Paul & Sarah Edwards have written extensively about self-employment and home-based businesses. Their book, Working From Home, is now in its fifth edition. Zoning for Home Offices: Recognizing Reality
PCJ #12, Fall 1993

David Essex of Antrim, New Hampshire, is a freelance writer and former newspaper reporter. He is currently one of the Town of Antrim's two representatives on the Southwest Region Planning Commission, and previously served for ten years as a member of the Antrim Planning Board. Tap the Internet to Build Public Participation
PCJ #51, Summer 2003
Think Like a Reporter
PCJ #47, Summer 2002

Amy Facca is a consultant specializing in preservation planning and research. For the past ten years she was a principal planner with River Street Planning & Development in Troy, New York, where she completed the preservation element of comprehensive plans for numerous communities. She has worked on a broad range of historic preservation, waterfront, and downtown revitalization projects in communities throughout upstate New York. Facca also teaches a course on the economics of historic preservation at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute's School of Architecture and consults on historic preservation planning. She holds a Master's degree in Architectural History and Historic Preservation from the University of Virginia. An Introduction to Historic Preservation Planning
PCJ #52, Fall 2003
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Patrick Field is a Vice President of the Consensus Building Institute, and co-author of Dealing With An Angry Public. Building Consensus
PCJ #48, Fall 2002

Eben Fodor is founder and principal of Fodor & Associates, a consulting firm based in Eugene, Oregon. The firm specializes in community planning and land use with an emphasis on growth management and environmental sustainability. Fodor & Associates combines technical skills in engineering, economics, and energy and resource planning with a knowledge of land use laws and regulations.

Fodor also serves as an Associate with the University of Oregon's Institute for a Sustainable Environment doing educational and community outreach programs. He started the Sustainable Communities Project to help Oregon communities begin implementing the principles of sustainability. He has held workshops and made dozens of presentations to groups all across Oregon on growth impacts, growth management, economic development and sustainability. He served as Executive Director of the Community Progress Board, a project to develop community benchmarks and sustainability indicators for the Eugene/Springfield Metropolitan Area.

Bringing Sprawl to a Crawl
PCJ #37, Winter 2000
The Three Myths of Growth
PCJ #21, Winter 1996

David Foster is a Program Manager for ChildCare Ventures, a collaborative child care facilities development program of the Santa Cruz (California) Community Credit Union. He is also a Planning Commissioner for the City of Santa Cruz. Foster has 25 years of experience working with nonprofit affordable housing and community facilities development projects. He holds a Masters in Community Development from the University of California, Davis. Child Care in Our Communities
PCJ #55, Summer 2004

Larry Frey, AICP, is currently enjoying a sabbatical, which has included historic preservation research and travel to New Orleans, Key West, Georgia, Indiana, and the island of Antigua. Frey's past work has included serving as Director of Planning and Development for the City of Bradenton, Florida. He has over fifteen years' public/private experience in planning and community development. Frey's areas of expertise include coastal zone management, downtown revitalization, visioning, and innovation planning. Engaging the Public
PCJ #66, Spring 2007

Elizabeth A. Garvin, Esq., AICP, is an attorney and planner with HNTB in Kansas City, Missouri. She has worked with numerous communities on revisions to their land development ordinances. Garvin holds both a law degree and a master's in urban planning from the University of Kansas. Making Use of Overlay Zones
PCJ #43, Summer 2001
An Introduction to Subdivision Regulation (co-authored with Martin L. Leitner)
PCJ #5, July/Aug. 1992 (part I); PCJ #6, Sept/Oct. 1992 (part II)
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Laurence Gerckens, AICP, is national historian for the American Institute of Certified Planners, founder of The Society for American City and Regional Planning History, and emeritus professor at The Ohio State University. Gerckens teaches American urban planning history as an adjunct professor at the University of Michigan, Kansas State University, and Goucher College, Baltimore. He is also a frequent speaker at planning conferences.
The Planning ABC's: An alphabetic review of 26 planning topics from Automobiles to Zoning, illustrated by Paul Hoffman. Published by the Planning Commissioners Journal, October 2003.

Ten Successes that Shaped the 20th Century American City

PCJ #38, Spring 2000
Ten Failures that Shaped the 20th Century American City
PCJ #38, Spring 2000
Ten Events that Shaped the 20th Century American City
PCJ #30, Spring 1998
Single-Family-Only Zones
PCJ #23, Summer 1998
Community Leadership & the Cincinnati Planning Commission
PCJ #18, Spring 1995
American Zoning & the Physical Isolation of Uses
PCJ #15, Summer 1994
Humanizing the Urban-Industrial Environment
PCJ #10, May/June 1993
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Community Aesthetics and Planning
PCJ #7, Nov/Dec. 1992
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Ed Gramlich, is a Research and Community Development Specialist at the Center for Community Change, an organization that helps community groups identify and make use of resources, such as the Community Development Block Grant Program, to benefit their neighborhoods. He has written a number of widely used action guides on meeting the needs of lower income citizens. Understanding HUD's "Consolidated Plan" Requirement
PCJ #45, Winter 2002

Roberta Brandes Gratz is an urban critic, lecturer on development issues, and author of Cities Back From the Edge: New Life for Downtown and The Living City: Thinking Small in a Big Way (both published by John Wiley & Sons). Downtowns Grow One Step at a Time
PCJ #49, Winter 2003
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"We Don't Have Enough Parking"
PCJ #48, Fall 2002
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To Market, To Market [on Farmers' Markets]
PCJ #42, Spring 2001
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Charles C. Graves III has been Director of the Baltimore City Planning Department since August 1993. Prior to coming to Baltimore, Graves served as Director of Planning & Development for Appleton, Wisconsin. Planners on the Information Highway
PCJ #21, Winter 1996

Douglas C. Hageman operates Hageman Group Vehicle & Equipment Leasing in Southington, Connecticut. Hageman served for nine years on the Southington Zoning Board of Appeals. He also represented Southington on the Central Connecticut Regional Planning Agency. Lessons From Nine Years on a Zoning Board
PCJ #3, Mar/Apr. 1992

Dan Hamilton has worked as a publications specialist for the Cape Cod Commission, a regional land use planning and regulatory agency. He is also former Managing Editor of The Register, a Cape Cod weekly newspaper published continuously since 1836. Dealing With the Press
PCJ #6, Sept/Oct. 1992

Patrick H. Hare is a transportation and housing consultant, and the author of Planning, Transportation, and the Home Economics of Reduced Car Ownership (1995). The Mis-Marketing of Transit
PCJ #22, Spring 1996
Accessory Apartments for Today's Communities
PCJ #1, Nov/Dec 1991

William M. Harris is professor and chair of the Department of Urban and Regional Planning at Jackson State University. He served for ten years on the planning commission for the City of Charlottesville, Virginia. In Jackson, Mississippi, he is a board member of the Farish Street Historic Preservation Foundation. Elected to the inaugural class of Fellows of the American Institute of Certified Planners, he has authored a number of scholarly articles, books, and book chapters related to African American economic development, professional ethics, and higher education. Professor Harris is active in land use expert witness consultation, community service activities, and scholarly research. Our Cities are Home to Great Diversity
PCJ #55, Summer 2004
Commissioners as Neighborhood Advocates
PCJ #27, Summer 1997
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Karen Popek Hart has been a professional planner for 23 years in a variety of environmentally sensitive, culturally diverse, high-growth communities. She served as the planning director of Ann Arbor, Michigan, from 1992 to 2004. Energy Conservation & Community Planning
PCJ #57, Winter 2005

Anne Heitlinger, an Assistant Vice President with the National Housing Trust, is assisting the Trust and its clients in their efforts to preserve affordable housing in the Midwest and Eastern United States. Ms. Heitlinger has over seven years of experience in housing and community development, including program development, affordable housing finance, loan/grant administration, research, and program evaluation. Providing Affordable Housing (with Michael Bodaken)
PCJ #45, Winter 2002

Eileen Hennessy is currently a technical advisor to the newly formed Land Trust for Tennessee. Previously, Hennessy served on the board of the Piedmont Land Conservancy in North Carolina and was Technical Advisor to the North Carolina Conservation Trust. Hennessy also has many years' experience working with local planning boards, having served as planning and community development director for Stokes County, North Carolina and for the Town of Pelham, New Hampshire. Finding Community Leaders
PCJ #18, Spring 1995
Volunteers
PCJ #6, Sept/Oct. 1992

Sharon Wiley Hightower is a planning consultant and has served as Chair of the Claremont, California Planning Commission. She has been a local government planner for thirty years. Her firm, Hightower/Associates, provides training sessions for new commissioners as well as other planning services. The New Commissioner -- Dazed & Confused
PCJ #24, Fall 1996

Kit Hodge is the CEO of Neighbors Project, a non-profit that inspires and trains members of the new urban generation to connect with their neighbors through projects that improve the neighborhood for everyone. The Next Generation of Your Planning Commission
PCJ #70, Spring 2008

Terri Horvath is a writer and photographer living in Indianapolis, Indiana. She has written on a variety of subjects, including community leadership and planning. Horvath is the author of Fund-Raising Success: Case Studies, Ideas and Tips for 50+ Fund-Raising Events. Building an Educated Community
PCJ #18, Spring 1995

Deborah A. Howe AICP, PhD, is an Associate Professor at Portland State University. Howe has a longstanding interest in and involvement with aging issues. She is also co-editor of Planning the Oregon Way: A Twenty Year Evaluation. Before joining the faculty at Portland State in 1985, Howe worked as a planner for Dutchess County, New York. Creating Vital Communities: Planning for Our Aging Society
PCJ #7, Nov/Dec. 1992

Elizabeth Humstone is Executive Director of the Vermont Forum on Sprawl. Over the past 25 years, she has worked as a planning consultant on a wide range of projects in rural communities and small towns. Humstone is a member of the Burlington (VT) Planning Commission, and is former Chair of the State of Vermont's Housing & Conservation Trust Fund Board. Access Management: An Overview & Guide for Roadway Corridors (co-authored with Julie Campoli)
PCJ #29, Winter 1998
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