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A Knowledge Based Approach to Community Planning

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A Knowledge Based Approach to Community Planning Dr. Patricia Byrnes Patrick Curry Arwiphawee Srithongrung What does Dilbert have to say? What is Planning? Planning ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Knowledge Based Approach to Community Planning


1
A Knowledge Based Approach to Community Planning
  • Dr. Patricia Byrnes
  • Patrick Curry
  • Arwiphawee Srithongrung

2
What does Dilbert have to say?
3
What is Planning?
  • Planning consists of defining the important
    objectives an organization needs to achieve and
    determining how it plans to achieve them.

4
Purposes and Types of Planning
  • Strategic Visioning
  • Identify and describe widely held values and use
    them as a platform setting goals.
  • Strategic Planning
  • To set the direction of the organization to
    improve its prospects for long-term survival.
  • Operational Planning
  • The tactical details of how an organization is to
    be run over a short period of time
  • Project Planning
  • Detailed identification and sequencing of all
    tasks to complete a project.

5
Problems with Planning
  • No mechanism exists for recognizing the
    difference between reality and predictions
  • Goals are set arbitrarily
  • Failure to focus on high-leverage goals
  • Planned activities are not designed to accomplish
    goals
  • There is no Shared Vision of the organizations
    future

6
Essential Definitions
  • Data - recorded observations of real world
    phenomena
  • Information - level of knowledge needed to solve
    a problem or show patterns
  • Intelligence - essential factors selected from
    information and data
  • Knowledge - total concept of data, information,
    and intelligence with feedback loop

7
Process for Identifying Data Needs
  • Define the problem
  • Decide on the geographic scope and detail
  • Pinpoint and define the specific variables (data)
    you will need
  • Establish the time period(s) for which you need
    the data
  • Decide on the presentation methods (tables,
    charts, maps, or a combination)
  • Establish cost and quality parameters for the data

8
What do Economic Developers Do
  • Create employment opportunities
  • Increase wealth and income
  • Increase the tax base
  • How do they do it
  • Retention and expansion of existing businesses
  • Attract new business
  • Support entrepreneurship
  • Other

9
Population losses experienced in recent decades
are likely to continue.
  • Population reached a peak in 1920 (41,403) since
    1920 the county experienced losses each Census
    except 1970 to 1980
  • The current population is 28,900 excluding the
    prison
  • Projections show slight declines of less than 1
    over the next five years
  • The rate of migration is very low, not many new
    faces in town!

10
Population Pyramids
With Prison Population
Without Prison Population
Male
Female
The 65 population is large but declining
Baby Boomers Will they stay or go?
Brain Drain
School age children will slowly decline
11
An increasing number of workers are crossing
county boundaries to find employment.
  • Your neighbor, Macoupin County, is now a metro
    county.
  • Commuting is a two way street. The number of
    workers commuting into Montgomery county
    increased at the same time the number of persons
    commuting outside the county increased.

12
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13
Montgomery County Resident Worker Profile
14
The labor force is growing even though the county
population is shrinking.
  • More residents work now than ever before
    primarily because of the age structure of the
    population and an increase in the proportion of
    females working.
  • BUT the County still has a relatively low labor
    force participation rate when compared with the
    rest of Illinois.

15
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16
The number of full and part-time jobs has
increased in recent years but long term has
tracked national cycles.
17
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18
The labor force has many characteristics
indicating the area may not be attractive to the
employers of the future
  • Educational attainment level are improving but
    are still below averages for rural Illinois and
    the State.
  • In particular the proportion of college educated
    persons is low, less than one half the Illinois
    average.
  • The prison population is included!
  • Occupation?????

19
Educational Attainment
20
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21
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22
The structure of the economy has changed
dramatically over the last 20 years.
  • Montgomery Countys economy reflects national
    trends with fewer workers producing more output
  • Basic industries, those exporting products and
    importing income, are agriculture, mining, and
    communication and public utilities.
  • Natural resource industries, including mining and
    agriculture, experienced dramatic declines in
    employment in the 1990s
  • The service sector of the economy emerged as the
    dominant sector in the 1990s

23
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24
Montgomery County
These charts illustrate the extraordinary differen
ces in the economic base of Montgomery County and
Illinois. Note the dominance of natural resource
industries in Montgomery compared to finance and
services in Illinois.
Illinois
25
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26
The housing stock is old and housing values are
low.
  • 47 of housing units were constructed prior to
    1950 compared to 40 for Rural Illinois and 32
    for the State
  • Lowest median value for owner occupied housing
    (54,767) when compared with neighboring counties
    (64,366), Rural Illinois (70,504), and the
    State (130,829)

27
The low income profile will influence many facets
of the county economy and institutional
infrastructure.
  • All measures of personal income are below those
    for neighboring counties, rural Illinois, and
    Illinois. Poverty rates are above the State
    average.
  • Diminished buying power and disposable income
    will restrict growth in retail sales.
  • The willingness to invest in local institutions
    like schools, parks, health care, and
    infrastructure may also be limited.
  • Local financial resources for investment in
    entrepreneurial endeavors may also be limited.

28
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29
1990-2000 MEDIAN HOUSEHOLD INCOME
30
What does it all mean?
  • Montgomery Countys future is as dependent on
    what happens in the surrounding counties as it is
    on what happens at home.
  • In the next five years the county is likely to
    continue to experience population decline and
    erosion of buying power because of low incomes.
  • Strategy development should focus on population
    growth and increasing per capita incomes.
  • Although many jobs have been created in the
    County they are primarily in the service sector
    where wages are low and benefits limited.
  • Reversing long term structural changes in the
    local economy and work force will take time.
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