The third
phase of the Full Circle project is the Common Ground participatory planning
process. The Full Circle partner organizations will convene face-to-face
participatory planning sessions, whereby local residents and neighborhood
leaders will come to consensus on their goals, concerns and desires about the
future of their communities. Timeline: January 2005 –December 2005
Planning for full potential-
how can the hopes and intentions of local residents be realized? What
kind of future is possible, or desirable, for local residents? Participatory
planning at the neighborhood level, informed by good data on existing and future
assets (including intangible human assets) targeting development efforts towards
the well-being of current local residents.
During this phase, CMAP will introduce the participatory planning model embodied
in the Common Ground initiative. This process of setting goals, evaluating
priorities, building consensus, and scenario building are all part of aligning
future development with the interests of local residents. Planning sessions will
be held over a period of 12 months. CMAP’s role in this participatory planning
process is to provide technical expertise and guidance. While CMAP will play an
integral role in assisting in the design of the planning process the workshops
will be implemented by each Full Circle partner organization at their own
discretion.
Key Components of the Common
Ground Participatory Process:
1. Process
Design is the first
step at being able to map out the planning process. A series of meetings will
convene the Full Circle partners with CMAP staff to discuss the Common Ground
planning process, and its applicability to each organization’s overall mission.
These sessions will help design the optimal path that should be initiated by
each organization. This process can take at least two sessions.
January-April
2005
2.
SWOT Analysis:
Identifying strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats should always be
done with as much public involvement as possible. This step can build on the
information and findings from the neighborhood inventory and asset mapping
stage. Participants in the SWOT analysis should have the chance to review this
information, discuss it with others, and provide meaningful feedback. Depending
on the situation, this might be accomplished with a series of workshops where
people have the chance to review information, talk together and share ideas. At
this point in the process, all suggestions by the participants should be
considered relevant. There will be opportunities later to prioritize and focus
resources. May-June 2005
Common Ground Tool: Workshop
facilitation – ensuring that a well planned workshop goes well, even if it does
not go as planned. A facilitator is a neutral guide that helps the group stay
on task, encourages participation, keeps the discussion fair and balanced, and
ensures that all voices are heard. All workshops need some form of
facilitation. A workshop might need at least one facilitator for every 8-10
participants.
Common Ground Tool: There are
several methods used in the Common Ground process to facilitate the
prioritization of issues, illicit information or gain group consensus. For
example, keypad polling retrieves anonymous and instantaneous quantitative input
from a large group of people. With the aid of small hand-held devices for each
participant, everybody in a workshop can be asked to respond to simple
multiple-choice questions. As each question is displayed on a screen with a
list of possible responses, participants respond by pressing a button on their
keypad. A summary of everybody’s response is then immediately available on the
screen for everybody to see. Keypad polling can be very helpful for larger
workshops.
3. Developing
a Vision: A vision can
take many forms. One possibility is a vision statement, which captures the
desires and aspirations of the community in a manner that is brief enough to be
easily communicated but rich enough to be meaningful. The larger and more
complex a community is, the more difficult this step might be. The vision helps
guide the rest of the process. The vision might focus the process on a
particular path, or it might confirm the need to make the process more
comprehensive. This step requires a mix of creative input and careful writing.
If possible, one workshop might be conducted to collect ideas for a vision from
a broad range of participants. Following this workshop, a small working group
might spend time crafting a vision from the ideas gathered. A second workshop
should then take place for the public to review the vision. It might be
necessary to repeat this step until a satisfactory vision is obtained.
July
2005
4. Drafting
Goals and Objectives
can build on a vision to create more detailed priorities for a community. Goals
are typically specific and measurable achievements that if met, suggest that
significant progress is being made towards the vision. Objectives are a series
of smaller steps that need to be accomplished in order to meet each longer-term
goal. Goals should be developed with significant levels of public involvement,
though the process might also call for smaller working groups that can work over
a period of time on more details. Objectives are another more detailed level
that might be best accomplished in a series of session with smaller working
groups or dedicated staff time. In either case, when completed, the goals and
objectives should be presented to the community in a draft form so that feedback
can be gathered and changes made August-September 2005
5. Creating
a plan map is a series
of community mapping exercises, used as means to develop a vision and define
goals. If the plan is attempting to address land use issues or other physical
aspects of the community, a plan map will be critical to translate the vision
and goals into a more concrete picture of how people desire their community to
look in the future. Creating a map is a difficult design process that requires
professional expertise. The process, though, can also suggest solutions that
might have been missed if the issues were not looked at so closely. The public
must be involved in this process to ensure that the plan embodies the public’s
shared vision. Information about existing conditions and future trends is also
necessary to inform the map making process. September-October 2005
Common Ground tool:
available GIS applications make the difficult and technical process of creating
a plan map accessible to residents in a comprehensible manner. CMAP’s [Paint
the Town/PlanBuilder*] is used to benchmark existing conditions, evaluate
alternative courses of action, and monitor change over time. Workshops using
PlanBuilder will need professional GIS expertise, facilitation, and technical
support.
6. Implementation
Strategies are another
detailed part of the plan that should be constructed with a combination of
public input and work from a core group of individuals, including
representatives from the community, organizational staff, and perhaps
individuals from outside the community who can provide information about efforts
and experiences elsewhere. The list of implementation strategies should be
fairly exhaustive so that it includes many possible means to achieve the goals.
However, it should also provide focus so that the organizations and individuals
taking responsibility for implementing the plan have clear directions.
October-November 2005
7. Plan
Writing: Writing the
plan involves documenting all of the preceding steps in a comprehensive and
concise fashion. Writing the plan can be highly technical. The plan will need
to include a well documented vision statement, justification for the proposed
courses of action, and paths to accomplishing both short and long term goals.
November-December 2005 (To be determined by the
Full Circle Partner
Organizations)
8. Communicating
the Plan: A
communications strategy should be devised to ensure both a broader level
of exposure and that the plan is feasible. November-December 2005
(ongoing)
9. Implementing
the plan involves a
continuous cycle of refining strategies, collecting new data and evaluating
progress. Hopefully, many individuals and organizations within the community
will take an active role in implementing the plan. These activities will not be
unusual to people involved in community work, but with assistance of a plan,
they will hopefully be better informed, better organized, better coordinated,
and more wide-spread. The planning process needs to be iterative and flexible.
In doing so, it will identify new issues and a need to update either minor or
significant aspects of the plan. The public should continue to be involved and
feel ownership of the plan and its outcomes. To be determined by Full Circle
Partner Organizations
* © Criterion
Planners/Engineers Inc.