CITB01H3 Chapter 1: The Nature of Canadian Planning (pp. 3-20)
Document Summary
The nature of canadian planning (jill grant): pp. In the us, zoning is often more powerful than and separated from planning; in. It is a necessary process to facilitate decision-making with the interrelationships among key elements: people, physical objects, and ecological processes, problems, subject matters, and specializations, jurisdictions (federal, provincial, regional, and municipal), domains (social, economic, political, and physical). It promotes the common or collective interests of the community. It considers the external effects of individual and group action. It improves the information base for public and private decision-making. "intent of the plan"; rejecting projects that do not need planning criteria, and approving of those that do: no single approach is best, and the chosen approach reflects interest base and values. Issues in planning vary depending on location, but also time period. For instance, in the 1960s, issues revolve around urban renewal; in the 1970s and.