Showing posts with label Brentwood Future. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brentwood Future. Show all posts

Friday, May 22, 2009

Today @ BrentWord: Sports, music and more

How about those Brentwood Academy baseball players winning the Division II-A state tourney yesterday? And the Brentwood Bruins' boys soccer team won its way into the Class AAA Spring Fling finals Saturday. The match is at 2:30 p.m. in Murfreesboro.

Plus: BA's Alyson Hasty earned her second state pole vault title while Chenelle Terry came home with the high jump trophy. In Class AAA action, Ravenwood's Courtney Woodard, won the triple jump for the second consecutive year.

Congrats to all the Brentwood athletes who have competed in state competition this year!

Also posted this morning:
  • Memories from last night's WannaBeatles concert at the Martin Center
  • A report from yesterday's Brentwood Future information meeting.

Still to come ... who knows! But check back today and over the weekend for updates and musings. (And if you missed yesterday's postings, scroll down for even more news (and a picture of Brad Pitt...)

Public-private partnership key to "Future"

A healthy crowd attended the Brentwood Future information meeting Thursday hosted by Brentwood architect Walter Kiskaddon. Among those attending were architects, commercial and residential real estate professionals, Town Center redevelopment advocates, a landscape architect, an environmental expert, small business owners, chamber officials and several citizens.

No city officials, professional or elected, attended though many were invited.

Franklin attorney Julian Bibb presented an overview of Franklin Tomorrow, a non-profit, public-private organization formed in that Historic city less than 10 years ago. Since its inception, the organization has helped provide a focus and consensus to how Franklin should grow into its future while respecting its past.

"In the late '90s, there was a tremendous amount of bumping into each other of the preservationists and developers," Bibb told those gathered at the Brentwood Cool Springs Chamber office. "There was a notion that this could be done better than butting heads."

Two key ingredients combined in Franklin Tomorrow's recipe for success: First, they had to discover "what the community wants it to be" and second, they had to "do it in a neutral stance."

A steering committee studied cities that had already put "visioning programs" in place, among them Chattanooga, the "Tri-Cities" of Bristol, Johnson City and Kingsport (in anticipation of the slowdown at Kodak, one of the area's main economic contributors), and several in Ohio.

Bibb said the committee discovered that in all locations where these programs were successful, "the city doesn't control it but is part of the program." The same is true of local chambers, he added.

To start, Franklin Tomorrow asked the city and local businesses and nonprofit organizations to provide funding, participation and support. Later a consulting firm hired.

Public input was vital, Bibb said, to the point that the city agreed to close down Main Street around the Historic Franklin Square for six hours. During that time, anyone could come and identify their personal priorities for the city's future.

The final result: A living, breathing plan and process for implementation that allowed for growth and change.

Franklin Tomorrow's vision and input is now reflected in city decisions on park plans, environmental plans and codes, Bibb said.

Throughout his talk, Bibb came back to the notion that Franklin Tomorrow's success was possible only through the public-private partnerships formed at the very start of the process.
"(Franklin) totally gave us access," he said of the steering committee.

Kiskaddon said his hope is that Brentwood can have a similar organization, one that can help determine "what Brentwood wants to be and where we want it to grow from here."

Kiskaddon had copies of both the Franklin Tomorrow and Brentwood 2020 plans and was asked how the two differ. Community input was key to the creation of Brentwood's comprehensive planning guide when it was adopted in 1999. A major update took place in 2006.

The general consensus of those attending was that the two could complement each other, but that an organization such as Brentwood Future would be a living, breathing entity that could enhance what the city is already doing.

"I feel passionate about this," Kiskaddon said, noting he is committed as a professional and a citizen to the project. He called those attending "ambassadors" and noted that while no city officials were there, he had heard from Mayor Betsy Crossley and Vice Mayor Rhea Little and anticipated interest from others as well.

"It really needs to be a public and private partnership," he said.

What's Next: A formal meeting in June or July.
In the meantime, here are links for background...
Brentwood 2020 Plan: www.brentwood-tn.org/index.aspx?page=171
Franklin Tomorrow: http://www.franklintomorrow.org/

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Busy Thursday and beyond

It's time to get out your calendar, Blackberry, whatever and mark down some important times and dates. For starters, here are a few opportunities you may want to consider on Thursday:
  • Want to hear the nitty gritty about what the city commission will discuss at its next meeting? Then the 9 a.m. City Commission Information Meeting is for you. It takes place at the Brentwood Municipal Building's board room, 5211 Maryland Way. And a gentle reminder that the regular commission meeting has been moved to next Tuesday, May 26, because of Memorial Day.

  • Another informational meeting, this one to discuss the possible formation of "Brentwood Future," a group that reportedly is shaping itself after the non-profit Franklin Tomorrow (http://www.franklintomorrow.org/), is scheduled at 5:30 p.m. Organized by local architect Walter Kiskaddon, AIA, this one takes place at the opposite end of the municipal building in the Brentwood Cool Springs Chamber of Commerce offices. I've put out emails to several people on the invite list and hopefully will have more information and thoughts about it soon.

  • After the Brentwood Future meeting, you can switch gears and have a little fun at the Music and Memories at the Martin benefit concert featuring the WannaBeatles (see yesterday's post for details and the Top 10 reasons you should go).

Looking further out, at 6 p.m. June 9, the Environmental Quality Coordinating Committee is hosting a "public input session" designed to gather input and ideas from people like you and me interested in environmental issues affecting the Brentwood community. In the meantime, please go ahead and participate in an online survey the committee has designed to help get feedback from city residents. You'll find it at www.brentwood-tn.org/greensurvey. I'll have more on this meeting closer to the actual date.

And finally, Mayor Betsy Crossley tells me she's asked City Manager Mike Walker to schedule a meeting on June 18 for Town Center land and business owners as well as any else interested in the area's redevelopment. While she cannot attend Thursday's Brentwood Future meeting (she had already committed to volunteer at The Martin Center), she tells me "I don't want to stop any dialog about Town Center. Let's keep the dialog moving forward."
Should have more details on this meeting next week if not sooner.