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Bad
land-use decisions can be made when citizens aren't aware that others
share strong feelings about the community. Dr. Thomas Horan heads a multi-university
team based at Claremont Graduate University in Southern California that
uses GIS to explore citizens attitudes about their neighborhoods.
Horan focuses on specific places that elicit strong positive and negative
perceptions.
In one Minneapolis-based study performed in collaboration with the University
of Minnesota, researchers asked citizens: "What are the things that
you don't like about your neighborhood? What do you think brings lesser
value to your neighborhood?" The answers included boarded-up storefronts,
liquor stores, and railroad tracks. Using GIS, citizens pointed out the
places they disliked, producing a map of "hot spots" that people
agreed were liabilities to the neighborhood. Researchers also asked, "What
things are assets to your neighborhood? What things do you take pride
in?" The local system of lakes rated highly in this study.
This process of assessing the neighborhood, says Dr. Horan, "creates
a visual summary of community feelings giving decision makers an immediately
understandable impression of what neighborhood residents cherish and want
preserved, and what they want improved." Dr. Horan and his colleagues
have replicated this approach in several communities throughout the United
States.
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