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NBN Overview
Planning Process Guides
Slide & Text Presentation
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NBN
Overview
What
is NBN?
Neighbors Building Neighborhoods (NBN) is the City of Rochester’s
nationally acclaimed citizen planning process. Initiated in March 1994,
the City of Rochester is divided into ten planning sector areas. Each
planning sector group has organized itself, created community vision
statements, identified key neighborhood issues, priorities, and
developed action plans to realize their goals. The planning sectors, with the help of the City
of Rochester and other major community stakeholders, completed over 78%
of the original activities identified in their plans. The original action plans
served as content for developing the City’s Comprehensive Plan,
"Rochester 2010: The Renaissance."
To respond to the changing needs in the sector area, in June 1999,
sector groups reorganized their committees to begin a process for
updating their original plans. The NBN2 Update Process was designed to
be completed over a two-year period, starting with a six-month planning
phase followed by an 18-month implementation phase, which began in
January 2000.
Throughout the NBN2 Update Process, each sector
committee has been encouraged to involve businesses, institutions, the
faith community, youth and the senior citizen population, to name a few.
City efforts have focused on promoting diversity within the sector
committees, re-energizing neighborhood residents, recruiting volunteers
and reaching out to new partners who will support the implementation
phase. Building on the strengths, capacities and assets of the community
is based on the principles and goals of the original NBN Planning
Process.
What is the ultimate goal of the NBN Process?
To establish and maintain stable,
healthy and diverse neighborhoods which are developed and sustained by
citizens. The focus of this community visioning process has been to
capitalize on the strengths and assets which residents and organizations
contribute to their respective communities.
Who is involved in NBN?
The City of Rochester, Rochester
City School District, neighborhood associations, businesses, private
and parochial schools, churches, agencies, community groups, Monroe County,
foundations and corporations are just some examples of those involved.
What effect has NBN had?
The NBN process has
enabled residents, business people, and organizations to be the "planners" for
their neighborhoods for the first time in the City’s history. Citizens
continue to successfully shape our community. Our collective efforts
have created a synergy, an unified approach to utilizing the assets and
resources of our neighbors. Many stories reflect the successful reinvestment
and renewal of our neighborhoods and renaissance vision.
What systems are in place
to support the process?
Accountability is a key to NBN's
success. With the multitude of activities included in the Sectors Action
Plans, it became necessary to provide technology and to create
a marketing campaign to keep the community apprised of the ongoing
accomplishments and successes of the sector areas, individually as well
as comprehensively. To accomplish this, the NeighborLink Network, a
technology initiative, was developed to monitor and track activities
and to facilitate communication and coordination among NBN partners.
To help coordinate the activities between those City departments that
have been identified in the action plans as implementing partners, an
NBN Priority Council is established. Members of this Council include
key representatives from each City Departments and the Rochester City
School District. Members serve as coordinators and liaisons to the sector
groups and report on activities and accomplishments. The NBN
Institute, a City sponsored educational initiative, offers ongoing training
and seminars on various topical areas to continue building the capacity
of sector volunteers, general citizens and community stakeholders.
How has NBN been recognized?
NBN is continuously in the national
spotlight as a Best Practice model, and City Administration staff are
utilized as peer consultants for developing citizen participation processes
in other communities.
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