXT OF INFRASTRUCTURES;
Sustainable Community Development will progress only if local
infrastructures are fully sustainable. Traditionally we have seen
intrastructure as large public and private works - - systems and
networks such as roads and rails, reservoirs and power plants. Now,
in order to bring the four action contexts of community sustainability
together, we must expand modern society's understanding of
"infrastructure" to include and to integrate all the basic systems of
support that allow modern civilization to operate. From this
broadened perspective, we must consider not just the physical network
systems but others as well:
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- natural ecological systems (aquifers, urban forests)
- physical network systems (mobility, energy, water)
- physical in-fill systems (homes, industry, parks)
- info/communications systems (tele-marketing, tele-medicine,
tele-commuting, INTERNET, cybernetics)
- regional resource systems (lakes, farms, forests)
- global resource systems (atmosphere, oceans, soil)
- social infrastructures (guilds, sects, sub-cultures)
- economic infrastructures (banking, commerce, barter)
C. THE COMMUNITY'S CONTEXT OF LAND;
Finally there is the context of the land - - whether urban or
rural, industralized or natural. Communities involve place and scale.
The metropolitan region represents a most critical scale for
sustainability. Basic metropolitan contexts of land include:
- neighborhoods
- urban centers
- suburbs
- rural land resources
- regional land resources
A New Set of Options: SOCIETY'S AGENDAS FOR
SUSTAINABLE ACTION
We reshape our lives as we reshape our communities and their
infrastructures - - as we design and plan, expend and employ for
urbanization. Sustainable Community Development, as America's primary
route to Community Sustainability, has many facets. Two basic ones
are: (a) the process of local choice-making (public and private
investment decisions) that shape what's to come - - an activity called
here "Local Urban Environmental Design"; and (b) the choices to be
made at the larger metropolitan/regional scale.
Steps we'll need to take through Sustainable Community Development
can be immediate, intermediate and long range. Most community
infrastructures are longer-term in their development and their
consequences. In America, today's community options favor cars rather
than people. Greater potential convenience, economy and health can
come with other mobility options that are available now. Looking
ahead, for most communities transit, walking and bikes become people's
preferred choices because they work and because people want it that
way. Today we have numerous planning and design options that look
ahead - - by interrelating jobs and work, by blending together
workplaces, housing and nature and by generally restoring the natural
resource base.
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A Menu: COMMUNITY SUSTAINABILITY ACTION AGENDAS
The lists and notations below show how broad the scope of
information and activities is that populates the Community
Sustainability agenda roadmap's territory. They represent a concerted
action agenda for modern society. They offer contexts for taking
action, institutionalizing specific administrative measures, framing
choices and mobilizing forces. This is not a plan but rather an
inventory of and a structure for what society can choose to do.
Studied in sequence, they provide an additional conceptual framework
for understanding each agenda in context with the next and with the
whole. These agendas for local action identify ways to shape local
agendas for promoting community sustainability, including potentially
ones own livelihood and lifestyle. Such agendas have been grouped
under the following headings:
- Sustainable Community Development (SCD)
- Community Visioning
- Local Urban Environmental Design
- Interdisciplinary Technical Assistance
- Community Information Systems
- Community Sustainability Scans
- Community Sustainability Infrastructures
- Generalized Ecosystem Approaches
- Rural-Urban Regional Action
- Landscape Ecology
- Local Micro-Economics/The Community Sustainability Marketplace
- Industrial Ecology (Energy Efficiency/Environmental Technologies/Green
Products/Natural Infrastructures)
- Consumer Education
- Eco-justice and Equity
- Community Measurements/Indicators/Benchmarks
Agenda A: Sustainable Community Development (SCD)
"SCD" is a search for balance within modern society and with
nature. As viewed here it is an umbrella activity that contains all
those agendas identified below and many others besides. These are by
nature public, profit and non-profit as well as social, economic and
ecological in focus. With emphasis on the integration of these
constituent elements, SCD is what we do to make our communities work -
- how communities can sustain themselves - - bringing everybody to the
table, to guide the choices and investments that shape the future.
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SCD includes the customary roles of local governments, commercial
interests, civic groups and the local public media. Key to SCD, the
ordinary citizen is sovereign and is accountable (by future
generations) for and challenged by these times and their imperative
for achieving a rapid transition to Community Sustainability. So,
therefore, what follows - - from the visioning of possibilities to the
measuring of outcomes - - begins to fill in the blanks of what,
specifically, can be done to achieve this transition.
Agenda B: Community Visioning:
The range of visioning techniques in place in the United States
used for collective public visioning is broad, and rooted in
neighborhood advisory committees, church group retreats,
mass-participant events organized to choose agendas and define
priorities, or a variety of design and planning participatory
processes. Often these activities lead to the emergence of new
partnerships between parties willing to work together for specific
sustainability agendas.
Agenda C: Local Urban Environmental Design (UED)
UED, or design administration, is a management concept about
integrative local popular choice-making and official and investment
decision-making. It matured during the 1960-'80 (U.S.) urban
revitalization epoch - - twenty years of extraordinarily wise and
unwise local, state and federal level public/private efforts to make
over American cities physically, socially and economically.
In cities and metropolitan regions there are the customary
structures of government, both formal and informal, that significantly
shape the local future. UED roles may appear informal and ad hoc in
these conventional contexts, but they are of the essence for those
communities (above, say, 50,000 in pop.) intentionally seeking to
become sustainable. UED, as a valued management approach, often
overlays customary organizational systems and structures. Its
concerns are with flexibility, creativity, performance, quality
information, real-cost accounting, active public outreach and
informativeness, attention to strategic investments and to lost-
opportunity costs, and many other local governance considerations.
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UED is an interdisciplinary domain of design that can involve the
"environmental design arts" of architecture, planning, engineering,
landscape architecture, landscape ecology, the natural and the social
sciences, law, community organizing and more. It is also about design
as deliberate intent for achieving a specific purpose. It is about a
community's creative and flexible local interdisciplinary, public and
private civic choice-making tied to local administrative and
investment decision-making.
Also involved are certain elemental features of local
public/private UED operations only touched upon here. There should be
authentic interdisciplinary professionalism at higher administrative
levels and in key departments such as those of planning, public works,
zoning and economic development. UED typically employs focal teams and
coordination groups of a diverse cast - - ones suited to specific
tasks in the development aspects of the community. It may employ
public campaigns and such integrative management structures as
key-agency lead assignments, private consultants, ombudspersons,
quasi-governmental organizations, and inter-jurisdictional compacts.
UED means introducing innovative legal, administrative and
informational features - - both informal and institutionalized - -
introduced so as to guide local choices that effect the built and
natural environment. A place using this approach will tend to be
clear about its quality of life goals, its ecological contexts, its
overall experience of public safety, amenity, decent standards of home
and work places, etc. Equally significant will be the role of the
volunteer citizen, the accessibility of public decisions to
neighborhood and civic input, the pursuit of highest information
quality and the provision of education and public communication
designed to empower citizens in such actions.
Agenda D: Interdisciplinary Technical Assistance
Such tools and methods as these exist for most communities. They
are an essential part of any interdisciplinary local Urban
Environmental Design administration approach, wherever that philosophy
has been adopted:
- general - (from a wide range of sources) assistance to
agencies/governments/business/neighborhoods/etc.
- guides/videos/tech.studies/trainings/visual simulation
- conferences/forums/workshops/speaker series/call-ins
- clinics/charettes/community visioning/retreats
- graphics/photography/audio-visuals/design communications
- ordinances/organizational concepts/integrative structures
- best practice cases/bibliographies/strategy menus
- outreach campaigns for sustainability and its elements
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Agenda E: Community Information Systems
No topical outline is suggested here. This burgeoning agenda is
one almost everybody living in the "information age" is becoming aware
of in general. Already many people are becoming users of INTERNET
electronic conferences and other media. In any given community there
are often those with the latest equipment and skills required to tap
the technologies involved. There are many challenging new concepts -
- such as electronically recasting our communities as "learning
institutions."
There are also tools that are often high-priced now: geographic
information systems-related analysis of projected costs and impacts of
alternative choices to development; tools for visualizing projected
changes to urban and natural fabric; for group interplay and
collaboration on projects; for tying together local settings and
situations into pre-packaged informational packages to present to
public audiences; etc. As these costs come into range, a vast shift
in engagement and empowerment will come for concerned lay citizens
seeking to grasp their community's interests in finer, more strategic
detail.
Agenda F: Community Sustainability Scans
The scan is a basic information tool. It helps people grasp the
concept of Community Sustainability in the first place. It helps us
comprehend the order of magnitude of problems and the logical or
strategic points for intervention. A scan can be an ongoing data
process or not, depending on resources available, the nature of its
purposes, and other factors. It may be technical, data-rich and
targeted, or general and diffuse and still serve their purposes. The
information process involved is sometimes closely related to the topic
below of indicators and benchmarks, but is usually more of a targetted
planning and decision-making mechanism.
"Scans" that portray sustainability activities come in numerous
variations. Many U.S. communities are assembling inventories of their
public and private sector sustainability agendas. Elaborate profiles
have been assembled in places concerned with energy, fuel costs or
other local capital draining "imports". Citizen groups are taking
stock of the local volunteer, academic, public and private
sustainability-related accomplishments and failings.
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Agenda G: Community Sustainability Infrastructures
What do they consist of, these infrastructures? There are the
networks of transport, power and water; there is the infilling
development of homes, businesses, manufacturing or recreation; there
is the natural infrastructure of urban forests, underground water
supply, greenways and parklands; there are the infrastructures of
communications and electronics; there are the resource-base
infrastructures that comprise each community's region and beyond this
of the global biosphere.
To become sustainable, communities will be taking the benefits,
costs and the consequences of all these basic infrastructures into
fullest account. The new processes required for doing so are to
create a new basis for economic vitality, a new meaningfulness for how
we make our livelihoods, and a fresh context for the redefining of
what it means to be part of one's community.
The following eight over-arching systems are the physical and
technical supports of urbanization. They combine the natural and the
industrial. They are modern society's essential supports, taken both
individually and together. Their integration is the great challenge
before us - - as the prerequisite for achieving our transition to
Community Sustainability:
- natural ecological systems (aquifers, urban forests)
- physical network systems (transportation, energy, water)
- physical in-fill systems (homes, industry, parks)
- communications systems (tele-marketing, -medicine)
- regional resource systems (lakes, farms, forests)
- global resource systems (atmosphere, oceans, soil)
- social infrastructures (nations, sects, groups)
- economic infrastructures (banking, commerce, barter)
Agenda H: Generalized Ecosystem Approaches
The following definition is from _The Ecosystem Approach: Healthy
Ecosystems and Sustainable Economics_, Page 17, Vol. 1 - Overview of
the Report of the (U.S.) Interagency Ecosystem Management Task Force,
June, 1995, President's Council on Environmental Quality:
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"An ecosystem is an interconnected community of living things,
including humans, and the physical environment within which they
interact. The ecosystem approach is a method for sustaining or
restoring natural systems and their functions and values. It is goal
driven, and it is based on a collaboratively developed vision of
desired future conditions that integrates ecological, economic and
social factors. It is applied within a geographic framework defined
primarily by ecological boundaries. The goal of the ecosystem
approach is to restore and sustain the health, productivity, and
biological diversity of ecosystems and the overal quality of life
through a natural resource management approach, one fully integrated
with social and economic goals."
- interdisciplinary decision making
- integration of the social, economic and ecological
- coordination of public, profit and non-profit actions
- use of multi-purpose/-party/-jurisdiction partnerships
- bio-geographic, watershed, soil, micro-clime ecosystems
- corridors - transportation/rivers/bike/hiking/greenways
- biomes/habitats/flyways/micro-climes/etc.
Agenda I: Contexts for Rural-Urban Regional Action
This agenda is especially profound since it has much to do with the
reconnection of modern society to land and nature. Within one's
ingrained and culture-bound outlook toward nature, we can expand our
personal connectedness to region as a spatial resource base, as a
commonwealth of interrelated communities of interest (large and
small), and as the community of nature of which we are a part. This
list identifies a wide range of community interests tied to both the
geography and the psychology of regional space:
- basic commercial/industrial/economic regional links
- bio-regions/multi-metro regional constellations & circles
- smaller, contiguous rural-urban community constellations
- linear parks/coastal regions/agro-forest ridges & valleys
- watersheds/airsheds (acid rain)/mediasheds (TV, cybernets)
- alignments along rivers, roads, main highways, railways
- biking/hiking/trails/scenic & historic touring districts
- soil/geology infrastructures/park & forest urban gateways
- college/university/trade school/tourism linkages
- regional jurisdictions (commissions, watersheds, TVA, etc.)
- regional history (Native American lands, ethnic settlements)
- regional culture (crafts, music, sports, resorts, etc.)
- region-focused consortia/urban growth boundaries (UGB's)
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Agenda J: Landscape Ecology
Design, or deliberate intent, is essential for achieving community
sustainability. The land - - and the landscape we can visualize and
attach our deepest selves to as sentient beings - - is our future.
Ecology, or the diverse natural systems of earth's bio-sphere, is the
basis for earth's bio-sphere. It is the very basis for the evolution
and perpetuation of life - - including our own. Therefore "landscape
ecology" is the term of art put forth here as the action agenda
necessary for integrating the urban and the rural of modern society -
- by bringing nature into our communities and by preserving the rural
landscape's ecological basis for preserving the human future.
This emergent and critical field of sustainability specialization
combines design creativity and infrastructure development with the
natural sciences' accountability for the consequences of what we
alter. The field's origins in the United States are with the creative
genius of Scotsman Ian McHarg (_Design With Nature_) of the University
of Pennsylvania and Philip Lewis (_Tomorrow By Design - A Regional
Design Process for Sustainability_, John Wiley publishers, forthcoming
in April 1996) of the University of Wisconsin. Both men have given
shape to the necessary tools for bringing natural science into the
on-the-ground choice-making that communities must now make.
Landscape ecology as a field - - as shaped by the eight combined
land-applied decades of landscape architects Lewis and McHarg - - is
one that no set discipline formally oversees. This field is the
confluence of fresh paradigms that, like "sustainability" itself, are
necessary for making a transition to a future that does not rob from
people tomorrow in order to make possible some temporary benefits for
us now. In securing its vital place in this urgent business of
transition it can be expected to evolve as a "trans-disciplinary"
field of complex problem solving and creativity.
Agenda K: Local Micro-Economics/The Community
Sustainability Marketplace (see the two sections that follow
"Menu")
- The "Community Sustainability Marketplace" (see "Emergence")
- personal savings/credit unions/local shares and currencies
- day care/elder/volunteer/traveler aid/shelter provisions
- Community Supported Agriculture/consumer collectives
- work shares/co-ops/tool libraries/loan centers
- employee owned businesses/collaboratives
- value-added manufacturing/value-added agro-forestry
- used and reconditioned equipment trading/swapping
- true-cost and life-cycle accounting/"natural capital"
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Agenda L: Industrial Ecology (Energy
Efficiency/Environmental Technologies/Green Products/Natural
Infrastructures)
Industrial ecology, or industrial metabolics, is about efficiencies
of cost and so-called "economic externalities" (social and ecological
costs). Today industrial production systems are subject to daily
testing for all kinds of considerations. The idea of "zero-defects"
has become a widespread approach for industry in recent decades. With
the shift towards sustainability now is added the objective of
"zero-emissions" or "zero-pollution."
- bio-indus. ecology/bio-mass water trtmt./indus.-metabolics
- energy technology/environ. technology/industrial ecology
- green bldg. stds./indigenous materials/"smart" buildings
- edible landscapes/xeriscaping/permaculture/organic agricul.
- consumer ecology training/eco-buying cooperatives
- eco-preneurship/community sustainability marketplaces
Agenda M: Consumer Education (via schools,
public media, non-profits, etc.)
- youth involvement/celebrations/clean-ups/design events
- video/TV media/cyberspace/groupware/visual simulation/etc.
- information on products/residential design/appliances/etc.
- diet/alternative medicine/preventive medicine/exercise
Agenda N: Eco-justice and Equity
This is a most critical option for the well-being of a community --
its stance towards decency and fairness, physical accessibility and
economic opportunity. Active civic and public sector help and
attention to resolve and avert specific environmental or eco-justice
issues is a key part of the overall community sustainability paradigm.
While part of the cure may be pollution prevention, the basic issue
here is a society's commitment to healthy communities for all its
citizens. Whatever their causes, the effects of social neglect and
oppression have definite long term costs to the community. Socially,
economically, and environmentally an organized and concerned civic
culture is central to the present and future health of a place.
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Agenda O: Community
Measurements/Indicators/Benchmarks
Community indicators measure what may be happening, whereas
community benchmarks give numerical or other targets for desired
achievements. Places are introducing such tools using the widest
variety of information sources to: (a) to establish an on-going basis
for tracking changes that inform a community about itself in a public
attention-getting way: (b) raise the local dialogues on sustainability
to increasingly "audible" levels: and (c) to mobilize critical masses
of citizenry towards broadened sustainability-focused community
action. Below, cited from the tenth annual report, "Life in
Jacksonville (Fla.): Quality Indicators for Progress (QIP)", are that
City's current "key indicators" for its nine main categories (of 74):
- Education: - public high school graduation rate.
- Economy: - net job growth.
- Public Safety: - people feeling safe walking alone at night.
- Natural Environment: - days of air quality index in the good
range
- Health: - infant deaths per 1,000 live births.
- Social Environment: - people believing racism is a local
problem.
- Government/Politics: - people rating local government leadership
good/excellent.
- Culture/Recreation: - city financial support of arts
organizations.
- Mobility: - # commuting times 25 minutes or less.
A New Economics: ECONOMICS-BASED PARADIGMS,
MANDATES AND COMMITMENTS FOR SEEKING COMMUNITY SUSTAINABILITY
A new ecologically balanced economics will drive the pursuit of
Community Sustainability within modern society's all-encompassing
urban-rural industrial civilization. It will be based upon a vast new
integrative marketplace that supports the positive evolution of new
mandates and paradigms, termed here the "Community Sustainability
Marketplace" (see "The Emergence of .."below). This global
marketplace is destined to recast the meanings of industry, work,
play, health, agronomy, communications, learning and much more. To
create this marketplace we will need robust, authentic new paradigms
and action mandates for both economic and community development, as
well as new paradigms for the continuing evolution of community
itself.
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Modern society must begin sustainability somewhere. In many ways
the most manageable economic option governing our urban civilization's
shift from the unsustainable to the sustainable is how we choose to
build -- that activity termed here "Sustainable Community Development;
or SCD." Communities can choose to recast and reintegrate how they
plan, design and build for sustainability. It can best begin by its
choices in how we build our communities.
To seek sustainability through Sustainable Community Development, a
framework for local action is essential. Using the three local
contexts - Local Action, Infrastructures and Land (ref. "A New
Framework..." above) -- the nature of national, state and local
mandates for Sustainable Community Development can be framed. Crucial
is the forging of coherent links between federal, state and local
levels.
In America, a sequel to the National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 will be one needed commitment - one that ties economic policy to
national ecological security. At all levels of governance there must
be commitment to the integration of society's social, economic and
ecological objectives. Equally critical is a commitment to
sustainability on the part of every citizen. Such commitments alone
can serve to distinguish the future outcomes of Sustainable Community
Development from society's current conventions of unsustainable,
status quo development. By following such a path, we may come to
distinguish sustainable economics from conventional economics.
The Emergence of the "COMMUNITY SUSTAINABILITY
MARKETPLACE"
More and more, communities are being forced to face the longer term
prospects of increasing costs of sprawl, auto-dependency and the drain
of local capital for fuel needs, community infrastructures, etc. They
are finding that efficiencies come from alternative patterns of
development, new appropriate technologies and new attitudes towards
resources. As these trends grow, the pace of innovation is
accelerating. A vast new global market is emerging.
Termed here the "Community Sustainability Marketplace", this
ecologically innovative market will become the focus of jurisdictions
everywhere to reduce waste, compete and replace declining resources
(food, fish, trees, pulp, fiber, fuel, ores, etc.). Planning and
design for these changes will result in new infrastructures governed
by a global-cost basis for raw and processed materials, by real
environmental cost accounting and, depending upon its progress, by a
shifting societal outlook.
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Where such economy-based innovation has been gradual until now, the
coming waves of Sustainable Community Development and infrastructure
to come will be characterized increasingly by:
- Cost-effective reliance upon natural ecological infrastructure
systems: for refrigerants (CFC-free zeolite), air quality/cooling
(urban forests, up wind bio-mass planting, green belts, etc.); for
water supply management (aquifer protection and recharge strategies):
food production (urban gardening, suburban edible landscaping,
urban-rural truck farming and community-supported farming):
recreational land use/agriculture strategies: fire protective
landscaping: water conserving xeriscaping: etc.
- Energy/resource efficient Community Sustainability
Infrastructure technology alternatives such as: community energy
systems (CECs), district heating and cooling (DHC), thermal storage,
cogeneration, alternative energy systems, etc.): TAXI 2000 personal
rapid transit -- now in development stages at University of Minnesota
and elsewhere: decentralized, natural waste water treatment
technologies (constructed wetlands, solar aquatic, earth filtered,
etc.): natural soil remineralization alternatives to toxic chemical
fertilization (from road aggregate quarries, reservoir silts, etc.:
indigenous, "waste" and alternative materials (fly ash, coal
residuals, sulphur, caliche clays, composite wood fiber, straw/clay,
straw bales, bamboo concrete reinforcing, etc.).
- Consumption-reducing reliance upon "green" and appropriate
technologies and designs employing: "electronic highway"
tele-commuting, tele-marketing, tele-medicine, etc.: digitalized
magazines, news"papers", textbooks", picturebooks", etc.: increased
miniaturization of motors, appliances, tools, furniture components,
building components, etc.; space conserving design using mirrors,
lofts, storage consolidation systems, trash compactors, multiple use
room/equipment systems; reusable container systems and cartage
systems; design of longer lasting durable goods for a growing market
segment that rejects planned obsolescence; increased "green
seal"-oriented purchasing in the mainstream marketplace; myriads of
soft and appropriate technology alternatives.
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- Planning and land use for Community Sustainability
Infrastructures, efficiency and livability that encourages: in-fill
over sprawl: compactness, higher density low-rise residential:
transit-oriented (TODs) and pedestrian-oriented development (PODs):
bicycle circulation networks; work-to-home proximity;
mixed-use-development: co-housing, housing over shops, downtown
residential; inter-modal transportation malls and facilities; water
conservation, wetlands restoration, sound flood plains uses; land use
planning tools such as geographic information systems (GIS), Planning
for Community Energy, Environmental and Economic Sustainability
(PLACE3S), Land Evaluation and Site Assessment (LISA), urban growth
boundaries (UGBs).
- An overall societal shift in attitudes towards Sustainable
Community Development: towards patterns of living and land use to be
found in the more sustainable arrangements of many Western European
countries where trolleys, rapid transit, trains and biking, walking
and hiking are encouraged by infrastructures, technologies and
business investments: towards cost and resource efficiencies - - with
their ecologically beneficial side effects: towards pollution
prevention and industrial ecology; towards "beyond-compliance"
corporate values; toward increasing emphasis upon healthy diets,
exercise and recreation that uses the geography of the nearby region
(or "community constellation") to its optimum; towards community
service activities aimed at combined recreation, education and
environmental restoration; towards the reintroduction of nature to the
urban landscape; and towards a reconnection of society as a whole to
the elements and energies of nature and the rural landscape.
- Sustainable Community Development economics: including social
and ecological investment portfolios, public private partnerships and
physical development financial proformas; true-cost accounting;
life-cycle costing; local capital retention; replacement economics;
production and services value-added strategies; community currencies;
credit unions,employee-owned businesses; commercial banking supports
for communities such as "green lining" versus "red lining" (loaning
encouragement versus denials), EEMs (Energy Efficient Mortgages), IDAs
(subsidized Individual Development Accounts) for publicly or privately
matched low-income
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twelve regional U.S. privately held Federal Home Loan Banks);
women's micro-loan enterprise lending circles: U.S. federal and state
subsidy and matching fund plans for home ownership savings and loans;
industrial ecology complexes and "zero-emissions" industrial
incubators and mixed-use districts; sustainable enterprise parks and
technology incubators; urban "brownfields" reclamation and
pollution-prevention redevelopment programs; transportation/ land
joint development and public investment value capture.
Many such innovations are increasingly in place in the more
conserving economies of Scandinavia, Japan, the Netherlands, Germany
and Switzerland, as well as in cities such as the exemplary Curitiba,
Brazil, Vancouver, Canada, and Kaundborg Denmark. Kaundborg's
community sustainability agenda involves a thirty year old
heat/gypsum/fish/power/etc.-based "closed-loop" industrial metabolic
use of natural resources. Germany has instituted a nationally
mandatory use-reuse "waste" management process. Brazil and China (in
selected pilot efforts) promote sustainably integrated bio-mass
energy/food/fibre production.
New systems of planning to encourage "green" development are used
by such places in the United States as Austin, Texas (the Green
Builder Program), and Tucson, Arizona (Civano Newtown), or in the
Netherlands Econolia (government subsidized) and Morra Park, Drachten
(privately financed). In many nations citizens are taking the lead.
Industrialists are begining to take an active part, finding
significant savings and profits are awaiting them. Globally, the
dialogue has begun about how we build and how we shape communities
sustainably.
Conclusion: COMMUNITIES "RE-MAPPING" FOR A
SUSTAINABLE FUTURE
Science says this ever-industrializing civilization, as it goes, is
unsustainable. Ecologically these are matters of national and
international security according to the warnings of science: including
the "Warning" released in 1992 from Atlanta by the Union of Concerned
Scientists (over 1500 signatories and 99 Nobel science laureates); and
that released jointly by the National Academy of Science and the
British Union, also in 1992. They see this urban-rural industrial
society having but three, two or even but one decade in which to
significantly recast itself. Recent atmospheric findings by climate
sciences greatly underscore these grave concerns.
-23
Clearly, both urbanization and ecology must be in the equation.
Urbanization is industry's largest aggregated product - - its major
impact upon both mankind and nature. Our rapidly urbanizing species
is nearing 50% metropolitan, heading for the great majority of us
within one more generation. In fact, globally urban population is
expanding at twice the rate of the human family itself! The U.S. is
almost 90% metropolitan region dwelling. Already over twenty-six
metropolitan areas are near or over ten million in population, several
over thirty. Yet people do not readily "see" urbanization, or "see"
their own collective interests in the forms that urbanization takes.
If the two domains, ecology and urbanization, are not bridged soon,
the way ahead will be very much limited. Importantly, our modern
sciences, commerce, industry, academia, politics, government
bureaucracies and the public media have not truly "seen" urbanization
either - - certainly not as the causal influence of unsustainability
it has beome. The U.S., for instance, has 5% of world population and
uses 25-30% of world resources. Its spread out and environmentally
costly urbanization is one expression of how this holds true.
Concentrating on the trees, we've failed to see the woods. Our
communities are humanity's foremost physical artifacts, yet they get
designed in an unconsious way, proceeding in many ways on
counter-productive paths. Globally, no one has been "watching the
store". Notable exceptions have included certain United Nations
colloquies, including its several summits, where the importance of the
interfaces between urbanization and ecology are becoming increasingly
explicit. Yet nations are few that base their policies upon these
realities.
Through its pioneering communities the United States is now in a
promising search of the sustainable in broadest terms of the social
(Community Partnership), the economic (Community Enterprise), the
environmental - - both built and natural - - (Community Conservation)
and the reintergration of all three (Community Design). The fate of
its communities raises most of the social, economic and environmental
crises and opportunities before civilization as a whole. There are
many U.S. communities with such an agenda. It is one that invites
the full spectrum of citizen interests. It is a politically
non-partisan theme so far, this theme of Sustainable Community.
No attempt has been made here to depict the different forms future
settlements may take. It may prove unlikely that the future will
support highly centralized, 19th-century "Victorian" technology-based
places. More likely, there will be the linking up of networks of
communities of varied sizes within quite varied and multiple regional
contexts, such as "Community Constellations" linked by compacts based
upon common interests. Between the communities will be rural
landscapes - - highly
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functional landscapes - - based upon entirely fresh understandings
of landscape ecology and its integral relationship to the
sustainability of urbanization.
For this hopeful future we may envision an entirely fresh set of
infrastructures that use fully automated, very light, elevated rail
systems for daytime metro region travel and nighttime goods movement,
such as have been conceptualized and being positioned for production
at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis; we will see all
settlements linked up by extensive bike, recreation and agro-forestry
"E-ways" (environment-ways such as in Madison, Wisconsin; we will find
healthy, productive soils where there is decline and erosion through
the widespread use of remineralization from igneous and volcanic rock
sources (much of it the surplus quarry fines, or "rockdust", from
concrete and asphalt-type road construction or from reservoir silts);
we will be growing foods, dietary supplements and herbs that make over
our unsustainable reliance upon foods and medicines that have adverse
soil, environmental, or health side-effects less and less land will go
for animal husbandry and more for grains, tubers and legumes.
Gradually, decent standards of equity will be in place for women, for
children and for the disadvantaged; the "peace dividend" will be
forced upon us as the insane costs of military armament becomes
challenged globally.
Today, fortunately, an American ethical shift is getting under way
towards sustainability as an accepted paradigm. The White House has
hosted a range of non-partisan dialogues for this subject, including
the President's Council on Sustainable Development, a two-year
industry and environmental sector reporting effort to complete its
findings this year. It is to give strong emphasis to "sustainable
communities". What pioneers in the local sustainability exploration
processes under way here are sensing is that Community Sustainability
is a truly powerful organizing paradigm. Many U.S. communities are
already performing as leaders in a wide variety of operational
contexts - contexts such as center city revitalization, neighborhood
development, quality of life, governmental decentralization, fiscal
stability, metropolitan integration, public/private interplay, or
public information access.
"Community Sustainability" employed as a conceptual framework for
re-mapping modern society's new Third Millennium reality - - and as a
roadmap for local action - - can help mobilize each individual
community and thereby society as a whole. As critical mass is reached
in this direction, as this idea takes hold gradually and in a wide
diversity of places, it holds greatest promise for the future of the
human family.
-25
This new reality acts within three basic levels of society: it is
about personal choices, preferences, concerns and fulfillments; it
addresses one's local contexts of community; and it is about
mobilizing the community's interests as projected into the regional
dimensions of the land. The concerned citizens of modern society are
expanding their basic sense of reality and of possibility by engaging
themselves across these three levels of personal awareness and action.
It is the direction local action must adopt to influence the global
patterns from which local outcomes evolve.
Sustainability at the community level is how we can integrate our
lives, strengthen our economics, reconnect our society with nature and
heal this planet of its potentially avoidable, human-induced
ecological decline. The meaningfulness of these new Community
Sustainability possibilities affects people. The sense of
responsibiltiy for their community's choices expands. In the future
this will become evident to most people, and, in the near future,
hopefully to all those who are concerned for their own communities.
Surely an expanding U.S. commitment to Community Sustainability now is
one of global society's more hopeful paths for bringing about a
transformation of how sustainably all nations produce and consume.
The recognitition of this subject, Community Sustainability, is of
central concern to modern, global urban-rural industrial society. Its
integrative message embraces the social, the economic and the
environmental - - it per force includes jobs, opportunity, equity,
quality of life, efficiency and health.
Today modern society's collective challenge is to contain the
excesses of its urbanization while time yet remains. We must reform
the negative ecological consequences and thereby, in both social and
economic terms, transform the future in a hopeful way. We can and
must design a common future based upon settlement patterns,
technologies and attitudes that work with nature rather than against
it. The goal must be to create both economically viable and
ecologically sustainable communities for all human families
everywhere.
Such shifts will take their time. First the local choices that
incrementally shape the local future have to become focused,
deliberate and integrated with respect to local interests and to
Community Sustainability. This is the grassroots answer and the
international bedrock for a hopeful outcome ahead - - one that is
becoming obvious to more and more concerned citizens everywhere.
-- END --
This document was hand-typed by Laura Mize, a long-time ECO member.
It would not have been available on the web without her effort.
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