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Pre-Conference Activities

Home Pre-Conference Activities
Healthy Food Systems
Portland 2-Day Tour
Columbia River Gorge Tour
Train-the-Trainer
Healthy Food Systems

3rd Annual Preconference Workshop:

Intention and Innovation towards Healthy, Equitable Food Systems

As past New Partners conferences have highlighted, communities across the country are recognizing food systems as critical elements of efforts to promote healthy, equitable and resilient places. The most innovative and promising strategies involve partnerships to bridge gaps: they align community-based initiatives with local and regional policies and plans; they engage local residents and businesses in designing systems that best serve them; they understand food access and affordability are components of economic growth as well as public health; they link urban and rural places.

This year, participants have three special opportunities to kick off their 2016 New Partners experience learning from and with grassroots leaders, policymakers and government staff, researchers, planners, health advocates, funders and other public and private stakeholders engaged in crosscutting food system work:

Food Systems Wksp Program

Preconference Workshop

On Wednesday afternoon, by joining a preconference workshop held from 1:30 – 6:00 pm. Featuring local and national leaders, the agenda will include a mix of general and small group sessions exploring the food and smart growth nexus through policy and practice perspectives on food justice, land use, production, infrastructure, economic development and public health. A hosted networking reception for participants will follow the workshop from 6:00 – 8:00 pm; preregistration and a $25 fee are required.

How the Work of Growing Resilient, Sustainable Food Systems Can Nourish Smart-Growth Initiatives

Thursday morning, grab your coffee and join a bonus session open to all New Partners attendees and featuring representatives of collaborative networks working to grow accessible, economically viable and healthy food systems for communities across Oregon. You’ll hear from networks operating at different scales and in different stages of development, each with their own unique intentions, strengths and challenges. Consider how their lessons learned around organizing frameworks, community engagement and measurement strategies may be applicable to smart growth initiatives in other contexts.

Mobile Workshop

And Thursday afternoon, hop on the bus for a mobile workshop touring sites of local food projects. This tour will explore how food system development efforts at different scales are increasing food access and supporting entrepreneurship in historically disadvantaged urban neighborhoods. Participants will visit with three sites in Southeast Portland where organizations are addressing food system challenges through urban farming, community kitchen business incubators, specialty retail, and development of a food processing and distribution hub. This tour is open to all New Partners participants, though preregistration and a $38 fee are required (includes refreshments).

msu-food-ctr-logo

Support for these activities is made possible by the Michigan State University Center for Regional Food Systems, through funding from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation’s Food & Community program.

Portland 2-Day Tour

Portland Two-Day Mobile Study Tour

Tuesday, February 9 and Wednesday, February 10

Register here for the tour

The Portland regional discovery tour is a true smorgasbord of urban town making delight; focused heavily on healthy, age-friendly, walkability, livability focused design. This tour features transit, bicycling, urban infill, transit oriented design, waterfronts and small scale neighborhood development. The Pacific Northwest, is the nation’s greatest showcase for the most dramatic and successful town change. This region is “the lab;” this is “the motherlode” of it all.

This tour is being led by three veterans of placemaking mobile study tours:  Dan Burden and Samantha Thomas of Blue Zones and Paul Zykofsky of the Local Government Commission.  They have all led highly rated, multi-day mobile study tours and draw from 23 prior tours; tours that have inspired some of our nation’s most important change agents. They not only know the best places to visit and explore, they also know the value of finding local peers to share their stories and experiences with you. Dan, Samantha and Paul are pulling out all stops to make this the best tour ever. Trust us; there has never been a tour as rich in learning as this one!

Be prepared to soak in much, including some possible sunshine, cold and rain. Did we mention that you will be outside almost every hour of every day? Each day begins with a peer-to-peer staff session. Noon and evening meals include quiet time with local hosts.

Areas to be explored with local experts include: Fairview Village, Orenco Station, Beaverton, the Pearl District, the Portland South Waterfront the Portland Aerial Tram.

This tour is transformative and empowering, a career changer; you will never see cities the same way again.

  • Space is limited to 50 participants so register early!
  • Cost: $400.
  • Costs include all registration, meals, light rail, bicycle rental, a half day with a coach bus, tour guides.
  • Costs DO NOT include lodging. Each participant should book their own lodging
  • Tour will start and end each day at the Portland Hilton.

Download the tour flyer

Columbia River Gorge Tour

Smart Growth in Nature’s Wonderland – The Columbia River Gorge – Additional spaces have been added!

Wednesday February 10 • 8:30 AM – 6:30 PM

With support from the Columbia Gorge Environmental Foundation, this tour will take participants to the spectacular Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area. Established by Congress in 1986, the National Scenic Area boundary begins just 15 miles east of downtown Portland and straddles the magnificent Gorge, cutting through the heart of the Cascade Mountain Range for the next 90 miles, transitioning from inland rain forest to oak woodlands to desert sagebrush – where some of the most extensive wind farms in the country have arisen in recent years. In response to concerns over development pressures in this scenic treasure, the 1986 law created a unique form of governance and land-use protections to focus development within existing towns while preserving working farm and forest land through thoughtful zoning in rural portions of six counties.

In addition to seeing spectacular scenery, participants will hear from Columbia Gorge Commission staff about some of the ongoing challenges facing the commission. The tour will visit two distinct towns – Hood River and The Dalles – and learn about efforts to revitalize their small downtowns and recent proposals from development interests to expand their urban-growth boundaries. Once a fruit distribution hub, Hood River is now the windsurfing capital of North America. The Dalles, once home to a major aluminum smelter thanks to its proximity to inexpensive hydropower, is now home to one of Google’s major computer-server facilities – which also depend on cheap electricity from the river.

Tribal representatives will also describe the role that Native American tribes play along the river where they have lived for 12,000 years. After visiting a historic Native fishing site, the tour will check out several small towns wrestling with ways to bolster their rural economies around tourism, recreation and small-town entrepreneurship. Participants will see the first of the large hydroelectric dams ordered by President Franklin Roosevelt and completed five years after he took office in the height of the Great Depression.

If time and weather allow, the tour will also stop to enjoy a few of the iconic natural sites and vistas that abound in the Gorge. Bring a rain jacket, and wear warm attire and comfortable shoes. Lunch and snacks will be provided.

Cost: $38

Photo credits: Peter Cornelison

Train-the-Trainer

Creating Livable Communities through Public Involvement (Train-the-Trainer Workshop)

Wednesday, February 10 • 8:30-5:00 PM

This workshop is FREE and Sponsored by the Pedestrian and Bicycle Information Center and the Federal Highway Administration.

This one-day workshop is intended to train professionals to lead Creating Livable Communities through Public Involvement Workshops. Participants will learn how to lead the one-day workshop which is designed to help government-sponsored boards and commissions, advocacy, business, and neighborhood-based groups and individuals work collaboratively to create great communities through public involvement. Participants will learn organizational models and strategies for teaching others how to most effectively work together on pedestrian and bicycle transportation projects and safety programs. The intent is to achieve better outcomes that have community buy-in and support.

As a result of this workshop, participants will be able to:

  • Identify the “ingredients” of what makes a “livable community.”
  • Identify the type of public involvement groups, their roles and responsibilities, and their relationships to government and other stakeholders.
  • Understand current structures and opportunities for public involvement in order to identify what is missing and what could be improved.
  • Create publicly-supported and trusted policies, programs, and projects.
  • Articulate how 25 people can create positive change.
  • List specific examples of what has worked in other communities.
  • Clearly identify priorities, next steps, and a clear vision of the future.

Download the Workshop Flyer.

Content Level

The advanced-level course is appropriate professionals who are well versed in smart growth, have experience leading workshops and other courses, are interested in public involvement and are in a position to be able to offer this course to others.

Additional Information

Participants will receive materials that include a comprehensive list of tools and resources, case studies and examples from other communities, frequently asked questions (FAQs), and organizations to contact for more information. Additionally, the FHWA Resident’s Guide for Creating Safe and Walkable Communities may be useful. It can be found online at: http://www.pedbikeinfo.org/data/library/details.cfm?id=4163

Instructor

Peter Lagerwey is the Regional Office Director for Toole Design Group in the Northwest. Peter has over 30 years managing high profile pedestrian and bicycle planning and design projects with the City of Seattle and as a private consultant. Peter is a nationally known expert having worked on non-motorized projects and made presentations in over 230 states, counties and cities. Peter is the co-author of several FHWA sponsored training courses and webinars including Creating Great Communities through Public Involvement, Designing for Pedestrian Safety and Designing for Bicycle Safety.

Registration

To register, please fill out an application at

http://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/2354753/Creating-Livable-Communities-Through-Public-Involvement

For details about the course, instructors, success stories, and other materials, visit:

http://www.pedbikeinfo.org/training/gettraining_clcpi.cfm

Copyright © 2015 New Partners for Smart Growth