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Forty Years after Mt. Laurel – New Findings about the Effects of Affordable Housing

Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University Frist Campus Center, Multi-Purpose Room B, Princeton, NJ, United States

The format for this event will be presentation and discussion. Four researchers will each give a 15-20 minute overview of this new research. The second panel will consist of stakeholders asking the researchers questions about what the literature says about various policy initiatives.

Free

Bloustein Grand Reception

Hilton East Brunswick Hotel 3 Tower Center Drive, East Brunswick, NJ, United States

We invite you to join us at our celebratory event honoring founding faculty members of the Bloustein School.  Reception, recognition program and networking opportunities with some of the nation's most respected thought leaders in Urban Planning, Public Policy and Public Health.

$100

Regional Plan Association’s 22nd Annual Regional Assembly

Waldorf-Astoria, New York 301 Park Avenue, New York, NY, United States

This year’s Regional Assembly, Big Plans • Bold Innovations • Bright Future, will bring together local and international civic leaders to explore strategies for the tri-state area and examine how world cities are confronting vital public-policy questions. Keynote speakers and panelists will address planning as it confronts funding constraints, climate disruptions and increased energy costs.

$350

Webinar: Preserving Affordable Housing in a Transit Corridor (CM |1.5)

Webinar , United States

In preparing for introduction of street car service along Columbia Pike, Arlington County is completing a new planning effort for existing multi-family communities. Increasing rents are already pricing out lower-income residents, and those pressures are expected to accelerate with the higher gas prices, highway congestion and that make living in transit communities so attractive. 

Designing Healthy Communities (CM | Pending)

Morris County Fire Academy, Morris Plains

Is land use costing you your health? Learn about designing healthy communities and your role in local government. Key topics including health and the built environment, physical activity options, access to healthy foods, air quality, traffic-related crashes and more!

Monetizing Sustainability (CM | 1.5)

Montgomery County Planning Commission 425 Swede Street, Norristown, PA, United States

Explore how incentives are created for sustainability. Who creates them? Who gets them? At what level do they work best, and what has been most effective over time? Experts discuss both the tools and the underlying policy objectives. Hear about incentives, such as surcharges, fees, and tax reductions, and learn how they have been implemented. Speakers assess how they have fared in different locations. Learn what can be applied to your circumstances.

Webinar: The New Markets Model: Making a Case for Healthy Retail Strategies (CM | 1.5)

Webinar , United States

Over the last several decades, urban sprawl, white flight, land use regulations, and consolidation and concentration in the food retail sector have created grocery gaps in urban and rural communities. As a result, many communities lack access to healthy and affordable food. One community solution is healthy food retailing through existing outlets. 

Webinar: Understanding Urban Goods Movements (CM | 1.5)

Webinar , United States

This National Academies of Sciences study produced a comprehensive, concise guide for public decision makers and land use planners on the impacts land use design and policies and regulations on freight movements within urban areas. The guidebook is written in a jargon-free manner and explains why it is important for local elected and appointed officials to understand how goods move within their urban area, why efficient movement is critical to their community’s urban quality of life, how land use codes, policies and regulation impact urban goods movement. 

Maintaining Neighborhood Character (CM |1.0)

Grundy Museum 610 Radcliffe Street, Bristol, NJ, United States

Many historic neighborhoods have experienced teardowns and the rebuilding of monster homes or other buildings that undermine sound planning. For historic and conservation districts this is a pressing issue. Learn how communities have developed codes, guidelines, and community visioning programs that respond to these incompatible developments. As communities grow and change, explore how historic preservation can be successfully linked to new development.

Designing Healthy Communities (CM | Pending)

Cape May Technical High School, Cape May Court House

Is land use costing you your health? Learn about designing healthy communities and your role in local government. Key topics including health and the built environment, physical activity options, access to healthy foods, air quality, traffic-related crashes and more!

Understanding the Redevelopment Process and Your Role in It

Thomas Edison State College 101 W. State St., Trenton, NJ, United States

Redevelopment is a procedure used to revitalize distressed neighborhoods, address the effects of underused and neglected parcels and enhance the economic conditions of a municipality. Accompanied by sound planning and execution, redevelopment ultimately allows residents, stakeholders and local government officials to produce invaluable changes to our communities.

$60