Posts Tagged ‘Teton County Comprehensive Plan’
Since the Town of Jackson’s wide-reaching DRD (Downtown Redevelopment) plans were voted down via public referendum seven years ago—a true, in-your-hands measure of community sentiment expressing its will that we not over-develop our town, not turn it into a playground for mismatched, overbuilt developments, not speculate that we can match Teton Village’s resort destination allure—-we’ve watched development happen. When citizens said “no” to DRD, development rights were simply granted individually, one project at a time.
And here we are, with a fist full of empty commercial space, large quantities of unsold real estate units, and a community that feels ever more transient. Too many citizens wonder if they should stay in the valley or leave it.
Town planners and community have been, for years, giving their lives over to creating an acceptable plan for this special place. We have been asked to trust our comments are truly heard by our leaders, charged with representing the public’s interest. As a community, we cannot afford to know we’ve all been whistling dixie. We want a logical process of implementation.
Otherwise, for all these years, our community has merely engaged in an exercise.
Preserving environment and quality of place, managing growth, and creating a viable, broad-based economy are Jackson’s great challenges. We need a certain critical population mass to achieve
that balance, but most crucial is ensuring we promote and protect our wildlife, its habitat and other environmentally sensitive areas.
We must continue moving towards making the arts a part of the Town of Jackson’s future. We can remind all visitors of our history by including beautiful and lasting public places in our Comprehensive Plan. That sort of planning aids in building tourism and helps us towards finding out what level of economic success we can expect to reach. We should, as Candra Day has said, be strengthening sustainable tourism practices, using cultural assets as tools. Growth should incorporate landscaping, parks, and grace of space. Let’s create space both sacred and fundamental. Without these provocative elements, we forfeit a higher level of urban vibrancy.
Officials must strategize to attract new businesses–businesses offering solid, long-term employment—to Jackson. Attract and establish products and services desired and supported by locals and visitors. Strive to fill all this empty commercial space, rather than plan for more building.
It still appears that developers are feeling encumbered by wildlife. Our core economic stability lies in protecting and preserving the power of this place. All new projects should be primarily concerned with that goal. Geography and wildlife are our golden eggs–they will only become more precious.
Keep downtown vibrant, give it an identity separate from Teton Village’s—we cannot match that profile—and use it as a place where families who can’t afford $400 a night lodgings may stay. We want to keep those “families of five from Toledo.” We want them to be able to come hereand experience the wonders of this place–we want to educate them. If we do not, why will anyone want to protect this place?
Former Jackson Hole Conservation Alliance Director Franz Camenzind has said, “We come home, there’s a moose in the yard. We pick up the phone, call our friend in Atlanta, and get them to guess what’s outside our window. It’s not just going to the parks to see these animals, it’s having them right there with us. Living with them. Nobody has the diversity of wildlife we do, let alone have it as visible as it is, interwoven with community.”
Public Art and Placemaking are, as many of us in the arts community have been saying, inextricable from contemporary, smart, even green, urban growth. Right now, the Teton County Comprehensive Plan is available to for the public to review. This is our chance to comment on the way we will grow, not only quantitatively, but qualitatively. Quality urban growth must include public urban spaces and public art.
If Jackson Hole’s citizens do not make reviewing this plan a priority, we essentially determine not to vote. And those of us determining not to vote lose a lot of “street cred.” Writing letters to the editor is a crucial public right; writing them when you’ve opted not to be a part of the process by showing up at town meetings or workshops is a bit fraudulent. The Comprehensive Planning process has been activated for many, many months.
YOU are the Plan.
I know it’s hard; but make this a priority. Here’s a way to start.
TUESDAY, MAY 12, beginning at 5:30 p.m., attend a public meeting at the CENTER FOR THE ARTS. The meeting takes place on the Center’s third floor, in Teton Art Lab’s new space. The Art Association’s digital photography studio will be available for those wanting to contribute comments electronically. Members of our arts community will ask questions and submit comments on the inclusion of public art and placemaking in Teton County’s Comprehensive Plan. Please try and make time to study Themes 3 and 7, in particular.
Preserving environment and quality of place, managing growth, and creating a
more viable, broad-based economy are Jackson’s great challenges. Most crucial is ensuring we promote and protect our wildlife, its habitat and other environmentally sensitive areas. In our region, the arts are a keystone in preserving place. Although our Town Square’s monument, various land art and myriad creative educational projects provide continual reminders of our inherent love for the arts, we’ve so far not included researching and moving towards making the arts a part of our “constitution,” as it were. We can remind ourselves and all visitors of this history by including beautiful and lasting public place making in our Comprehensive Plan. Such planning aids in building tourism and strong market values. Think logo.
Art captures the essence of the places dear to our hearts. Successful public art resonates on a national level. Our traditional themes may be translated traditionally; they may also be translated using contemporary aesthetics and materials.
We must not only include the words. We must decide upon a logical process of implementation. Without implementation any plan is simply an exercise.
For information, contact Don Kushner at don@jhcenterforthearts.org or Carrie Geracie at carrie@centerofwonder.org.
Jackson Hole resident Don Harger makes several important points about Teton County’s growth and planning: Our residents want to be knowledgeable about the process; we have strong neighborhood groups; it is difficult for many people to attend meetings or understand the complexities of the planning process.
Last December, I read a news article about a New England town and its novel approach to planning. The New York Times piece not only described part of a community’s growth planning strategy; it tied in the town’s recognition of the importance of public art in planning. Public art is a hot topic here in Jackson Hole; public art is controversial in many urban areas simply because the arts are so subjective. They’re an opinion, a view.
Here’s a summation of that article:
Starksboro, Vermont is finding out what town qualities its residents wish to preserve by recruiting Middlebury College students; the students spend a semester canvassing residents. They document community thoughts and preferences regarding growth. The town will use that information to help steer planning.
Students attend meetings, explore the region, and go door-to-door. Funding for the project is secured with help from the Orton Family Foundation and the Vermont Land Trust.
Said the Orton Foundation’s spokesman John Barstow, “We’re trying to make a process where more people who don’t go to meetings and aren’t speaking up and are not activists have a chance to express what is important to them.”
A Middlebury professor, John Elder, noted, “The key is to project beyond immediate controversies over applications for subdivisions and to say, ‘Let’s envision the future that we would love to have,’ at which point there is considerable agreement.”
The article goes on to say that another problem rural Vermont faces is losing young people to states with significantly more jobs and housing. The students found that parents raise their children to leave Starksboro, and few young people attended town meetings.
The project is to culminate in a special town forum, where students present their findings. The Orton Family Foundation and the Vermont Land Trust will pay for an artist-in-residence, “…with the goal of helping the town create a lasting piece of art, music or writing that reflects its hopes for the future.” Orton said the company would provide more funds to incorporate changes in land use.
Jackson’s population is about four times that of Starksboro’s. Fewer opinions bouncing about, but what folks there seem to have agreed upon is that public art can be successfully created within a public planning system. Planning for public art space is thinking forward; that’s good for comprehensive planning.
