Mon
May 4 2015
02:11 pm

Somebody sent me the press release about this. It's not on the City website yet, so I don't have a link and will have to post the entire text.

PLANNER WITH EXPERIENCE IN KNOXVILLE AND NORTH CAROLINA NAMED NEW EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF MPC

Gerald Green, a professional planner with decades of experience in East Tennessee and North Carolina, has been named the new Executive Director of the Knoxville-Knox County Metropolitan Planning Commission.

Green, currently the Planning Director for Jackson County, N.C., was selected by Knoxville Mayor Madeline Rogero and Knox County Mayor Tim Burchett after a six-month search process.

Green has a Master’s degree in City Planning from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and a B.A. in Urban Affairs from Virginia Polytechnic Institute. He worked as Principal Planner for the East Tennessee Development District from 1979-1982, and in the decades since has also worked as a Senior Planner and Chief Planner for the City of Asheville, N.C., and in private practice as owner of NFocus Planning and Design in Asheville. He has been in his current position with Jackson County, N.C., since 2010.

“I am very excited to return to East Tennessee to work with the City and County and the talented group of professionals at MPC,” Green said. “I have returned to Knoxville often over the years, and I am impressed with all of the progress and growth the area has seen. I look forward to helping to build on that momentum through all of the planning services that MPC can provide.”

MPC was established in 1956 by Knoxville and Knox County as the agency responsible for comprehensive county-wide planning and administration of zoning and land subdivision regulations and remains so today, except for the town of Farragut. Funding for MPC activities comes primarily from City and County appropriations and from federal grants for specific initiatives.

Green will oversee a staff of 35, with duties that include preparing and adopting a General Plan; reviewing subdivision regulations and site plans; preparing and recommending zoning ordinances and maps to the Knox County Commission and Knoxville City Council; and reviewing proposed zoning amendments.

“MPC provides vital services to the City of Knoxville, and it is crucial that we have effective leadership at the agency,” Mayor Rogero said. “We had a very strong pool of applicants for this position, and Gerald really stood out. His background in both city and county planning, and his familiarity with Knoxville and East Tennessee, will make him a great asset to all of the constituents MPC serves.”

“I look forward to working with Gerald as the new director of MPC,” Mayor Burchett said. “In a very real way, the organization’s work affects everyone in Knox County, from individual residents to business owners, which is why the director’s position requires effective communication with the public. Ultimately, that is who everyone in government works for.”

Green was selected from more than 30 applicants for the position, and was one of three finalists interviewed by the mayors and a joint City-County search committee. Green will begin his duties on July 1, succeeding former MPC Executive Director Mark Donaldson, who retired at the end of 2014. Jeff Welch, Executive Director of the Transportation Planning Organization, will continue to serve as interim director of MPC until then.

Up Goose Creek's picture

Walkability

Knoxville Mercury says Mr. Green is an advocate of walkability - I wonder if he will choose a home where you can actually walk to something.

One of my concerns is that Green will push for sidewalks on every single street. Do we need to worry about all the trees that happen to be growing in a right of way? I support Jim Hagerman's approach of focusing on the streets that connect to something and/or other sidewalks.

Now I like walkability as much as anyone, there was a tiny "country" store right down the street when I first moved into my home. And I walked to it even without a sidewalk! But I worry that "walkability" is sometimes used as a code word for high density urbanism. Do I need to get a heavy lock and chain so I can chain myself to the porch?

DowntownMan's picture

Chain yourself immediately

The walkability army is coming for you.

Up Goose Creek's picture

Ha Ha

It must feel fun to belittle me. Does it make you feel like you are hip and with-it?

I was referring to Eminent Domain.

Which is serious.

Up Goose Creek's picture

urbanaism vs Urbanism

My reaction to "walkability" is it seems to be a dog whistle term for Urbanists (capital U).

An example of this movement is Mark D telling community leaders he wouldn't craft a mixed use zone compatible with existing neighborhoods because he had made a pledge to the Congress of New Urbanists to promote density as much as possible. As a result the entire measure failed.

I hope the new director puts local concerns above the Urbanist ideals. There's a lot of room for innovation in our city without making it look like midtown Atlanta or those sterile mixed use buildings clogging the north shore of Chattanooga.

I will be happy to buy any frustrated Urbanists a one way ticket to Chattanooga, BTW.

As for real walkability I am a big fan. My parents were urbanists (small u) and made sure we lived in neighborhoods where the kids could walk to schools, stores, the library, etc.

Bad Paper Original 's picture

Mark D

"An example of this movement is Mark D telling community leaders he wouldn't craft a mixed use zone compatible with existing neighborhoods because he had made a pledge to the Congress of New Urbanists to promote density as much as possible."

Mark D was just another Jim McIntyre. Above the law and pledged only to situational ethics. Both the MPC director and the School Super should be elected because we cannot trust the boards that SHOULD supervise them. The fix is in with the boards. They are proxy votes. And that is the failure of appointing these positions.

At this point what is the difference between the Congress of New Urbanists and the Broad Academy?

Fish, did you see how I did that semi-Hillary quote? That was for you buddy. Because I care.

Rachel's picture

An example of this movement

An example of this movement is Mark D telling community leaders he wouldn't craft a mixed use zone compatible with existing neighborhoods because he had made a pledge to the Congress of New Urbanists to promote density as much as possible. As a result the entire measure failed.

Citation, please.

bizgrrl's picture

I agree with what you are

I agree with what you are saying. Don't agree with the promotion of "density as much as possible." Thanks for bringing it up.

Up Goose Creek's picture

Citation

This conversation took place at a public meeting at the Cansler Y. I did not have a tape recorder so you might speak to someone who was there for verification.

Yes it is speculation on my part that that is the reason the measure failed. Possibly wishful thinking as I would have liked to see some sort of mixed use zone but I did sense from the tone of the question that there might be room for compromise if the mixed use buildings were of an appropriate scale.

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