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| Planning Comm'rs Journal & PlannersWeb Staff: |
P.O. Box 4295, Burlington, VT 05406 e-mail: info@plannersweb.com |
| Publisher & Editor: Wayne Senville Burlington, Vermont |
General Manager: Betsey Krumholz Burlington, Vermont |
| Office Support: Peggy Ellis-Green Burlington, Vermont |
Assistant Editor Larry Pflueger Clearwater, Florida |
| Editorial Advisory Board Members: | |
| Larry Frey West Palm Beach, Florida |
Lee A. Krohn Manchester, Vermont |
| Wayne Lemmon Somers, New York |
Ross Moldoff Salem, New Hampshire |
| Christine Brauer Mueller Lawrenceburg, Indiana |
Irv Schiffman Chico, California |
| Dave Stauffer Red Lodge, Montana |
Bryan Stumpf Indianapolis, Indiana |
| Barbara Sweet Hyde Park, New York |
Ilene Watson Kelowna, British Columbia |
| Lindsley Williams Washington, D.C. |
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Larry P. Frey
Among the numerous studies, visioning documents, and reports Frey has prepared are, "7th Avenue, A Visual Perspective", "A Walk Around Historic Ybor Square", and "Citrus County Coastal Impacts from the March 1993 Winter Storm." As Frey puts it, "Planning is always exciting for me since it takes me anywhere from walking down a vibrant downtown street, to trudging through a pristine wetland, to spending a couple of days aboard an aircraft carrier at sea." Lee A. Krohn Lee A. Krohn, AICP is the Planning Director for the Town of Manchester, Vermont. Krohn earned a bachelor's degree from Franklin & Marshall College and a master's degree at Duke University, and graduated with the inaugural class of the Vermont Leadership Institute. He is a frequent instructor at local and statewide workshops, and has spoken nationwide on land use planning issues. Krohn is former Chair of the Putney Planning Commission, past President of the Vermont Planners Association, and currently serves on the boards of the Vermont Institute of Natural Science, the Manchester Community Land Trust (now one year old), and the Equinox Preservation Trust. An award-winning photographer, Krohn has published images and essays in many different publications, and has become a successful wedding photographer. Elizabeth M. Krumholz
Krumholz was a member of the Burlington, Vermont, Planning Commission from 1993 to 1999, and served as the Commission's Chair. More recently, she has been a member of the Burlington School Board. Krumholz received her B.A. degree from Georgetown University. Wayne Lemmon
Wayne is the author of The New "Active Adult" Housing, in Issue 51 of the PCJ The Anti-Sprawl Mantra, in Issue 37 of the PCJ, and the The Market Analysis Workbook published by AMACOM in 1983, and has made presentations on development economics at conferences of the APA and IDEA. He has also undertaken fiscal impact analyses at both the project and government level, and has analyzed the financial feasibility of complex, multi-phased development projects. Lemmon holds degrees in Architecture from Cornell University, and Urban Planning from City College of New York. Ross Moldoff
His professional interests focus on using better design to improve the quality of development and controlling strip development in particular. Moldoff has published several articles on this topic, including Controlling Strip Development in the Winter 2004 issue of the Planning Commissioners Journal. Christine Brauer Mueller
Mueller holds a BS in Biology from Mount St. Joseph College and a MEd in Chemistry from Xavier University, both in Cincinnati. She taught junior high and senior high school for 5 years and introductory college science for 3 years. Mueller served on St. Lawrence School Board for 3 years, after her children graduated. While raising her 3 children she served as Business Manager for 13 years for what eventually became a 5-doctor internal medicine practice. Reading dry Medicare regulations prepared her well for the Indiana Code Laws for planning and zoning and local government. Larry Pflueger
Pflueger is a Principal Planner with the Pinellas (Florida) Planning Council. The Council provides a forum for representatives of Pinellas County's 24 cities and towns, the unincorporated county, and the Pinellas County School Board to address countywide land use issues. The thirteen members (some representing groups of communities) provide policy advice and recommendations to the Board of County Commissioners, who are authorized by the county charter to act as the Countywide Planning Authority (CPA). Irving Schiffman Irv Schiffman is a Professor of Political Science and the former Director of the Master's Program in Rural and Town Planning at California State University, Chico. He holds a doctorate from the University of California at Davis and a law degree from the New York University School of Law. He is the author of Alternative Techniques for Managing Growth, 2d Edition (University of California, Berkeley, Institute for Governmental Studies, 1999), and has conducted workshops and written extensively in the areas of planning, environmental policy, and land use implementation. Schiffman also authored The Property Rights Challenge: What's a Planner to Do in PCJ #21 (Winter 1996). He currently serves as a member of the Chico, California, Planning Commission. Wayne Senville
Between 1988 and 1991, Senville was Director of Local & Regional Planning Assistance for the Vermont Dept. of Housing & Community Affairs. Before moving to Vermont, Senville served as a senior planner in the National Park Service Mid-Atlantic Regional Office in Philadelphia. During his time with the NPS, he had the fortune of working on numerous park planning and river corridor conservation projects, including the Pinelands National Reserve, the Steamtown National Historic Site in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and the Upper Delaware River Management Plan (in NY and PA). In a prior career as an attorney, Senville worked from 1982-83 for the law firm of Freilich, Leitner & Carlisle, handling a variety of land use matters; and as an appellate attorney for the now-extinct Interstate Commerce Commission, 1978-1981. Senville holds a Masters degree in city planning from the University of Pennsylvania, and a J.D. degree from the University of Minnesota Law School. Dave Stauffer
Dave is head of the consulting firm of Stauffer Bury Inc. His firm works with progressive developers to "identify and develop the messages that can help convince key audiences—decision-makers, the public, and potential buyers—that your progressive development is the right way to grow." Over the years, his clients have included The Rouse Company, Freddie Mac, Marriott International, and Prime Retail. Dave is the author of four books on corporate success published by John Wiley & Sons, and has written dozens of articles published by Harvard Business School Publishing, The Conference Board, The Wall Street Journal, and others. For the Planning Commissioners Journal, Dave has authored Smart Messages (Fall 2006), and Emerging Water Shortages Are No Mirage (Spring 2004). Bryan Stumpf
Barbara Sweet Barbara Sweet serves on the Hyde Park, New York, Masterplan Committee and on the Hyde Park Crossroads Committee (whose intent is to spruce up the original four corner intersection with sidewalks, lighting and planters). She is also Secretary of the Town of Hyde Park Historical Society, and teaches Intro to Computers and Internet to folks 55 and older at Marist College. Sweet retired from IBM where she worked as an Administrative Assistant to a Senior Engineer and his Staff. Her skills also include being an amateur radio operator. Ilene Watson
Watson has authored three articles for the Planning Commissioners Journal: An Introduction to Design Guidelines (PCJ #41, Winter 2001), An Introduction to Urban Design (PCJ #43, Summer 2001), and Listen! (PCJ #52, Summer 2003). Lindsley Williams
For eight years, concurrent with his full-time Federal employment as a Commissioned Officer of the U.S. Public Health Service (PHS), Williams served on the Zoning Commission of the District of Columbia, including serving as its Chairperson and Vice Chairperson. By virtue of that position, Williams also served, as did other Commission members, as one of the members of the Board of Zoning Adjustment. Williams also served as Director for Land Use within the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development, Government of the District of Columbia. In that capacity, he provided guidance to staff of the Office of Planning at a time when it had no director, and helped the Director assume his duties once appointed. For nearly thirty years, Lindsley Williams has also had substantial involvement in transportation issues in the communities in which he has resided. He was appointed to Transportation Citizen's Advisory Committee, Washington Metropolitan Area Council of Governments for two two-year terms, elected within to serve as Vice Chairperson. Williams is a member of the Economic Development Committee of the District of Columbia Building Industry Association, and has served or is serving as a member of the Board of several voluntary organizations, including Property Owners' Association of Deep Creek Lake (Garrett County, Maryland), and Cleveland Park Historic Society. He received a B.A. in 1963 from Haverford College, and a Masters in Regional Planning in 1968 from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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