I’m a son of a planner. When I say it out loud, for dramatic effect, I make a slight pause after the second “a” before delivering the word planner as the punchline.
It’s true. My dad was a city planner when urban planning was a new thing. As the son of a planner, I’ve been attending planning meetings longer than I can literally remember.
Though my dad and I saw eye-to-eye on most things, we differed when it came to planning. He was proud, for example, to live his entire life and never set foot in a Walmart. It must be mandatory as an urban planner to (wrongly) blame Walmart for the demise of America’s downtowns.
On the contrary, I am a huge fan of Walmart. I am proud to call a major Walmart investment in Ohio among the most impactful job-creating projects on which I’ve ever had the pleasure to work.
One thing is apparent on what we would agree. My dad wouldn’t recognize planning today.
First Thought: It’s Not
My Father’s Planning Anymore.
Planning used to be a positive exercise—zoning made to strategically invite complimentary development and land use.
It’s shifted.
I recently found myself observing a planning hearing. For a change, I was not personally involved. More than 40 people testified against single family homes being built in Heath that, by some crystal balls, may bring two and half times more school-aged kids than would generally be the case for expensive new homes. Though the meeting was 90% civil, some things were new to me: booing the other side as well as pandering instead of persuading.
I fear that the message now part of modern planning and zoning is simply: Keep out.
Another Thought: Is
Civility Lost Forever?
There’s no question that the evolution of planning has brought with it greater negativity.
According to a recent survey by the Ohio Economic Development Association, almost two out of three economic developers reported negative community sentiment as a challenge over the past year versus that topic not even making the list the year before.
There’s lots of reasons for the shift. Filling social media posts and procuring online thumbs up from an audience beyond the room scores points with some. Unbiased media coverage isn’t even in the room.
When trends shift one way, it’s easy to assume they will stay that way. I’ll take the high road and predict civility wins out. Some day.
Third Thought: A
Positive Plan For Employment.
Chandler, Arizona was 40 years ahead of Central Ohio in winning a semiconductor manufacturing investment from Intel. Chandler leaders cite the biggest decision their forefathers made that is paying dividends today is planning for future employment.
They call them employment corridors.
Chandler didn’t want to be a “company town” dependent on one major employer. They found a way to plan for future opportunity. There’s still development land in fast-growing Chandler that brings promises of job creation in the future.
Chandler is a model for the reasons to return to the strategic and positive side of planning and zoning.
Local planning and zoning focused
on creating employment opportunity is spot on.
That’s the sort of planning on which most people can agree.
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This column is a regular column in The Dispatch.


