Laserfiche WebLink
..._ 1 ... .~ _.. ....__ .~S r -. ... r J. ~i..u s1}~r~ F~i~ <br />C7 <br />• <br />• <br />20 Pl~nniny Apri12004 <br />PROFESSIONAL PLANNI?R <br />Barbara Lukermann, ['A[~P <br />Barbara Lukermann could be called the Bar- <br />bara Walters of Minnesota planning: She's <br />tough. She's fair. She has a slight accent. And <br />when folks are looking for someone to lead a <br />hot-button discussion, they turn to her. <br />Apracticingplanner <br />and for 25 years pro- <br />fessor at the Univer- <br />sity of Minnesota, <br />Lukermann is winner <br />of the 2004 APA <br />award for distin- <br />guishedleadership by <br />a professional planner. <br />The award caps a <br />broad-ranging career <br />that includes teach- <br />ing, research, and con- <br />sulting. <br />The British-born <br />geographer has <br />taught hundreds of <br />planning students at <br />the University of <br />Minnesota's Hubert <br />Humphrey Institute <br />of Public Affairs, <br />where she headed the <br />land-use concentra- <br />tion. She has influenced state and regional <br />policy by her work in groups such as the <br />Minnesota Environmental Quality Board, the <br />Governor's Round Table on Sustainable De- <br />velopment, and the Metropolitan Waste Con- <br />trol Commission, which she chaired in the <br />late 1970s. "I became committed to sewers>" <br />she says with a wry laugh. <br />Bridging mane worlds <br />She has studied homelessness, exclusionary <br />zoning, affordable housing, commercial cor- <br />ridors, clusrer development, nonprofits, and <br />government spending. And she has helped <br />guide 30 years of metropolitan growth ftom <br />the first comprehensive plans in the 1960s <br />for dozens of first-ring Twin Cities suburbs <br />to last years strategic growth study for <br />exurban Lakeville. <br />The first chair ofAICP in 1978-79> she was <br />named a Fellow ofAICP in 2001. <br />Lukermann's expertise has taken her to <br />post-Nlao China and- post-Communist Ro- <br />mania and Poland to do what she does best: <br />help others understand the way cities and <br />regions change and grow. <br />"I've always been a bridge between the <br />world of planning and the academic world," <br />she says. <br />Lukermann, 74, retired three years ago <br />from teaching. She is now a fellow emeritus at <br />the University's Center for Urban and Re- <br />gional Affairs, <br />which receives <br />state money to <br />engage students <br />and faculty in ap- <br />plied research. <br />She is research- <br />ing the last 50 <br />years oftranspor- <br />tation decisions <br />in the metro area <br />with center di- <br />rector Tom <br />Scott. <br />"It's really <br />been a rewarding <br />career," she says <br />with the lilt of <br />her native York- <br />shire in hervoice. <br />"This is why I <br />don't know how <br />to retire." <br />Lukermann's <br />enthusiasm about land-use planning has en- <br />gaged both students and citizens. <br />Bob Erickson, city manager of Lakeville, <br />says he has brought Lukermann in three times <br />to facilitate strategic planning for the fast- <br />growing southern exurb. Since 1998 the city <br />has grown from 38,000 to 48,000. <br />Something happens "when this English lady <br />is presenting current trends," he says. "Her <br />effervescent enthusiasm makes it enjoyable." <br />Erickson credits the 29 detailed recom- <br />mendations in her 1998 study with helping <br />Lakeville phase in new housing, j ump to fourth <br />in the metro area in permit valuation (after <br />the big three of Minneapolis, St. Paul, and <br />Rachester), and "keep ahead ofrapid growth." <br />Although the Lakeville studies are consult- <br />ing jobs, they are just the sort of case studies <br />Lukermann used to hone her students' skills. <br />Deal lu•oject <br />"She secured real projects, that she hired stu- <br />dents to work on, or made the subject of a <br />class," says Barbara Sporlein, a former <br />Lukermann student who became Minneapo- <br />lis planning director in January. As a planning <br />student, Sporleinand amulti-disciplinary team <br />assessed housing needs for the first-ring sub- <br />urb of Brooklyn Park. <br />"Not only was it great planning experience, we <br />also got some practice in how to package a plan <br />and present it to a city council," Sporlein says. <br />Plus, says Sporlein, "with those experiences and <br />Lukermann's name behind it, I got the plan- <br />ningjob Iwanted in St. Paul right out of school." <br />Lukermann says that seeing her students <br />find distinguished posts with cities, congress- <br />men, or government agencies such as the <br />Federal Highway Administration "is a real <br />pleasure." <br />Curt Johnson, a writer for the CitiStates <br />Group who formerly headed the Metropoli- <br />tan Council, the Twin Cities regional govern- <br />ment, says Lukermann tackled tough issues <br />such as who pays for waste water treatment. <br />"She stepped right into the middle of that <br />weighty and politically radioactive issue, ran <br />some serious numbers, and came to some <br />conclusions. It was a courageous thing to do," <br />Johnson says. <br />Working on public issues seems to be <br />Lukermann's lifeblood. Three Minnesota gov- <br />ernors have appointed her to leadership posts. <br />She especially prizes her chairmanship of the <br />Department of Natural Resources steering <br />committee for a metropolitan "greenprint." <br />The greenprint served as a base for the Met <br />Council's more detailed natural resource in- <br />ventory. Now, she says, if only communities <br />were still required to plan, they could, as they <br />develop, work around these natural resources. <br />Linda Mack <br />Mack is the architecture and urban design columnist <br />for the Star-Tribune in the Twin Cities. <br />1'vi~El"PI;D C)FI~NIIAL <br />Gov. Ruth Aiui 1llinner <br />"We need to pursue a strategy that will keep <br />sprawl in check, reduce traffic congestion, <br />strengthen our towns and cities, and protect <br />our huge investment in roads, schools, and <br />other infrastructure." <br />Spoken like a planner, these are the words <br />of Gov. Ruth Ann Minner of Delaware in her <br />first State of the State address three years ago. <br />Minner called the strategy "Livable Delaware," <br />and she set out to make good on its promise. <br />In recognition of her leadership, Minner <br />receives the 2004 APA award for an elected <br />official for a significant contribution to plan- <br />