opening summit for public
TRANSCRIPT
seven50.org
@seven50plan
#seven50
Opening Summit Better Region
Better Life
Opening Summit Agenda
Registration Opens
Welcome AddressesVictor Dover: “50 Year Plan: The Impact Starts Now”
Allison DeFoor: “Nine Generations in Florida (and Counting)”
Quick Poll: Participants
Bob Burchell: “State of the Region and Future Trends”
9:00
10:00 10:15
10:30
10:45
11:00
Better Region
Better Life
Opening Summit Agenda
Bill Spikowski: “The Numbers, and Why They Matter in Regional Planning”
Neal Peirce: “Regions Will Define the Future”
Shaping the Plan: Working Lunch, Meet with Your Group
Quick Poll: Ideas
Work Group Highlights
Next Steps
11:20
11:35
12:45
2:15
2:302:50
Better Region
Better Life
WELCOME
Better Region
Better Life
Joe Gillie, Old School Square
WELCOME
Better Region
Better Life
Mayor Ferreri, Greenacres
Thank you Better Region
Better Life
Exec CommitteeMr. Doug BourniqueMr. Doug BartelThe Honorable Heather Carruthers**Mr. Art CobbMs. Carla ColemanMs. Sara E. FainThe Honorable Samuel FerreriThe Honorable Ed FieldingMr. Kevin J. FoleyDr. Dennis P. GallonThe Honorable Suzanne GunzburgerThe Honorable Kathryn HensleyThe Honorable Peter O’BryanThe Honorable Karen MarcusDr. Edwin Massey
Ms. Gepsie MetellusThe Honorable Tod MoweryMr. Jack OsterholtMs. Susan E. O’RourkeMr. Gus PegoMr. William PerryThe Honorable Raquel RegaladoMs. Kelly SmallridgeMr. Michael SpringMr. Edwin SwiftMr. Norman TaylorMr. Ramon Trias, AICPMr. James WolfeMr. Barrington Wright
Thank you Better Region
Better Life
Chip LaMarca Broward County Commissioner Tom Powers City of Coral Springs Vice Mayor
Beam Furr City of Hollywood CommissionerPatricia Asseff City of Hollywood Commissioner
Patricia Williams City of Lauderdale Lakes CommissionerEdwina Coleman City of Lauderdale Lakes Vice Mayor
Benjamin Williams City of Lauderdale Lakes CommissionerGloria Lewis City of Lauderdale Lakes Commissioner
Wayne Messam City of Miramar CommissionerAnne Sallee City of Oakland Park Mayor
Shelby Lowe City of Riviera Beach City CouncilmanEula Clarke City of Stuart Commissioner
Sean McCrackine Comm. Jean Monestime, Miami-Dade, Chief Legislative AideDan Liftman Congressman Alcee Hastings, Staff Assistant
Miguel Otero Congressman Mario Diaz-Balart, District DirectorWendi Lipsich Office of Congressman Ted Deutch
Victoria Nowlan Fl House of Representatives, Chief Legislative AssistantDoug Smith Martin County Commissioner
Jean Monestime Miami Dade County County CommissionerAbby Ross Staff to Rep Berman
Victoria Winslett Staff to Rep BermanLori Berman State Representative
Sandy Berman SFRPC Member
WELCOME
Better Region
Better Life
Marcela Camblor, AICP, Project Director
Dover, Kohl & PartnersCitizen-Based Regional Planning & Visioning
doverkohl.com @DoverKohl
Duany Plater-Zyberk & CompanyPlanning, Policy, Modeling Tools
dpz.com
Robert Burchell, PhD, Rutgers UniversityEconomic Analysis
http://policy.rutgers.edu/cupr
Emerge ConsultingPublic Outreach
Spikowski Planning AssociatesResearch & Model Ordinances
spikowski.com
Criterion PlannersScenario Modeling and Implementation
crit.com
Strategic EconomicsTOD Strategies
strategiceconomics.com
The Brookings InstitutionEconomic Advisory Panel
brookings.edu
HDRTransportation & Infrastructure
hdrinc.com
Hall Planning & EngineeringMultimodal Transportation
hpe-inc.com
ROAR MediaCommunicationsroarmedia.com
Paul Vrooman, University of MiamiPublic Education
Gorman & AssociatesHousing Strategygormanusa.com
Cardno ENTRIXEnviro Economics, Ecology, Sustainability & Climate Change
entrix.com
Cardno TBEBrownfield Redevelopment
tbegroup.com
Municipal Code CorporationCode Integrationmunicode.com
• Windsor, Indian River County• Towns, Villages, and Countryside Land Development
Regulations, St. Lucie County• Fort Pierce Waterfront & Corridor Plan• Downtown Stuart• South Martin County Regional Plan• Waterfront Quarter, Jupiter• Abacoa, Jupiter• Lake Okeechobee Regional Plan• Seven Cities - The U.S. 1 Corridor, Palm Beach County• Water Preserve Areas, TCRPC• Downtown Lake Worth Plan, TCRPC• Fox Property Study, TCRPC• Callery Judge Grove, Loxahatchee• Wellington, Palm Beach County• PBC Agricultural Reserve• West Palm Beach Downtown Plan• Royal Palm Beach Corridor Plan• North Federal Corridor, Delray Beach• Charleston Place, Boca Raton• Davie Downtown Plan• Mirabella, Miramar• Western C-9 Basin, Miami-Dade & Broward Counties• Lake Belt Plan, Miami-Dade County• Miami Lakes Town Center• North Miami Beach Bicycle Masterplan• Aqua, Miami Beach• Miami Springs Downtown Plan• Downtown Doral• Miami 21• UM Miller School of Medicine, Miami• Miami-Dade County TND Ordinance• Miami-Dade County Agricultural & Rural Area Study• South Miami Hometown Plan• Downtown Kendall• Downtown Homestead Action Plan• Bluewater Carpet Cottages, Tavernier
Dover-Kohl & DPZ 30+ years local experience50+ SE Florida projects
Victor Dover FAICP
50 Year Plan: The Impact Starts Now
SE Florida Prosperity Plan Opening Summit
2062
2012
1962
it’s not very long?
1962
Key West Fort Lauderdale
Palm Beach
1962
Hurricane Dona
Cuban Missile Crisis
National Airlines – Miami
Chevrolet – Coral Gables
1962
The Jackie Gleason Show
1962
Streets
Neighborhoods
1962
“Here is the giant, plastic, metal, and unbreakable glass city of the 21st century. A city of science, of atomic power, of space travel, and of high culture.”
Frank R. Paul – Amazing Stories, 1939
Seattle World’s Fair
Disney Magic Highway USA
it’s plenty of time?
Sebastian, Indian River County 1968
Seba
stia
n B
oule
vard
Sebastian, Indian River County 2012
Seba
stia
n B
oule
vard
Deerfield Beach, Broward County 1968
Flo
rida
Eas
t Coa
st R
ailw
ay
Hillsboro Blvd
Flo
rida
Eas
t Coa
st R
ailw
ay
Hillsboro Blvd
I-95
Deerfield Beach, Broward County 2012
Miami Dade County 1968
Kendall Drive
Kendall Drive
Miami Dade County 2012
Flor
ida
Turn
pike
confidence.
1733
Oglethorpe Plan for Savannah,Lines drawn on the ground last for generations, longer than buildings
Savannah, GA
1791
Plan for Washington, DC
1909
1909 Plan of Chicago – Burnham & Bennett
“Make no little plans….
…They have no magic to stir men's blood and probably themselves will not be realized. Make big plans; aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble, logical diagram once recorded will never die, but long after we are gone will be a living thing, asserting itself with ever-growing insistency. Remember that our sons and grandsons are going to do things that would stagger us. Let your watchword be order and your beacon beauty. Think big.
Daniel Burnham (probably…)
1921
1928
“All development is a public-private partnership”
1970s-80s
1962
2012
new era
Seven50.org as of June 22, 2012
Paradise (5 votes, 2%)
A good place to live, getting better everyday (70 votes, 31%)
A work in progress with a long way to go (119 votes, 53%)
Needs work and not getting better (16 votes, 7%)
Getting worse everyday (11 votes, 4%)
Total Votes: 221
How would you describe Southeast Florida today?
10
10.5
11
11.5
12
12.5
0 - 4 4 - 7 7 - 10 10 -15 15+
Net Residential Density (housing units per residential acre)
CO
2 (K
G)
-- m
ean
dai
ly p
er
per
son
10
10.5
11
11.5
12
12.5
0 - 4 4 - 7 7 - 10 10 -15 15+
Net Residential Density (housing units per residential acre)
CO
2 (K
G)
-- m
ean
dai
ly p
er
per
son
North Redmond Queen Anne
Source: LUTAQH final report, King County ORTP, 2005
CO2 and density
8
9
10
11
12
13
0 - 0.1 0.1 - 0.2 0.2 - 0.3 0.3 - 0.4 0.4+
Intersections per acre
CO
2 (K
G)
-- m
ean
dai
ly p
er
per
son
8
9
10
11
12
13
0 - 0.1 0.1 - 0.2 0.2 - 0.3 0.3 - 0.4 0.4+
Intersections per acre
CO
2 (K
G)
-- m
ean
dai
ly p
er
per
son
Source: LUTAQH final report, King County ORTP, 2005
North Redmond Queen Anne
CO2 and connectivity
9.5
10
10.5
11
11.5
12
12.5
0 1 - 2 3 - 9 10 - 29 30 - 165
# of Neighborhood Retail Parcels
CO
2 (K
G) -
- mea
n da
ily p
er
pers
on
9.5
10
10.5
11
11.5
12
12.5
0 1 - 2 3 - 9 10 - 29 30 - 165
# of Neighborhood Retail Parcels
CO
2 (K
G) -
- mea
n da
ily p
er
pers
on
64
Source: LUTAQH final report, King County ORTP, 2005
North Redmond Queen Anne
CO2 and convenient retail
national call to actionobesity trends among US adults
No Data <10% 10%-14% 15-19% 20%
25%
Source: Mokdad AH CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance SystemSource: Marla Hollander
Zimmerman/Volk Associates
the great convergence
the great convergence
L.U.D.M. of the F.L.U.E. of the C.D.M.P. per F.S.L.G.C.P.A. of 1985
Seven50.org as of June 22, 2012
More economically resilient (144 votes, 63%)
More walkable (95 votes, 42%)
More bikable (78 votes, 34%)
Safer for children (49 votes, 21%)
More environmentally sustainable (108 votes, 47%)
More prepared for changes to climate (60 votes, 26%)
More sociable/convivial (40 votes, 17%)
More equitable, open to diverse communities (58 votes, 25%)
More attractive aesthetically (55 votes, 24%)
More unified as a region (112 votes, 49%)
Total Voters: 226 Total Votes: 799
In the future I would like Southeast Florida to be:
Seven50.org as of June 22, 2012
More economically resilient (144 votes, 63%)
More walkable (95 votes, 42%)
More bikable (78 votes, 34%)
Safer for children (49 votes, 21%)
More environmentally sustainable (108 votes, 47%)
More prepared for changes to climate (60 votes, 26%)
More sociable/convivial (40 votes, 17%)
More equitable, open to diverse communities (58 votes, 25%)
More attractive aesthetically (55 votes, 24%)
More unified as a region (112 votes, 49%)
Total Voters: 226 Total Votes: 799
In the future I would like Southeast Florida to be:
2014
four summits
models: trend, and…?
data warehouse
6 workgroups
engage online
start the conversation
Allison DeFoor
Nine Generations(and counting)
SE Florida Prosperity Plan Opening Summit
Bob Burchell, Rutgers University
State of the Region and Future Trends
SE Florida Prosperity Plan Opening Summit
The Demographic State of the Region and Future
Trends:The Effects of Larger
Geographies
Seven 50 Opening Summit11:00 a.m. to 11:20 a.m.Wednesday 27 June 2012
Robert W. Burchell, Ph.D.
88
Demographic Trends in Countries Abroad
Demographic Trends in Countries AbroadIn 2050, world population will reach 9.1 billion. (1)
• India will be the most populous country in the world.Projections show that by 2020, of 100 people:
• 56 will be from Asia (19 Chinese, 17 Indian*); • 16 from Africa (13 from Sub-Saharan Africa); • 13 from the Western Hemisphere (4 from U.S.); • 7 from Eastern Europe and former Soviet Union; • 5 from Western Europe; 3 from the Middle East. (2)
World population growth is trending downward. (1)
• Most growth will be in less-developed countries; developed countries’ growth will turn negative by 2030. (1) * 21 and 22, respectively, by 2050.
90
Demographic Trends in Countries Abroad In 1950, the population of Europe and Russia
constituted about 22% of world population; by 2050, these countries will constitute just 7.5%. (2)
Russia’s population will contract over the next 50 years from 141 million today to 120 million– 2060 will be equivalent to 1960. This decline will result from both lower fertility rates and higher mortality rates. (11)
Male unemployment is noticeable in high-income economies (>$12,200 income, per capita). (12)
By 2050, within a population of over 1.3 billion, China will have over 300 million people over age 65, with limited social infrastructure to care for that population. (11, 2) 91
Demographic Trends in Countries AbroadBy 2050, India will have 1.7 billion people. The majority
is expected to be living in some of the most impoverished conditions in the world. (11)
Many families in India (and to a greater extent, in Africa) do not participate in a cash economy. Commodities are grown and bartered; children’s work has value. (15)
In Africa, nearly all of the growth increase is expected to be in the sub-Saharan region, where there is expected to be virtually no economic growth, and where AIDS will significantly impact life expectancy. (2)
Thus, one should not assume that projected economic and demographic growth of China and India, or Russia and Japan, would relegate the U.S. to a second-class economic power by 2050. (11, 2) 92
Demographic Trends in Countries AbroadJapan’s population is affected by declining fertility and
increasing life spans. Fertility declines relate to women marrying later, or not at all. Life expectancy is 7 years longer for women and increasing. (13)
World: Working age population (15-64) will decrease in Europe (Italy -39%; Germany -18%; Britain -12%; France -11%) Russia (-8%) and Japan (-3%); it will increase in the United States (+33%) and Canada (+17%). This is related to immigration policies. (4, 2)
In Europe, more coordinated immigration policies, resembling those of the United States, could enable this geographic area to address its declining rate of natural increase. (29)
93
Demographic Trends in the United States
Demographic Trends in the United States
National and Regional• The U.S. population will be about 380 million in
2040, and 420 million in 2060. (5,39)
• From 2000 (281.4M) to 2010 (308.7M), U.S. population increased by 27.3 million: 52.4 % was in the South; 32.0% in the West; 10.8% in the Midwest; and 6.3% in the Northeast. (16)
• Average growth over the period 2000-2010 in the U.S. was 9.7%. The South increased by 14.3%; the West by 13.8%; the Midwest by 3.3%; and the Northeast by 3.2%. (16)
• These regional patterns are projected to continue for the next 50 years at a reduced rate of growth. (16)
95
Demographic Trends in the United States Immigration
• ½ of 2000-2010 growth in the U.S. is due to immigration; half is due to natural increase. (7)
• Until the 1960s, immigration to the U.S. was primarily restricted to Europeans. (17, 23)
• The 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act eliminated non-European quotas, and opened the doors to immigrants from all parts of the world. (17, 23)
• By 2050, for the first time, Caucasian Americans will cease to be a majority (47%). (8)
• Differential fertility rates: U.S. average, 2.0; Hispanics, 2.4; non-Hispanic blacks, 2.1; non-Hispanic whites and Asians, 1.8; will affect population growth in different geographic areas at any scale. (8)
96
Demographic Trends in the United States Multigenerational Households (MGHs)
• Definition I - Three generations, one roof—3.7% of all households in 2000; 4.4% of all households in 2010. (9)
• Definition II – Definition I, plus households comprised of grandparents/grandchildren, and households comprised of parents/adult children: 16.2% of all households, 2008. (18)
• Immigrants from Latin America and Asia are especially likely to have these sorts of living arrangements. (18)
• In 2010, the share of the U.S. population that lived in MGHs (16.2%) was its highest since the 1960s (when it had reached 15%). This rate was up from a low of 12% in the 1980s. (18)
• MGH rate will not fall until 2050 due to economic incapacities of GEN X (1965-81)/GEN Y (82-1999). (18)
97
Demographic Trends in the United StatesMultigenerational Households (MGHs)
• Both older women (> 65) and younger men (25-34) have a 20% chance of living in an MGH. (18)
• The poverty rate (2009) for all people living in MGHs was 11.5%, versus a poverty rate of 14.6% for people in all other types of households. (10)
• For unemployed people, those living in MGHs had a poverty rate of 17.5%, while those with other living arrangements had a poverty rate of 30.3%. (10)
• Multi-generational households will diminish in 2050 as baby-boomers’ wealth transfers to their children. (18)
• There is also a multigenerational workforce made up of pre-Boomers, Boomers, Gen X, and Gen Y. (19)
98
Demographic Trends in the United StatesMarrying-Out (of Race/Ethnicity)
• In 2010, marrying out of one’s ethnicity reached an all-time high in the U.S. Among newlyweds, 9% of whites, 17% of blacks, 26% of Hispanics, and 28% of Asians married members of other racial/ethnic groups. (20)
• White-Asian couples (2010) had significantly higher average household incomes ($71,000) than all other pairings; their incomes were higher than those of white ($60,000) and Asian couples ($62,000). (20)
• The rate of marrying-out varies by geography. It is highest in the West (22%), followed by the South and Northeast (13%) and the Midwest (11%) (2010). (20)
99
Demographic Trends in the United States
The Dominance of the Elderly• In 1970, seniors comprised 10% of the U.S. population
(20m); by 2010, they comprised 13% (40m); in 2050, they will comprise 21% (85m). (21)
• Households without children (including seniors) were half of the population (52%) in 1960; two-thirds (68%) in 2005; and will be three-quarters (74%) by 2040. (22)
• Households without children will represent 90% of the growth of households from 2005-2040. (22)
• Every day in the decade of 2010-2020, 8,000 people will turn 65; from 2020-2030 that rate will be 8,250. (23)
100
Demographic Trends in the United States Women’s Workforce Presence
• The gender ratio of college admissions in the United States is 60% female and 40% male. (23)
• In married-couple households, women now provide 47% of the overall household income. (23)
• In 2008, 63.3% of women were breadwinners or co-breadwinners; in 1967 that figure was 27.7%. (23)
• Today, men versus women are more adversely affected by unemployment: men bore 80% of the job losses during the recent economic downturn. So bad for men, it has been called the “man-cession”. (23)
101
Implications of Demographic Trends for Southeast Florida
Implications of Demographic Trends for Southeast Florida World Trends – Population Flows• Increase in growth in Russian and Japanese
tourism/residency. Europe linked to euro (+now). (31,32)
• Some growth in Chinese tourism/residency from later working-age/affluent population. Asian immigrants now outnumber those from South/Central America. (14, 29, 40)
• Sustained growth in immigration from South/Central America, and the Caribbean. (29)
• Counter-trend: Economic growth in Brazil, Argentina, and Mexico could draw workers from across Latin America, diverting them from reaching the U.S. Opening up of Cuba could also produce a counter-trend from the U.S. (29) 103
Implications of Demographic Trends for Southeast Florida U.S. Trends – Population Flows• Florida was one of the five fastest/largest growing states
for most of 70 years. 2040-26m; 2060-31m. (6)
• Population growth in Florida slowed or was negative during recession; 2011 Census releases show return to growth with SE leading (38)
• The Sunbelt (inc. South) will continue to garner the largest component of growth through 2060 (25), and Florida will be one of 9-11 U.S. super-regions. (24)
• The South will get increased Hispanic immigration through 2060. Aging Hispanic immigrants will have different social-service needs than aging Northern migrants. (16)
104
Implications of Demographic Trends for Southeast Florida
U.S. Trends – Marrying-out-Increasing Average Age• Marrying-out trends will affect Southeast Florida—41%
of intermarriages are white/Hispanic couples. (23)
• Florida (5th nationally) and Southeast Florida have relatively high percentages of elderly, and both will have higher percentages of seniors in 2030. (27)
• Southeast Florida’s population had been getting younger, in contrast to its history as an aging region; this trend will be reversed by retirement of Baby Boomers. (28)
• Overall in SE Fla., elderly 23.3% of population in 2030 (16.6% 2010); 28.4% Treasure Coast; 20.7% South Fla. (29)
105
Implications of Demographic Trends for Southeast Florida U.S. Trends – Gender Changes• The college gender ratio will hit Southeast Florida as
more Hispanic families enter the mainstream. (34)
• Women will reverse representation trends on private/ public boards as their education/wealth increase. (37)
• Woman’s ascendance in Florida, and within Southeast Florida, could likely exceed national trends. (35)
• Women in Southeast Florida will continue with their own blue collar employment (health, service), but will also move into male white collar employment, as well as its hierarchy. (36)
106
Implications of Demographic Trends for Southeast Florida Southeast Florida Trends – South/North Immigration• Miami-Dade, and less-so Broward, will continue to be
numerically dominated by south/north immigration.(30) • Immigration will be largely from South/Central America
and the Caribbean.• Palm Beach, Martin, St. Lucie, Indian River will have larger
percent increases in S/N immigration. (30)
• Increase of foreign born in all S. E. Fla. counties.• Southeast Florida, older; foreign-born, older. (30)
• The tug-of-war between immigration and migration will be won by immigration in terms of numbers. Migration plus general aging will continue to increase overall age. (30) 107
Implications of Demographic Trends for Southeast Florida Southeast Florida Trends – North/South Migration• Florida – 19M population 2011; SE Florida, 6.2M
(2011) (29)
• Continued loss of northern migration to other states, Middle, Northwest, and Northeast Florida. (29)
• North to south migration will be concentrated more in Indian River, Martin, and Palm Beach counties; less in St. Lucie, Broward, Miami-Dade, Monroe counties. (29)
• Tourism, then northern migration to Southeast Florida, will pick-up an Eastern European-former Soviet Union component who are relatively new U.S. workers/citizens. (31)
108
Implications of Demographic Trends for Southeast Florida Southeast Florida Trends – Natural Increase/Job Base• Natural increase in the non-Caucasian Hispanic and black
populations, especially in Miami-Dade, Broward, St. Lucie counties. (23) Per capita income may be lower in Southeast Florida but higher than the U.S. and Florida. (29)
• Southeast Florida may grow slower than Florida as a whole but faster than the U.S./most southern states. (29)
• Middle Florida will increase in job base and pull economic growth from the Southeast Florida region. (29)
• Southeast Florida will experience growing trade with South/Central America and the Caribbean; unemployment initially high (<10%-2012) but region poised for recovery. (3, 29)
109
Endnotes (1)1. www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/2006/09/picture.htm2. https://www.cia.gov/library/reports/general-reports-1/Demo_Trends_For_Web.pdf3. www.thewealthreport.net/The-Wealth-Report-2012.pdf4. www.un.org/esa/population/publications/wpp2006/FS_ageing.pdf5. http://www.macfound.org/media/article_pdfs/FULL_REPORT.PDF6. http://www.bebr.ufl.edu/content/florida-county-population-projections7. www.cis.org/2000-2010-record-setting-decade-of-immigration8. www.pewsocialtrends.org/2012/05/17/explaining-why-minority-births-now-outnumber-white-births9. www.therepublic.com/view/story/a6eceed37547df963197eb9cf1016b/IN--Exchange-Multigenerational-Househ
olds10. www.pewsocialtrends.org/2011/10/03/fighting-poverty-in-a-bad-economy-americans-move-in-with-relatives11. http://www.census.gov/newsroom/releases/archives/international_population/cb11-116.html12. www.tradingeconomics.com/high-income/long-term-unemployment-wb-data.html 13. www.forbes.com/2010/06/14/japan-population-aging-business-oxford-analytica.html14. http://www.wttc.org/research/economic-impact-research/regional-reports/asia-pacific/15. http://planningcommission.nic.in/plans/planrel/12appdrft/approach_12plan.pdf16. www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-01.pdf17. www.thenagain.info/webchron/usa/immigrationact.html18. http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2010/03/18/the-return-of-the-multi-generational-family-household/19. http://assets.aarp.org/www.aarp.org_/cs/misc/leading_a_multigenerational_workforce.pdf20. http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1616/american-marriage-interracial-interethnic
110
Endnotes (2)21. http://www.flickr.com/photos/usgao/5509657762/22. www.epa.gov/aging/resources/presentations/2008_1028_nelson_reconstruction.pdf23. www.kenan-flagler.unc.edu/~/media/files/kenaninstitute/UNC_KenanInstitute_2010Census24. www.floridafuturessurvey.com/2009/10/demographic-trends.html25. www.bebr.ufl.edu/news/sun-belts-comeback26. www.forbes.com/sites/joelkotkin/2011/12/22/the-sun-belts-comeback27. www.bebr.ufl.edu/news/census-shows-fewer-seniors-some-south-florida-cities28. www.heraldtribune.com/article/20110818/wire/110819592/-1/news?p=2&+c=pg29. http://www.slideshare.net/Jacqueshart/se-florida-demograghic-trends-dick-ogburn30. http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2011-03-21/news/fl-census-change-20110318_1_whites-communities-dick-ogb
urn31. http://blogs.sun-sentinel.com/south-florida-travel/2012/05/29/russias-aeroflot-to-start-flights-to-miami-in-octo
ber/32. http://www.miami.us.emb-japan.go.jp/en/bilateral.html33. http://www.travelandleisure.com/slideshows/top-10-asia-spas34. http://www.alligator.org/news/campus/article_206135ea-3bb0-11df-9902-001cc4c002e0.html35. http://www.bpwfl.org/36. http://flwbc.org/37. http://www.theglasshammer.com/news/2009/02/19/breaking-the-glass-ceiling-in-florida/38. http://miami.cbslocal.com/2012/04/05/census-figures-show-people-once-again-moving-to-s-florida/39. http://www.bebr.ufl.edu/news/usa-sees-flattest-growth-population-1940s40. http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2010-03-05/business/fl-china-tourism-20100305_1_visit-florida-chinese-travel-
overseas-trip
111
Bill Spikowski, FAICP
The Numbers, and Why They Matter
SE Florida Prosperity Plan Opening Summit
Regional Transportation
climate change
“lidar” remote sensing
drive everywhere?Vehicle-Miles Traveled (VMT)
Indicators: Measurements that provide information about past andcurrent trends to assist communityleaders in making decisions that affect future outcomes.
Benchmarks: Quantifiable targets that crystalize community aspirations. Indicators can be used to measure progress over time in achieving these targets.
Austin RegionAustin Region
MarylandMaryland
but what if: energy prices rise? federal government expenditures drop?
FloridaFlorida
Florida
but what if: energy prices rise dramatically? migration of people and capital shifts? sea-level rise affects coastal communities?
Neal Peirce, Citistates Group
Regions Will Define the Future
SE Florida Prosperity Plan Opening Summit
Opening Summit
Shaping the Plan: Working Lunch,
Meet With Your Group
Better Region
Better Life
Education, Workforce & Econ DevelopmentGymnasium
Development PatternsGymnasium
Environment, Natural Resources & AgricultureGymnasium (Upstairs)
Climate Resiliency Classroom 2
Community Assets & CultureClassroom 6
Inclusive Regional Leadership & EquityStudio 2
Clarence Anthony
Lightning Round: Workgroup Highlights
SE Florida Prosperity Plan Opening Summit
NEXT STEPS
Better Region
Better Life
THANK YOU
Better Region
Better Life