Showing posts with label rockfall symposium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rockfall symposium. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 13, 2018

Join Rockfall on 3/22 for our Annual Symposium

Coming up next week on March 22nd, The Rockfall Foundation and the UConn Climate Adaptation Academy host a symposium on:

Site Development Considerations for Changing Weather Patterns

Case Studies: What Works, What to Watch Out For, and How to Encourage Success

Join us for a discussion on progress in eco-friendly commercial development and an exploration of completed projects including a LID residential development, a pervious pavement parking lot, and a municipal stormwater upgrade. We'll discuss both the long- and short-term challenges and successes of development and investigate several case studies. 

The Jordan Cove Subdivision in Waterford is now 15 years old with multiple homeowners and expiring deed restrictions; we’ll examine how this worked and apply that information going forward.
We’ll also learn about what’s been done on the UConn campus in Storrs (pervious parking lot and more) including lessons learned and whether maintenance is an issue or not; and we’ll have a return visit from Giovanni Zinn in New Haven to get a progress report on the green infrastructure he discussed at the 2016 Symposium, including how it has fared in both drought and flood conditions. Finally, we’ll hear about successful sites nationwide and how our regulations and mindsets may need to be adjusted in order to foster site development that works with our changing weather patterns.

Who should attend: Local elected and appointed officials; planners and zoning enforcement officials; architects; developers; engineers; landscape architects; educators; students; Planning, Zoning, Wetlands and ZBA board and commission members; and all concerned with our changing weather patterns and how best to design for them.

Symposium Program: 

8:00 – 8:30          Registration and Continental Breakfast
8:30 – 8:40          Welcome – Tony Marino, Executive Director, The Rockfall Foundation
8:40 – 9:10          Introduction – David Dickson, Co-Director CT NEMO
9:10 – 9:50          Residential Subdivision: Jordan Cove, Waterford’s LID Subdivision, 15 years later – Michael Dietz, Co-Director CT NEMO
9:50 – 10:35       Municipal Stormwater Management: New Haven’s Green Infrastructure/LID and How It’s Working – Giovanni Zinn, City Engineer, City of New Haven
10:35 – 10:45     Break
10:45 – 11:30     The UConn Experience:  Maintenance, Issues, and Benefits –  Michael Dietz, Co-Director CT NEMO
11:30 – 12:15     Commercial:  National Case Studies and a Toolbox that Encourages Developers to “Do the Right Thing” – David Sousa, Planner & Landscape Architect, CDM Smith
12:15 – 12:45     Panel Question & Answer Session with David Dickson, Michael Dietz, David Sousa, and Giovanni Zinn

1:00                      Lunch (Optional)

March 22nd, starting 8:30am.
Location:
UConn Middlesex County Extension Office
1066 Saybrook Road
Haddam, CT 06438

Register online here


Wednesday, October 12, 2011

ROCKFALL FOUNDATION TO DISCUSS LOCAL FOOD (IN)SECURITY

Some learned names will be discussing the future of food resources in Middlesex County tomorrow.


The Rockfall Foundation will hold its annual symposium at "The Kate" in Old Saybrook. This year the environmentally-focused foundation, headquartered on DeKoven Drive, will examine "Our Future Food Security: National Issues, Local Response".


Symposium Chair Christine Nelson said "We've been hearing more about hunger [in Middlesex County]. It's not starvation, but there are issues with hunger." Too many of them involve children, who may suffer consequences from even a short period of malnutrition. "You only develop once" said Nelson. But, she also noted, "We have an agricultural legacy we really could capitalize on again."



To discuss how Middlesex County can create our own 'healthful, sustainable food system and maximize community self-reliance', the Rockfall Foundation has invited Mark Winne, a community food activist, writer, author and co-founder of the Connecticut Food Policy Council.



His keynote address will be followed by a panel discussion among Nicole Berube, Exec. Director at City Seed, New Haven and a member of the New Haven Food Policy Council; David Zemelsky, co-owner at Star Light Gardens in Durham; John Guszkowski, Director of Planning CME Associates and CEO at Eastern CT Resource Conservation & Development Area, Inc., and Middletown's own Izzi Greenberg, Exec. Director of NEAT and manager of the North End Farmers' Market. The discussion will be moderated by the Hartford Courant's Susan Campbell.



The program begins at 8:30am and runs until noon. Cost is $50. An optional lunch follows.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Rockfall Foundation Annual Symposium to Explore “Changes to Regional Planning”


The Rockfall Foundation’s Annual Symposium, “Changes to Regional Planning - New Opportunities to Share State & Local Services” will be held Friday, October 8, 2010 at Essex Steam Train & Riverboat in Essex, Connecticut. Corporate sponsorship is provided by Essex Steam Train and Essex Savings Bank.


The morning presentations will explore best options for creating and implementing regional collaborations that provide services efficiently and economically, yet sustain Connecticut’s unique quality of community life.


“Connecticut is a small state, yet it is carved into dozens of regions and districts for services and infrastructure such as transportation, public health, fire, police, emergency management, cable TV & data, soil and water conservation, water and sewers, etc,” according to Trevor Davis, Symposium Chair and member of the foundation’s Board of Directors. “Plans are being considered for consolidation and raise a number of key questions for municipalities, regional planners and others: What are the best political and geographic options available? How can we plan for and improve regional collaborations while respecting community identity, “small-town” life, citizen access to decision-makers and local responsiveness?”


Featured speakers and presentations topics include: David Kooris, Vice-President and CT Director of Regional Plan Association, Stamford, CT, Emerging Regions - The Context for Middlesex County; John E. Harmon, Professor Emeritus CCSU Department of Geography, Rational Regions - Looking at Connecticut’s Tangle of Overlapping Regions; Linda Krause, Executive Director, CT River Estuary, Regional Planning Agency, Old Saybrook, Regional Planning Options in the Lower CT River Valley - How are we different?; and Tim Brennan, Executive Director, Pioneer Valley Regional Planning Organization, Springfield, MA, Choosing to Collaborate - Innovative Ways to Get Cities and Towns to Work Together. (Speakers’ biographical information below.)


“The symposium will be of key interest to local elected and appointed officials, land use planners, developers, and town planning and commission members,” said Davis. “And the presentations and follow-up discussions should engage all who are concerned with effective community planning.”


The symposium runs from 9 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. (8:30 a.m. registration), with an optional lunch served at 12:30 p.m. For complete program and registration information, visit www.rockfallfoundation.org, News and Events page; or call (860) 347-0340.


The Rockfall Foundation supports environmental education, conservation programs and planning initiatives in Middlesex County. Celebrating its 75th anniversary in 2010, it is one of Connecticut's oldest environmental organizations. The foundation provides grants, sponsors educational symposia, preserves and manages open space property, and maintains and operates the historic deKoven House in Middletown as a community center with meeting rooms and office space for county-based environmental groups.


Speakers at the Rockfall Foundation’s Annual Symposium

Friday, October 8, 2010


Emerging Regions: The Context for Middlesex County

David Kooris, Vice-President and Connecticut Director of Regional Plan Association, Stamford, CT

David Kooris is based in Stamford and manages the Connecticut and Hudson Valley programs for RPA that combine his background in urban design and sustainability with his devotion to the public process and climate action.. He is also involved in work across the region to better understand the link between built form and climate change. Mr. Kooris coordinates the City of Bridgeport's comprehensive sustainability initiative, BGreen 2020, which involves community leaders, business owners, and city staff in a process to balance economic prosperity, environmental quality, and social equity for residents, workers, and visitors. This effort works to implement many of the concepts outlined in the Greater Bridgeport Carbon Emissions Reduction Strategy, a research project conducted by Mr. Kooris to identify land use and transportation policies for a low-carbon future for Bridgeport and the surrounding towns. Lessons learned from this and a comparable effort covering the Hartford region are being scaled up to the state level to clearly articulate the role that development and infrastructure have in meeting emissions reduction targets. Working with the Town of Fairfield and several other municipalities and neighborhoods with active transit service in CT, Mr. Kooris is helping communities identify the appropriate scale and character of transit-oriented developments to meet both local and regional goals.



Rational Regions: Looking at Connecticut’s tangle of overlapping regions

John E. Harmon, Professor Emeritus Central Connecticut State University, Department of Geography

John Harmon was a professor of geography at Central Connecticut State University for 30 years until retiring in 2009. While his principal specialty was geographic information systems, he has maintained an intense interest in the formation and extent of human-defined regions. Dr. Harmon is the co-author of two books and numerous other publications involving regions and how they are built. He has taught courses in World regional geography, geographic information systems (introductory and advanced), transportation planning, and human geography. An active member of the New England-St. Lawrence Valley Geographical Society - 1979 to 1998, he served as State representative, Secretary-Treasurer, Vice-President, Editor Proceedings, and President. Since 1997, Dr. Harmon has served on the Executive Board of the Connecticut Arc-Users Group, a statewide association of users of a GIS software.


Regional Planning Options in the Lower CT River Valley: How are we different?

Linda Krause, Executive Director Connecticut River Estuary

Regional Planning Agency, Old Saybrook, CT

Linda Krause has served as Regional Planner and Executive Director of the Connecticut River Estuary Regional Planning Agency since 1987. She previously was Planning Director for the Town of Ledyard, Connecticut, and has been a private planning consultant for several Connecticut municipalities. In those capacities, she has completed numerous municipal plans of conservation and development, economic development plans, housing plans, transportation plans and open space plans. The Estuary Region encompasses nine small towns with a strong history of local self-determination. CRERPA functions as a coalition builder for shared services and shared approaches, building communications amongst all levels of government. In 2001, the Agency received a national NOAA Award as an outstanding local coastal program. Ms. Krause has served on the Groton (CT) Town Council and as Mayor, and has represented Groton on the Southeastern Connecticut Regional Planning Agency for 13 years, serving part of that time as Agency Chair. Her state activities include membership on numerous state boards and commissions. Currently, she is on the Long Island Sound Fund Advisory Committee, the Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, and the Connecticut Maritime Commission. In 1998, Ms. Krause received a Governor’s Award for her environmental activities.


Choosing to Collaborate: Innovative Ways to Get Towns to Work Together

Tim Brennan, Executive Director, Pioneer Valley Regional Planning Organization, Springfield, MA.

Tim Brennan joined the Pioneer Valley Planning Commission (PVPC) in 1973 and since 1980 has served as the agency's Executive Director. The PVPC is one of the Commonwealth's 13 designated, public Regional Planning Agencies and is responsible for the second largest planning region in Massachusetts. It serves a planning district encompassing 43 cities and towns, 1200 square miles of land area and over 615,000 residents. The PVPC's focuses on land use, environmental quality, transportation, community development, historic preservation, economic development, housing, data collection/research, regional shared services and public policy formulation and advocacy. Mr. Brennan previously has served as the Chair of the Nationwide Institute for the Regional Community, but he is also active in many other organizations including the National Association of Regional Councils, the New England Association of Regional Councils, the Alliance for Regional Stewardship and the New England Futures Project. He is an adjunct faculty member of the Department of Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning at the University of Massachusetts and also serves on the faculty of the Graduate Public Administration Program at Westfield State College.


Rockfall Symposium Contacts:

Trevor Davis, Symposium Chair, 860-347-8738; td.nonprofit@trevordavis.biz

Claire Rusowicz, Development Director, 860-347-0340; crusowicz@rockfallfoundation.org

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

23rd Annual Rockfall Symposium at MxCC to focus on Jobs, Energy & Education for a Sustainable Future



The 23rd Annual Rockfall Symposium titled, "Green Light for Our Economy" will be held Friday, October 9th from 8:30 a.m.- 12:15 p.m. at Middlesex Community College, Chapman Hall, 100 Training Hill Road in Middletown, Connecticut.

Five distinguished speakers will discuss the effects new green jobs, a refreshed energy policy and progressive education will have on Middlesex County's environment and economy.

· Wilfredo Nieves, President, Middlesex Community College, Middletown, Connecticut
Education - Opportunities

· William Leahy, Director, Institute for Sustainable Energy, Eastern Connecticut State University Energy &Jobs-Environmental Solutions and Sustainability Planning

· John Hall, Director, Jonah Center for Earth and Art, Middletown, Connecticut
Embracing Change-Eco-friendly Practices

· Jiff Martin, Connecticut Director, American Farmland Trust
Eating Green-Farms, Farming and Marketing

· Stephen Tagliatella, Innkeeper, Saybrook Point Inn & Spa, Old Saybrook Connecticut
Green Business Practices-Process and Pay-off

Who Should Attend: Local elected and appointed officials, land use planners, developers, architects, attorneys, real estate agents, educators; town planning, zoning, wetlands and appeals board and commission members, and all who are concerned with effective community planning.

Registration: The Symposium fee of $50.00 includes all materials and coffee breaks. Because space will be limited, registration is on a first-come, first-served basis. Registration forms must be received no later than October 2nd. Optional buffet lunch immediately following the program is $15.00. No refunds can be made after October 7th.
Date & Time Friday, October 9, 2009

9 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. program (8:30 a.m. registration)

12:15 - 1:00 p.m. optional catered lunch

1:00 - 1:30 p.m. tour of MXCC campus and nature trail

Program and Registration Information See www.rockfallfoundation.org or contact the Rockfall Foundation office at 860-347-0340.

The Rockfall Foundation, located in Middletown, CT, supports environmental education, conservation programs and planning initiatives in Middlesex County. As one of the state's oldest environmental organizations, its primary goal is to help promote a healthy balance in the county between development and environmental conservation.

Trevor Davis, Symposium Chair - 860-347-8738

Claire Rusowicz
Development Director
The Rockfall Foundation
27 Washington Street
Middletown CT 06457
(860) 347-0340
crusowicz@rockfallfoundation.org

"Greening & Growing Middlesex County for 75 years"