Place, Identity, and the Burden of Planning Someone Else’s Hometown

Rory Isbell Lake County Parks and Recreation Master Plan Community Planning Workshop CPWPlanners are burdened by a heavy responsibility.  Planners are responsible for creating, maintaining, and improving peoples’ hometowns.  Hometowns are not just the places where we live; rather they are the spatial manifestation of our lives.  Hometowns are the floor, walls, and roof of our identities.  The places we are from, and the places we live, inform who we are. We have pride in our communities because our lives are wrapped up in our communities.

It is a loaded question to ask someone “where are you from?”  The answer is not merely a piece of data, but a slice of identity.  When I answer that question, I say that I’m from Flagstaff, Arizona.  But my answer – Flagstaff, Arizona – is so much more than a set of coordinates on a map.  Flagstaff is the city where I learned to drive in a 1986 Toyota Tercel through a harsh winter in one of the snowiest cities in America.  Flagstaff is where my family’s house was perched on the edge of Walnut Canyon, where I spent summers and weekends exploring from our backdoor and gaining a respect for nature that continues to guide my values and goals.   Flagstaff is where I was a bass player in a high school rock band with two of my best friends who I would go on to move to Oregon with after college.  When I answer with the words “Flagstaff, Arizona,” I’m not just saying where I’m from, but where my identity was formed.

Here in Eugene, Oregon, I am on the Community Planning Workshop Team project for the Lake County Parks and Recreation Master Plan.  Lake County has never had a parks and recreation plan, so a big part of our project is identifying what residents want in their parks and recreation opportunities.  To that end, we recently conducted interviews with about 30 stakeholders.  We asked them to tell us about Lake County.   We asked what people like to do for fun in Lake County. We asked why Lake County is special.  In short, we asked “where are you from?”

The answers we heard were not simple street addresses or names of locations.  We heard about the qualities that make Lake County special.  We heard about the trails that start right in town and end at magnificent viewpoints.  We heard about the swimming pool where families meet and enjoy summer afternoons.  We heard about fishing spots where grandfathers teach their grandsons how to cast a fly.  We heard about dispersed campsites where relatives meet every year to tour the back country on ATV.  We heard about high school gyms where local rivalries are fought and won.

As outsiders, the answers to our interview questions might seem simple, but we will never fully understand their true meaning to the residents of Lake County.  Just as no one will ever know exactly how Flagstaff, Arizona is wrapped up in my identity, we will never know exactly what Lake County means to those who call it home.  Nevertheless, we do the best we can.  We listen earnestly, we read extensively, and we work tirelessly to do the stakeholders justice and create a parks and recreation master plan that channels the identity of Lake County.

 

Rory Isbell CPW Community Planning Workshop Lake County Parks and Recreation Master PlanAbout the Author: Rory Isbell is from Flagstaff, Arizona and is in his second  year at the University of Oregon pursuing degrees in law and community and regional planning.

 

Asking Questions and Taking an Inventory

Lake County Parks and Recreation Master Plan CPW Community Planning WorkshopThe Lake County Parks and Recreation Master Plan Team (through the Community Planning Workshop) has set out to develop a vision for parks and recreation in Lake County, Oregon. Our intrepid group of public administration and community and regional planning students will be working with communities in Lake County to understand their health and recreational needs and values. We even have a County task team with local knowledge and expertise to help guide our recommendations.

Understanding the context of planning parks and recreation in Lake County requires that we take an inventory of the current parks system and the role that it plays in the community and local economy. From concept to deliverable, this project involves: researching social and economic trends, interviewing stakeholders, surveying community members, holding community meetings, interpreting the results of this research, and, finally, creating a Parks and Recreation Master Plan based on our findings.

Turns out, there is a lot to learn about a place you’ve never been!

Alexis Biddle Lake County Parks and Recreation Master Plan  CPW Community Planning WorkshopWe’ve learned about Lake County’s geography – it has the highest elevation city in Oregon! –; populations of towns – hint: they are small –; demographics – apparently, it’s a great place to retire! –; seasonal swings in employment – farm towns vary a lot! –, and tourism.

From my experience, having grown up in a larger city, focusing on the economic trends in a rural county made me realize how important each and every job is to the local economy. Gaining or losing even ten jobs can make a huge impact in the prosperity of towns in rural Oregon.

From the Lake County Treasurer and our project advisor, Anne Crumrine, we learned about Red Rock Biofuels planned biomass plant for Lakeview, Oregon. The plant will create fuel from logging debris for the military. More importantly, this development will likely create needed jobs in Lake County. This project and developments like it will drive the growth that shapes the demand for parks and recreation.

Alexis Biddle Lake County Parks and Recreation Master Plan  CPW Community Planning WorkshopMy teammate Rory and I were so excited to visit Lake County that we went for sneak peak to Fort Rock. The eroding center of a volcano was like nothing I had ever seen – a piece of living geology still speaking the story of the Earth. We knew that this story needed to be shared and are excited to let others in on secrets like this in Lake County.

We are currently in the process of conducting stakeholder interviews. These interviews are preparing us for our first round of community conversations in February. During that trip we’ll get to taste even more wonders of Lake County’s park system.

That’s right, it’s our job to go to the park.

 

Alexis Biddle Lake County Parks and Recreation Master Plan  CPW Community Planning WorkshopAbout the Author: Alexis Biddle is a law student focusing on land use and is pursuing a Masters in Community and Regional Planning. He  has a passion for active and public transportation and wants to promote policy related to healthy and sustainable communities. In his free time, Alexis enjoys backpacking, snowboarding, biking, and competitive stone skipping.