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Upcoming Events of Interest

January 6, 2007 Events/Meetings 7 Comments

The following are events that might be of interest to some of you:
January 9, 2007 – 2nd Annual St. Louis Regional Brownfields Marketplace

The 2nd Annual St. Louis Metropolitan Brownfields Marketplace will take place January 9 from 7:30 AM to noon on UM-St. Louis campus in the J.C. Penny Conference Center, Summit Lounge. The conference is free. The goal of the Marketplace is to offer a one-stop event to bring together the region’s top developers with brownfield/distressed property owners to establish connections, exchange information and initiate future development deals. Keynote speakers will be John Askew, Regional Administrator for the U.S. EPA Region 7and Jim Gilstrap, Missouri DNR Brownfields/Voluntary Cleanup Program.

You will have the opportunity to meet with a diverse group of environmental professionals who can address your brownfield issues at our resource center. You will not want to miss this informative event; it only comes once a year! A feature of the conference will be Speed Networking – Present your brownfield properties directly to brownfield developers in our speed networking sessions. Register at www.stlmetrobrownfields.org. For more information, call Julie Stone at (314) 421-4220 or (618) 274-2750.

January 9, 2007 – 15th Ward Candidates Forum

We will be inviting all Democratic Candidates for President of the Board of Aldermen in the March 6th Primary to our January meeting:

Tuesday, January 9, 2007, 7:00 PM
Carpenter Branch Library (Grand & Utah)

Everyone is invited to attend!

See 15thWard for more information.

January 10, 2007 – St. Louis Community Clean Air Project Hosts Regional Panel to Discuss Reducing School Bus Emissions

The St. Louis Association of Community Organizations’ (SLACO) Clean Air Project is hosting a panel of experts to discuss the advantages for area school districts to reduce damaging emissions into the air. The event is open to the public. School administrators, school health care providers and transportation directors, and bus contractors are especially encouraged to attend. Experts from local school districts, health professionals, government officials and professional engineers will be on hand to discuss ways to implement a successful initiative to reduce school-bus idling and learn new ideas and approaches to this initiative in our area.

Presenters are: Richard Ruhl, Fleet Maintenance Supervisor for the Wentzville School District; Patrick Lanane Assistant Superintendent for the Lindbergh School District; Dr. Raymond Slavin, Medical Educator from the Saint Louis University School of Medicine; and Glenn M. Luksik, Regulations and Funding Consultant for Caterpillar Emissions Solutions. Ruhl and Lanane will discuss how they were able to implement and enforce emissions reductions within their schools – mainly focusing on idle reduction.

This free event will be held at the University of Missouri – St. Louis, JC Penney Building, Room 126, from 4 – 6 PM. Reservations are not required. Parking is available in Lot C. Go to www.umsl.edu/admission/tour/directions.htm for detailed directions, travel options (including MetroLink) and a campus map. For additional information, contact Erica Fendler, SLACO/CAP at (314) 534-9104 or Erica at slaco dot org.

January 11, 2007 – Passive Survivability

Alex Wilson, president of BuildingGreen, Inc. and executive editor of Environmental Building News and the GreenSpec® Directory will make the case for a new design criterion for homes, apartment buildings, schools, and certain other public-use buildings: “passive survivability.” As he uses the term, passive survivability refers to the ability of buildings to maintain livable conditions in the event of extended power outages, or loss of heating fuel or water. The program will be held at Missouri Botanical Garden’s Monsanto Center, 4500 Shaw Boulevard. Networking will begin at 5:30 PM; the program is from 6:15 – 7:30. The program is free to USGBC-STL members and students; $20.00 for nonmembers. To register, e-mail usgbc-stl@mobot.org or call (314) 577-0854. For more information, go to http://chapters.usgbc.org/stlouis/Programs_Events_07.html.

January 12, 2007 – Downtown Partnership Luncheon w/MoDot Director Pete Rahn

MoDOT should soon have a contract signed with the I-64 design-build team, Gateway Constructors, within the next few weeks. More details should then be forthcoming about sequencing and other aspects of the project. Downtown St. Louis Partnership will be featuring MoDOT Director Pete Rahn at its January 12 Issues & Answers luncheon with BOMA (Building Owners and Managers Association). This will be an opportunity to hear some of these updated details. The event will be held at the Hilton St. Louis at the Ballpark from 11:30 AM – 1:30 PM. Registration is $35 for members and $45 for nonmembers. For sponsorship and registration information, contact Jennifer Burgnone at (314) 436-6500, ext. 225 or jburgnone at downtownstl dot org.

Registration form — deadline 1/9/07!

January 15, 2007 – Martin Luther King Day – Act for Peace

Please join us in marching for justice and peace in the annual Martin Luther King Day march, Monday morning January 15. Gather
at the Old Courthouse across from Kiener Plaza (Market and Broadway), at 10 a.m. The march to Powell Hall begins at 11 a.m.

There is MetroLink service at both ends of the march (8th & Pine MetroLink station is near the Old Courthouse; Grand MetroLink
station is near Powell Hall.)

The weather forecast is cold and clear, so bundle up! Bring your peace and justice signs, wear good shoes and join the celebration, always strong and spirited.

Let our elected officials hear that we demand real change, now! – a rapid end to the disastrous Iraq war, and speedy redirection
of resources to human needs.

“The chain reaction of evil — wars producing more wars — must be broken, or we shall be plunged into the dark abyss of
annihilation.” — Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr


January 16, 2007 – Euclid Streetscape Improvement Project

Postcard received in mail indicates the following:

  • Final public viewing
  • Come Any Time From 5:00-7:30 p.m.
  • Brief Presentation at 5:45 and 7:00 p.m.
  • The St. Louis Woman’s Club 4600 Lindell Blvd.
  • Sponsor: Central West End Midtown Development
  • Host: Joe Roddy, 17th Ward Alderman

Sorry, no website or other contact information is provided.

January 17, 2007 – APA-SLMS Luncheon: The Mill Creek Valley Urban Renewal Project Revisited

You are invited to attend the American Planning Association-St. Louis Metropolitan Section luncheon to be held in the Community Room on the first floor of the Heritage House Apartments, 2800 Olive St., St. Louis. The luncheon begins at 11:30 AM. Ron Fagerstrom, a local historian, will take a critical look at the Mill Creek Project. St. Louis was one of the most active cities in the federal urban renewal program during the 1950’s and 1960’s.

The largest St. Louis project took place in what was referred to as Mill Creek Valley, an African-American community, in present day Midtown. Perhaps the most extensive urban renewal initiative in the country, the Mill Creek Project involved the total clearance save for four buildings of an area bound by 18th Street on the east, Olive on the north, Grand on the west, and the Mill Creek rail yard to the south. Although now developed, the land remained undeveloped for several years and was locally known as “Hiroshima Flats.” Fagerstrom will discuss how the residents of the neighborhood were shut-out of the planning process and how the fabric of a vital community was destroyed. For Fagerstrom, the Mill Creek Valley Project sheds light not only on development practices of the past, but on the continued razing of low income neighborhoods in areas like Maplewood and Brentwood in the name of the public good.

Please make reservations with entrée choices (Bake Madison Chicken Breast, Roast Beef or Meatless Pasta) by Monday, January 15 to Jason Jaggi, jjaggi at ci.clayton.mo dot us. The cost of the luncheon is $15 for members and $18 for nonmembers.

January 17, 2007 – Free APA Training – Introduction to the Planning Commission

You are invited to attend a free audio/web conference training session: “Introduction to the Planning Commission – Part Two” to be held from 2 – 4 PM, local time at the offices of East-West Gateway, Gateway Tower, One Memorial Drive, Suite 1600, St. Louis. The conference’s two hours of moderated discussion cover: zoning process and variances, plan implementation, subdivision regulation, how plans are amended, citizen engagement and resolving conflict in public meetings, how to work with the public and other appointed and elected officials, the roles and participants in public decision making, concerns of participants, and applicability of sunshine laws. Technical Briefs explaining these concepts are available for conference participants online at www.planning.org/audioconference/ipc2/participant.htm. Anyone with an interest in the subject is welcome to attend.

Please RSVP to East-West Gateway: Karen Kunkel at karen at ewgateway dot org or Gary Pondrom at garyp at ewgateway dot org or call Karen or Gary at (314) 421-4220 or (618) 274-2750. The audio/web conference series is sponsored by the APA-St. Louis Metropolitan Section, the City of Maryland Heights and East-West Gateway Council of Governments.

January 18, 2007 – ULI St. Louis – Meet the Mayor – Francis G. Slay, Mayor of the City of St. Louis

ULI St.Louis – Meet the Mayor Luncheon:
Featuring Mayor Francis G. Slay, City of St. Louis

Thursday, January 18, 2007
12:00 – 1:15 PM

– Location –
City of St. Louis
Mayor’s Board Room
1200 Market Street, Room 200
St. Louis, MO 63103

This is a ULI Members Only Event

Please join ULI St. Louis for our second Meet the Mayor Luncheon featuring Francis G. Slay, Mayor of the City of St. Louis; Barbara Geisman, the Mayor’s Executive Assistant for Development; and Jeff Rainford, Chief of Staff, on Thursday, January 18, 2007 from 12:00 – 1:15 PM.

This will be an invaluable and unique opportunity to spend quality face-to-face time with Mayor Slay and his staff. You will be spending the kind of time with the Mayorthat you won’t get elsewhere, discussing issues of interest to you and getting to know those with whom you will be working in the future.

This event is limited to the first 15 ULI Members to register. You must pre-register no later than January 16 to attend. There will be no on-site registration for this event.

Cost for all sectors: $50

Regisration for ULI Members.

January 23, 2007 – Transit Oriented Development

Citizens for Modern Transit will be hosting an informational program on Transit Oriented Development at 4 PM at the Des Lee Auditorium of the Missouri Historical Society, Forest Park. The featured speaker will be G.B. Arrington of Parsons Brinckerhoff Place Making. He is Parson Brinckerhoff’s most senior practitioner in the field of linking transit and land use. For the last 20+ years, he has played a key role in the Portland, OR region’s innovative experiment to reinvent the American dream of a livable community by
marrying transportation and land use. In the past year Arrington has lead three TOD policy studies of national significance – the Governor’s Task Force on Transit Oriented Development for Maryland, the California Statewide Study of Transit Oriented Development and the Mayor’s Special Transit-Oriented Development Task Force for Washington, D.C. His work with station area planning received a national award of excellence from Progressive Architecture and a First Place in the Livable Communities Initiative Transit Design Competition from the Federal Transit Administration.

The program also will feature updates on how Clayton and Shrewsbury are approaching TOD. The program will be followed by a reception and informal discussion. Registration will be $20 for CMT members and $25 for nonmembers. Go to http://www.cmt-stl.org/news/story_22.html for additional program information and to make your
reservation.

February 14, 2007 – Great Streets Design Workshop

East-West Gateway invites you to the Great Streets Design Workshop on Wednesday, February 14 from 8 AM – 12 noon. The workshop will be held at the Eric P. Newman Education Center, 322 S Euclid Avenue, St. Louis. This workshop will provide information on how to use the Great Streets Digital Reference Guide and how to obtain assistance on planning and designing a Great Streets project in your
community. The workshop cost is $25, with parking available for an additional $5. The Central West End MetroLink station is one block south of the Center. Advanced registration is required. Workshop information available and the registration form can be downloaded and printed or you can register on-line by going to www.ewgateway.org. For questions or additional information, contact David Wilson at david.wilson at ewgateway dot org or (314) 421-4220 or (618) 274-2750.

March 29, 2007 – APA St. Louis Metro Section 2007 Planning Workshop

SAVE THE DATE: APA SLMS has arranged for distinguished land-use attorney, planner, and author Dwight H. Merriam, FAICP, CRE to be the highlight this year’s Planning Workshop. Mr. Merriam will not only present the evening’s keynote address on eminent domain, but will also be heading up a technical workshop earlier that day. Mr. Merriam is a partner with the law firm of Robinson & Cole LLP in Hartford, Connecticut, where he practices land use law. He represents developers, local governments, landowners, and advocacy groups in land development and conservation issues. He has published over 180 professional articles on land use law, co-edited Inclusionary Zoning Moves Downtown, co-authored The Takings Issue, and authored The Complete Guide to Zoning. He is a Fellow and past president of the American Institute of Certified Planners, a former director of the American Planning Association and a previous chair of APA’s Planning & Law Division. He is also a member of the American College of Real Estate Lawyers and The
Counselors of Real Estate, and he teaches land use law at Vermont Law School.

 

Currently there are "7 comments" on this Article:

  1. The goal of the Marketplace is to offer a one-stop event to bring together the region’s top developers with brownfield/distressed property owners to establish connections, exchange information and initiate future development deals.

    …so does that mean Blairmont’s gonna be there?!

    the annual Martin Luther King Day march, Monday morning January 15. Gather
    at the Old Courthouse across from Kiener Plaza (Market and Broadway), at 10 a.m. The march to Powell Hall begins at 11 a.m.

    Am I crazy for wondering why it’s not held on MLK Drive?

    Ron Fagerstrom, a local historian, will take a critical look at the Mill Creek Project.

    Aw, man… I really wish I could make it to this one.

     
  2. Anonymous says:

    Thanks for all the info Steve!

    The luncheon on the 17th about the Mill Creek Urban Renewal Project seems rather piognant today given the horrifying scale of of what Blairmont is slowly cooking up for North St. Louis!

     
  3. GMichaud says:

    For those who can’t make the lecture, Ron Fagerstrom also wrote a book about Mill Creek, it is informative and well done. I’m not sure if he will have copies at his lecture, but I know Subterranean Books in U City on Delmar has copies. (It is reasonably priced also)
    In reading the book it becomes clear that the major fault of the people living in the area was that they were poor. The area was intact and functional. The other thing that becomes obvious is how the Post and city leadership at the time shoved demolition of this area down throats of the citizens.
    It seems the government, along with their friends in the press like to use that tactic a lot. The SLPS takeover for one, another is handing Pyramid huge tax guarantees for the rehab of downtown property in a week when it usually takes them the aldermen months or years to do anything of value for the citizens.
    Anyway Mill Creek is quite a story for any one not aware of it.

     
  4. Jim Zavist says:

    The best way to reduce school bus emissions? Bring back neighborhood schools and let the kids walk or ride their bikes to school! Alternately, buy them transit passes and let/force them ride Metro (and eliminate a lot of underused, redundant serivce).

     
  5. Jim Zavist says:

    A corollary to the school bus emissions discussion – what is the tradeoff between the ever-increasing number of soccer moms dropping off their grade- and middle-school kids, the ever-increasing number of high-school kids who drive and a net decrease in school bus use? Aren’t multiple lower-emission vehicles (modern mini-vans and SUV’s) generating a lot more combined pollution than one relatively-dirtier diesel school bus? Many years ago, back when I was in school, I took the big yellow bus to school pretty much every day, and didn’t have my own car until the second year of college. Granted, bus service has been cut back over the years (“to balance the budget”), meaning the “acceptable” walking distance in many districts is now measured in miles (plus drivers may be more distracted than they used to be and many roads around here certainly aren’t “pedestrian friendly”, etc. etc.). Bottom line, reducing vehicle trips, especially cold-start, short-distance ones, by making riding the school bus at least acceptable again (and not just a tool for desegregation), would likely prove be more effective than trying to improve upon the new “clean” diesel regulations now taking effect.

     
  6. Mary Homan says:

    Steve:

    Thanks for the posting for the Idle-Free event. I would just like to reemphasize the Saint Louis Regional Asthma Consortium’s support of the event:

    Asthma Consortium Members,

    The St. Louis Community Air Project is sponsoring a panel discussion on bus idling and the harmful effects of diesel exhaust on respiratory health. Eighty school districts have been invited to attend. We are asking our members to contact their school district representatives encouraging them to attend this event and to impress upon them the importance of this issue…Together we can make a difference in the quality of the air we breathe. Thank you.

    Please consider attending this Wednesday even if you don’t have children in those school districts because this is a community effort. If you need or want a flyer for the event, please email me at the below address.

    Mary E. Homan, MA
    Senior Research Assistant
    Controlling Asthma in St. Louis
    Saint Louis University
    School of Public Health
    Salus Center, Suite 300
    3545 Lafayette Ave
    Saint Louis, Missouri 63104
    Ph: 314.977.3296
    Fax:314.977.1674
    homanme@slu.edu

     
  7. on school bus emissions – the answer is simple: fill the tanks with bio-diesel instead of petro-diesel. or simply using waste vegetable oil from the caffeterias. could even be turned into grade-school level chemistry projects…
    now, where do I go to pick up my consultant fees from the school board? 😉

    [UrbanReviewSTL — I believe you need to speak with Veronica O’Brien about those fees, let me know how that goes…]

     

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