ABA 2018
Environment & Sustainability
New Partners for Smart Growth
New Partners for Smart Growth, 2015
New Partners for Smart Growth, 2014
New Partners for Smart Growth, 2013
New Partners for Smart Growth, 2012
LGC - CA Adaptation Forum 2014
Society for Conservation Biology, 2012
Behavior, Energy & Climate Change, 2010
TIDES
Building Opportunities Conference, Los Angeles, 2011
Building Opportunites Conference: TIDES, DC '09
Buillding for Sustainable Communities Conference: TIDES, Berkeley '09
Collaborating for Success, 2007
Social Justice
American Bar Association
American Bar Association 2017
American Bar Association 2015
American Bar Association 2014
American Bar Association 2013
American Bar Association 2012
A Just Bay Area, Oakland 2013
Out & Equal 2011
Take Back America, 08
Take Back America, 07
Engaging The Other, 08
SE Alliance
Social Enterprise Summit, 11
Social Enterprise Summit, 2010
Social Enterprise Summit 08
Social Enterprise Summit, 09
Social Enterprise Summit 07
OLOC 2014
CELA 2017
CELA 2018
CELA 2019
Rabbis for Human Rights, 08
Education
Gender Spectrum 2017
Gender Spectrum 2016
Gender Spectrum 2015
Gender Spectrum 2014
Gender Spectrum 2013
Gender Spectrum 2012
Gender Spectrum 2011
CACTI, April 2012
WRCBAA - Black American Affairs
Universal Learning Conference
C.G. Jung Institute of SF
Health & Wellness
American Group Psychotherapy Association
AGPA 2019
AGPA 2018
AGPA 2017
AGPA 2016
AGPA 2015
AGPA 2014
AGPA 2013
AGPA 2012
AGPA 2011
AGPA 2010
AGPA 2020
American Psychoanalytic Association
APSA 2019
APSA February 2018
APSA January 2017
APSA January 2016
APSA January 2015
APSA January 2014
APSA January 2013
APSA January 2012
APSA June 2012
APSA June 2011
APSA 2020
Nat'l Hemophilia Foundation
NHF Conference, 2015
NHF Conference, 2014
NHF Conference, 2013
NHF Conference, 2012
NHF Conference, 2011
NHF Conference, 2010
NHF Conference, 2009
Nevada State Conference on Problem Gambling, 2010
Drug Policy Alliance
Nevada State Conference on Problem Gambling, 2009
EMDR 3rd Annual Parnell Institute
Int'l Conference on Gambling
Transgender Health 2013
Create Your Future 2014
Globe Sound Healing Conference
Parnell Institute: EMDR
Sustainable Business
Social Venture Network, 2010
BALLE, Bellingham 2011
BALLE, South Carolina 2010
Progressive Opportunities Conference, 2012
Women Take On The World
Montclair Women's Club Video Documentary
Professional BusinessWomen's Conf. of CA
PBWC, May 2011
PBWC, May 2010
Invent Your Future, for Women
Invent Your Future, 2012
Invent Your Future, 2011
Invent Your Future, 2010
Invent Your Future, '09
Oakland Women's Summit, '09
Gems from the Archive
Active Resistance
Breast Cancer & The Environment
Feminist Icons
Entrepreneurial Success
Marilyn King's Olympian Thinking
Dale Marie Golden
Elinor Stutz
Audio Books
Trade Up!
Dr. Lakita Long
I Open My Heart
Life Moxie!
Qty
#
Title
Format
Price
Subtotal
NPSG13-156
Do it Here, You Can Do it Anywhere! Complete Streets in Missouri
Speakers: Ed Kraemer, Co-Chair, Lee’s Summit City Health Education Advisory Board; Michael Park, City Traffic Engineer, City of Lee’s Summit, MO; Marlene Nagel, Community Development Director, Mid-America Regional Council.
(2 hour session) Just six years ago, Missouri had only three Complete Streets policies. Now the state has more than 20 Complete Streets policies at the local, regional and statewide level, and has been identified as one of the leaders in the nationwide Complete Streets movement. All six of the state’s six largest cities have now adopted Complete Streets policies; citywide Complete Streets policies cover over 1.4 million of the state’s residents. At the metropolitan planning organization level, Complete Streets policies cover more than half of the state’s residents. How were these policies created and adopted? What were the strategies used by advocacy groups, agencies and local citizens? What challenges did they face in creating and adopting policies? How did they overcome the objections? How successful have the policies been? What challenges are advocates, citizens and agencies facing now? Get a take-home list of strategies, ideas and examples.
MP3
$20.00
NPSG13-306
Smart Growth Citizenship: How Grassroots Action is Transforming Communities
2 hour session.
NPSG13-000
Full Set Audio Recordings
Each session on a separate CD (includes free binder); or all sessions in mp3 format on free USB (playable on any computer, tablet, or other electronic listening device. CDs and USBs delivered via Priority US Mail. 15% shipping and handling fees will be applied upon checkout.
Audio CDs: 125
Audio CD
$595.00
NPSG13-01D
WORKSHOP: Using Regional Equity Indicators
Speakers: John Fierro, Alfred Henson, Amanda Martin, Victor Rubin
Participants learn about a new methodology and a set of indicators for analyzing regional equity, and how to use this analysis to inform regional and sustainable community planning, economic and workforce development, and land use transportation planning efforts. A trainer from PolicyLink instructs attendees on how to conduct a regional equity analysis, and how to interpret demographic, economic, educational, health, housing and transportation indicators. Government staff and community leaders discuss how they are translating equity analyses to policy and on-the-ground work.
$10.00
NPSG13-136
Smart Growth as Economic Development: Helping Communities Find and Create Competitive Advantage(s)
Speakers: William Fulton, Director, Governors’ Institute on Community Design; Kathy Nothstine, Associate Director, National Association of Development Associations. Moderator: Nora Johnson, Policy Fellow, Office of Sustainable Communities, U.S. EPA
The last several years has seen an emphasis on how using smart growth techniques can lead to economic growth. Little attention, however, has been paid to how smart growth approaches can be used for economic reinvention, particularly in smaller communities. This session focuses on how smart growth can be used as an economic development strategy, leading to economic and community revitalization. Integrating smart growth techniques and economic development is proving to be critical for communities who are successfully competition in today economy through utilizing existing assets to reinvent themselves, creating a competitive advantage, and retaining and attracting residents. Speakers represent local, state and regional level perspectives and provide ample examples.
Audio CDs: 1
$15.00
NPSG13-328
Planning for Equitable Development Around Transit: Four Tiger II Planning Projects
NPSG13-322
New Approaches to Engaging Industrial Neighbors in Community Planning and Smart Growth Development
NPSG13-320
Smart Growth Achievement Awards– Keynote: The Path Taken: Finding New Ways to Make Smart Choices for Our Cities
Speakers: R.T. Rybak
NPSG13-140
Developing Vibrant Communities for the New Economy: How to Attract, Build and Serve the Businesses of Tomorrow
Speakers: Erik Calloway, Principal, Freedom Tung + Sasaki; Ilana Preuss, Vice President and Chief of Staff, Smart Growth America; Roy Buol, Mayor, City of Dubuque, IA; Ryan Coonerty, Mayor, City of Santa Cruz, CA; Co-Founder and Chief Strategist, NextSpace Coworking + Innovation; Ilana Preuss, Vice President and Chief of Staff, Smart Growth America; Adam Arredondo, Founder and CEO, Local Ruckus; Founder, Kansas City Startup Village; Matthew Marcus, Co-Founder and CTO, Local Ruckus; Cameron Cushman, Senior Advisor, Kauffman Foundation; Regan Carrizales, Community Builder, Silicon Prairie News
(3.5 hour session) Today we are experiencing a revolution in the nature of work. Knowledge, creativity and innovation are replacing mass production as the primary driver of the economy. Generation Y, destined to be the workforce of this New Economy, gravitates to more urban places looking for housing, entertainment, recreation, jobs and the interactive environments that stimulate creative interaction, collaboration, and idea sharing. Today’s city design must emphasize the convenience, connectivity, accessibility and buzz that is central to the New Economy. Hear about what it takes to create these places. During the first part of this session, an urban planner describe planning policies that will help cities prepare for this economic engine. In the second part of this session, real estate developers and two mayors discuss how they are attracting businesses downtown and what it takes to get them there. The third part of this session features local leaders of the Kansas City startup community – entrepreneurs and a local foundation helping to make great places come to life for their own business needs
$25.00
NPSG13-154
Building Blocks: Making Smart Growth Happen at the Local Level
Speakers: Roger Millar, PE, AICP, Vice President, Smart Growth America; Phillip Myrick, AICP, Senior Vice President, Project for Public Spaces; Jeff Aken, Communities Program Manager, Forterra; Scott Allen, AICP, Community Development Director, City of Blue Springs, MO; Raymond Lai, AICP, Deputy Director, City of University City, MO; Barbara Goode, Pollution Prevention Specialist, Kansas State University Pollution Prevention Institute. David Doyle, Sustainable Communities Coordinator, U.S. EPA, Region 7
Many communities around the country are asking for tools and resources to help them achieve their desired development goals, improve the quality of life for their residents, and make their communities more socially, economically and environmentally sustainable. In response to this demand, EPA developed the Building Blocks for Sustainable Communities Program. Building Blocks seeks to provide quick, targeted technical assistance to communities using a variety of tools that have demonstrated results and widespread application. This technical assistance helps selected local and tribal governments implement development approaches that protect the environment, improve public health, create jobs, expand economic opportunity, and make communities more livable. The panelists present an overview of the tools being offered and a summary of the experiences over the first two rounds of this program, and also provide information on how to apply for technical assistance in the future.
NPSG13-01B
WORKSHOP: Partnering with Industrial Neighbors to Create Healthy, Sustainable, and Prosperous Communities
Speakers: Deidre Sanders, Bill Gallegos, Michelle Garakian, Stephanie Hall, Hilton Kelley
This session highlights successful partnerships among community groups, local governments and industry representatives to develop shared visions for their communities, build healthier neighborhoods, and create opportunities for residents and strong local economies.
NPSG13-104
Small Housing Trends: Recession Survival Tactics & Moving Forward
Speakers: Debra Bassert, Vice President of Land Use Policy, National Association of Home Builders; Donald Powers, Founding Partner, Union Studio; Dena Belzer, President, Strategic Economics; Toby Rittner, President and CEO, Council of Development Finance Agencies; John Williams, Chair and CEO, Impact Infrastructure
Entrepreneurial builders have worked through the recession by capitalizing on trends toward smaller housing. Demographic trends and housing surveys identify a growing interest in buyers and renters for smaller housing units. In new communities or infill projects, big or small markets, these builders have noticed the trends and have responded with new models for attached and detached units at various price points. With changing preferences among Generation Y and boomers, unstable oil prices and volatility in the costs of construction, builders are giving more consideration to what and where they build. The demand for smaller housing transcends economic conditions. Hear what these builders are saying about working through the recession, and what is needed to thrive as the housing market improves and a New Normal is established. The panelists offer insight into finance, zoning, design, construction, demographics and placemaking, as we explore the growing opportunity in small housing.
NPSG13-227
Park Oriented Development: The Next Big Thing
NPSG13-120
Building Capacity for Equitable Transit-Oriented Development in Diverse Communities
Speakers: Paulina Gonzales, Executive Director, Strategic Actions for a Just Economy; Lisa Hubbard, Director of Public Affairs, St. John’s Well Child And Family Center; Mike Dennis, Community Organizing Director, East LA Community Corporation. Moderator: Adrian Martinez, Staff Attorney, Natural Resource Defense Council.
Los Angeles is now undertaking one of the largest transit expansion projects in the U.S. To prevent the displacement of low-income families and respond to the gentrification pressures in East and South Los Angeles, a variety of community organizations are building coalitions to ensure that equitable strategies are applied in transit-oriented developments (TODs). In this session, non-profit organizations share how they use social and economic justice coalesce alliances, while promoting smart growth strategies for creating equitable TODs. Learn how community residents are mobilized and engaged in campaigns to preserve and develop affordable housing, promote living wage jobs, retain small businesses and medical services, and secure other community benefits in low-income communities of color. Panelists provide examples of community development efforts, affordable housing development, healthcare initiatives, and recent organizing and advocacy campaigns. This session includes a popular activity on how to educate community residents on transit-oriented development.
NPSG13-110
Intercity Passenger Rail in America: Creating Regional Centers
Speakers: Wayne Aldrich, Development Director, Town of Normal, IL; Brian Harner, Architect, Union Station Redevelopment Corporation; Wilma Quan, Urban Planning Specialist, City of Fresno, CA
As the nation considers building new high-speed rail connections and strengthening existing intercity passenger rail networks, communities large and small are thinking about leveraging rail assets in new ways. Many metropolitan areas have plans to revitalize historic stations into multimodal and economic centers, while smaller communities reassess how to leverage intercity rail stations into a regional economic development strategy. This session will address such questions as: How can stations catalyze TOD-like development patterns and help curb sprawl? How can high-speed rail stations become regional growth centers? How can good station area planning concentrate jobs and growth? Speakers offer case studies from a metropolitan area focusing on economic development and multimodal connectivity at Washington, DC, Union Station; planning for a new High Speed Rail station in Fresno, CA, to refocus economic growth and jobs downtown; and revitalization of a small-town Main Street centered on rehabilitation of an historic train depot.
NPSG13-114
How Municipalities Can Avoid the 20 Most Common Place-Making Mistakes
Speakers: Chad Emerson, Director of Development, City of Montgomery, AL; Eliza Harris, Urban Planner, Canin & Associates; Amanda Thompson, Planning Director, City of Decatur, GA. Moderator: Nathan Norris, CEO, Downtown Development Authority, Lafayette, LA
In this “get real” session, you learn about the 20 most common placemaking mistakes that municipalities make, as well as the 10 most effective placemaking tools you should be using. The motivation for this session stems from the fact that many municipalities continue to make the same mistakes over and over — all the while hoping for a better result. Oftentimes, their major problem isn’t the execution of a specific tactic or tool, but the incorrect diagnosis of their challenges from the outset. This session arms you with the techniques and strategies you need to effectively advocate for meaningful improvements to your community.
NPSG13-202
Innovative Municipal approaches to Equitable Reinvestment and Revitalization
Speakers: Jeff Hebert, Executive Director, New Orleans Redevelopment Authority; Michael Braverman, JD, Deputy Commissioner, Housing Authority of Baltimore City, MD. Moderator: Nicole Heyman, JD, LLM, Vice President and Director of New Orleans Vacant Properties Initiative, Center for Community Progress.
Code enforcement, nuisance abatement and the legal systems they work within directly impact the quality of life, reinvestment opportunities and long-term sustainability and affordability of neighborhoods. At its core, the goal of a code enforcement program is to encourage responsible property ownership. Code enforcement is property regulatory system and that helps prevent vacancy, abandonment and disinvestment. As communities seek to protect neighborhoods and individuals from the negative impacts of substandard or vacant properties and negligent landowners and landlords – problems often disproportionately affecting communities of color and low-income residents – it’s more important than ever to create strategic approaches and partnerships to achieve positive and equitable outcomes. This interactive discussion among some of the country’s most thoughtful and innovative problem-solvers explores how code enforcement departments, the courts and redevelopment authorities are working together to hold negligent property owners accountable, eliminate blight, and drive development opportunities in disinvested neighborhoods.
NPSG13-01A
WORKSHOP: Sustainable Neighborhoods, Thriving Residents: Strategies for Building Equitable Communities, PLUS Opening Plenary: Neighborhood Revitalization and Economic Development from the Bottom Up
Speakers: Megan McConville; Lisa Garcia; Michael Goo; Kalima Rose; Jay Thomas; Anita Maltbia; Charlie Sciammas
This workshop explores how low-income, minority, tribal, and other overburdened communities are integrating land use and economic development strategies to renew their neighborhoods and build residents’ skills and wealth.
NPSG13-247
New Opportunities in Growing Resilient Communities Through Local & Regional Food Systems
NPSG13-303
ALRIGHTA! Innovative Methods for Public Engagement
$880.00
HungryMind Recordings ~ 3703 Rhoda Ave, Oakland CA 94602 ~ (510) 543-6064 ~ info@hungrymindrecordings.com
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