Foreword - Alan A. Altshuler Preface Part I: Experience 1. Planning in Cleveland 2. Inheriting a Staff and Building a New One 3. Writing the Policy Planning Report 4. Euclid Beach 5. Regional Issues and the Clark Freeway 6. Low-and Moderate-Income Housing 7. Tax Delinquency and Land Banking 8. Regional Transit and a Committed Planning Presence 9. The Downtown People Mover 10. A State Lakefront Park System for Cleveland 11. Helping Cleveland's Neighborhood Organizations 12. Improving Planning, Management, and Administration in Other City Agencies Part II: Lessons 13. Possibilities 14. To Be Professsionally Effective, Be Politically Articulate 15. Evaluation, Ethics, and Traps Index
Lessons from an experiment in equity planning
Norman Krumholz, Professor of Urban Planning at Cleveland State University, is former Director of the City of Cleveland Planning Commission and former President of the American Planning Association. He is the recipient of the 1990 National Planning Award for Distinguished Leadership by the American Planning Association.
"No planner, I predict, will be able to consider his education
complete during the next decade or so who has not grappled
vicariously with the dilemmas Krumholz faced."
-Alan A. Altshuler, from the Foreword "Fascinating, illuminating
war stories from the nation's most creative and progressive
(ex)municipal planning director, capped by an intelligent and
useful set of 'lessons.'"
-Chester W. Hartman, Fellow, Institute for Policy Studies, and
Chair, Planner Network "In this extraordinary book, Norman Krumholz
and John Forester team up to enlighten those seeking a progressive
approach to planning on how to interpret the Clevland experience.
Krumholz provides an analytic chronicle of his role as Cleveland's
planning director under three mayors and of his efforts to plan on
behalf of the city's impoversithed majority. Forester examines the
Cleveland story from the perspective of a planning theorist whose
focus is how planning can serve people with relatively little
political influence. Together the authors identify the
opportunities that exist within the urban governmental structure.
They conclude that planning and politics are not antithical and
that an astute political strategy depends on sound professionalism.
This well-written book is required reading for both students and
practitioners of planning."
-Susan S. Fainstein, Rutgers University
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