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Regionalism : Innovation + Job News

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St. Paul hires first sustainable transportation planner

Emily Goodman has given the subject some thought.

While earning degrees in geography and psychology at Macalester College, she wrote an honors thesis titled The Green Cities: an Exploration into the Twin Concepts of Urban Sustainability and Conservation Psychology.

In January, after nearly three years working on transportation and bike/walk issues in St. Paul's Department of Planning and Economic Development, Goodman began putting her knowledge and experience to work as the city's first sustainable transportation planner.

The position is a new spoke in the city's larger Sustainable St. Paul strategy. A key part of her work so far has been conducting a survey of bicycle projects in anticipation of a citywide bike plan, which she calls "much-needed and exciting."

Goodman will work to establish a "bicycle priority network"--areas and routes in which the city will support biking with aspects like signage, road treatments, traffic calming, bump-outs, bike boulevards, and off-street trails.

That too supports a larger effort: to create a balanced transportation plan in line with the city's adopted "Complete Streets" policy.

"It acknowledges that the system should serve all users," says Goodman. Cars, bikes, buses, light rail, and pedestrians all have their place. Goodman's position "will focus on types of transportation that�will need a little bit of extra love," she says.

Another part of her role is to partner with other organizations and municipalities--"anybody who is doing good work in the Twin Cities region," she says. St. Paul is currently working on an effort to establish regional way-finding guidelines with nearby counties, the Minnesota Department of Transportation, and, of course, that twin city across the river.

While she does feel a bit overshadowed by the country's number-one bike city, St. Paul's relationship with Minneapolis is "friendly and collaborative," says Goodman, who calls Minneapolis "a great asset."

St. Paul has received some funding, for instance, as a rider on Minneapolis' participation in the federal Non-motorized Transportation Pilot Program, administered through St. Paul-based Transit for Livable Communities.

And Goodman agrees that Minneapolis' lauded bike culture is bolstered at least a bit by its metropolitan neighbors.

"St. Paul has done amazing things," Goodman says. "I'm excited to improve on those, but also to improve on telling the story of what we're already doing."

Source: Emily Goodman, St. Paul's Department of Planning and Economic Development
Writer: Jeremy Stratton


Minneapolis, St. Paul announce partnership to seed, grow green manufacturing

Minneapolis and St. Paul announced an economic development partnership last week aimed at boosting green manufacturing in the region.

Thinc.GreenMSP is a marketing and resource-sharing plan aimed largely at growing demand for products from local green businesses in the two cities.

"We think if we grow the demand for for their products, they'll stay and grow," says Cathy Polasky, economic development director for the city of Minneapolis.

The plan lays out five strategies. The first two involve getting the cities to adopt similar green buying and green building policies. Minneapolis requires its departments to buy green office and cleaning products whenever possible, but St. Paul does not. Meanwhile, St. Paul requires both government and city-funded projects to meet certain green building requirements, but Minneapolis only does so for government projects.

Other strategies include establishing a program to recognize green business leaders in both cities, exploring a potential green industrial park or parks, and creating programs and networking opportunities to help green entrepreneurs finance their businesses. The latter may involve helping new business owners network with private investors or tailoring existing city finance programs to better fit green businesses.

Polasky says the partnership will also include working with the private sector. She cited the city's recent work with the Minneapolis Regional Chamber of Commerce to create a green business-to-business networking group.

"We think we have a solid green environment here already," says Polasky, "and so we think that we have a good starting point to be competitive."

Source: Cathy Polasky, City of Minneapolis
Writer: Dan Haugen

Minnesota Cup semifinalists include a dozen entries from Greater Minnesota

A gadget to help doctors diagnose patients across language barriers is one of a dozen outstate Minnesota proposals to make the Minnesota Cup semifinals.

The annual entrepreneur contest has typically been dominated by metro-area inventors, but 12 of the 48 semifinalists announced last week come from Greater Minnesota.

"We had more entries than we've ever had from outstate Minnesota, which is something we've really been trying to develop," says Matt Hilker, director of the Minnesota Cup.

Duluth-based Geacom, for example, makes a medical communication device called Phrazer, which lets patients point to diagrams in more than 100 languages.

Hilker credits the contest's new partnership with the Arrowhead Growth Alliance in northeastern Minnesota for helping to boost participation in Greater Minnesota.

Minnesota Cup organizers received around 400 proposals for this year's contest. The 48 semifinalists will spend the next month refining their business plans before the field is reduced to 16.

By the end of summer, there will be one finalist in each of six divisions: cleantech, biosciences, high-tech, general, student, and social entrepreneur.

The social entrepreneur division, which is on a different schedule than the others, announced its finalist last week: Saint Paul's Springboard for the Arts.

Source: Matt Hilker, Minnesota Cup
Writer: Dan Haugen
18 Regionalism Articles | Page: | Show All
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