| The North Dakota Planning Association (NDPA) was
incorporated on October 26, 1973. The state boasted only three professional
planners at that time, and the planning process was new to many.
The planners from Bismarck, Fargo, Minot, Grand Forks and the director
of the State Planning Department were well acquainted and had been
meeting informally for about a year prior to the actual incorporation.
This initial group included Will Walton, Russell Staiger, Tom Jacobson,
Keith Burkholder, Mort Mazaheri, Vern Hunter, Earl Stewart, Willis
Kingsbury, Dave Schmidt, Bill Sharff, Charles Franks, Greg Waldoch,
Francis Chichester, Karen May, Jerry Schimmelpfennig, Lewis Lubka,
Irv Rustad, Bonnie Austin and others.
The initial mission statement stated the desire for a professional
organization to provide a forum for discussion and education among
people involved in planning. Minutes from the initial meetings
indicate a need for education for planning commissioners and for
formulation and lobbying for or against legislation. Two meetings
were held each year, one in May and the other in October-November,
and meeting sites were scattered around the state. The organization
recognized outstanding work in the state with awards for Planner
of the Year and Publication of the Year, beginning in 1978 spring
meeting.
Membership grew to around 60-70 people by 1982. Annual conferences
during that period were very well attended, with some 250-300
attendees at the 1987 conference (which was the regional Western
Planner conference that featured the Poppers). Membership dropped
during the late 1980s and in recent years has climbed to 100 members,
exceeding the original level.
Archived meeting brochures and other files give a profile of
association activities. The themes and topics from 1973 to 1976
follow the mission of the NDPA: to provide a forum for education
on planning and zoning issues. Meetings from 1981 to 1985 featured
topics about survival, greater local responsibility, “back
to Basics,” and “current needs.” Economic development
dominated conference themes and agendas from 1986 to 1997. Strategic
planning was first mentioned in 1990 and the conferences from
1995 to 1997 dealt with the immediate problems of coping with
the disasters that impacted ND during 1993 to 1996. Workshops
on training for lay officials formed the basis for conferences
in the late 1990s. The Growing Smart program in 2000 capped several
years of interest in reviewing the state’s enabling legislation.
The advent of email has provided another network for the NDPA,
since questions can be posted to the membership and help is (almost)
instantly available. To handle planning concerns during the 2003
and subsequent legislative session, the NDPA is working with the
North Dakota League of Cities.
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