Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Ecosystem based management meets planning: South Carolina case study


The David and Lucile Packard Foundation has funded PlaceMatters* to run three pilot projects, with the purpose of combining ecosystem-based management (EBM) tools within traditional planning.

Three counties in South Carolina are approaching planning in a new way: the Berkeley-Charleston-Dorchester region is using new methods to assess their vulnerability to natural hazards, resource conservation, and socioeconomic factors. This analysis will then shape the BCD Council of Governments regional land use and transportation plans.

The approach is to get experts together, identify hazards, areas of biological sensitivity, and economic considerations. Then PlaceMatters worked with local partners to engage the community to come up with an actual plan based on the science. The team hosted a Tools Expo in April of 2008 in South Carolina that brought together regional decision-makers and colleagues who could provide new methods to achieve town goals. As the BCD process goes forward, feedback from stakeholders will be provided via an interactive website that provides feedback to the planning process.

Some key lessons learned and successes in the project to date include:
·    Creation of a Local Project Implementation Team.  This team connected PlaceMatters staff with local experts on biodiversity, sources of hazard data, as well as acting as liaison with local partner organizations. 
·    Biodiversity Expert Group. Initial outreach to biodiversity experts to ask for assistance in gathering data was challenging.  Eventually, a group was gathered for one afternoon to collectively determine conservation goals and discuss available data. 
Some key tools, used by the firm PlaceMatters, are:
·    CommunityViz to analyze various social and economic impacts and create a future build-out scenario
·    NatureServe Vista to analyze performance of the current conditions and two future scenarios with respect to conservation goals
·    NOAA’s Community Resilience and Vulnerability Assessment Tool to analyze hazard risk with respect to vulnerable populations and facilities

The results of the scenario analysis will be shared with the BCD COG and its consultant team in order to successfully integrate this information into the public engagement and planning process.

Project Website: www.resilient-communities.org
--Jacob Smith
Jacob Smith, is a PlaceMatters-Packard Fellow based in Denver, Colorado

* PlaceMatters is an organization that helps citizens visualize and shape the impact of development and changes in land use upon their communities, operating as a 501c3 organization. This section of the Internal Revenue Code denotes an officially recognized, American, not for profit organization.

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