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Rethinking Public Land Use Planning

Rethinking Public Land Use Planning. Mark Squillace, University of Colorado Law School 2014 J.B. and Maurice C. Shapiro Environmental Law Symposium. The Problem. The current process for public land use planning is broken It takes too long It’s too complex

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Rethinking Public Land Use Planning

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  1. Rethinking Public Land Use Planning

    Mark Squillace, University of Colorado Law School 2014 J.B. and Maurice C. Shapiro Environmental Law Symposium
  2. The Problem The current process for public land use planning is broken It takes too long It’s too complex It fails to meaningfully engage the public It invites litigation Even if the process could be fixed the current system is inadequate Planning needs to be done at multiple scales Planning is pointless without a robust program for monitoring and adapting
  3. The Solution A layered planning approachthat avoids trying to do too much at any stage of the process A robust monitoring program that is designed to ensure timely adaptation of plans as necessary to reflect new information or changing conditions
  4. Geographic Scale Landscape Level Planning Mapping/Zoning Exercises Only Resource Area Planning Activity Level Planning The Layered Planning Approach Project Level Planning Monitoring and Adaptation
  5. The Planning Cycle
  6. Thank you. Your comments are most welcome!

    Mark Squillace, University of Colorado Law School mark.squillace@colorado.edu
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