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AmericaSpeaks Proves
Citizens Scattered by Catastrophe Can Help Plan Reconstruction From
Multiple Distant Public Locations
Thousands of New Orleanians Develop Unified Plan For Community Congress II
In early
December, the AmericaSpeaks (www.americaspeaks.org
)method of large, complex public deliberations was used by over 2,500
residents of New Orleans to help develop the Unified New Orleans
Plan. However, in this use of its 21st Century Town Meeting format,
the participants were not together in one room.
In fact, they
were communicating and planning together from 5 major American cities
to which they had fled Katrina and its aftermath: Atlanta, Houston,
Baton Rouge, and Dallas. Another large group was in New Orleans
itself. Plus, there were groups from 16 other community sites that
participated as well…united by modern telecommunications technologies.
Community Congress II and Its Priorities
Dubbed Unified
New Orleans Plan (UNOP) Community Congress II, the organizers sought
input on many of the most difficult issues that are dogging the more
official local, state, regional and national planners and
reconstruction experts up to this very minute.
But the citizens
who participated waded in and tackled such issues as .how to balance
social welfare and development against the city’s infrastructure
needs, and how much emphasis to place on protecting and restoring the
environment.
According to
Lars Torres, an AmericaSpeaks spokesperson, “Among the surprising
findings of the day was overwhelming support for construction of the
strongest possible levees (Category 5) in the city and concentrating
recovery dollars in the parts of the city with the greatest need,
those most devastated by Hurricane Katrina.”
To what extent
this prioritization influences the professional and governmental views
remains to be seen. However, the experiment proved how well this
method can be used to gain citizen participation in planning and
prioritization even when the citizenry has deserted an area devastated
by some natural or other calamity.
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