Update on current Land Use Code revision and Feb 28th hearing

Good news!

On February 7th the County Commissioners held their regular meeting. One important outcome of the meeting was that Commissioner Suppes stated that they will not pass the Planning Commission’s proposed land use code revision as it currently stands. As quoted from the meeting minutes: “Commissioner Suppes added that if it [the land use code revision] was what they saw last time he can assure… it will be remanded [voted down] again.”

Commissioner Don Suppes further clarified in the same meeting, that this stance was the result of the tremendous community response and issues which have been brought forward concerning the land use code revision proposal.

The Commissioners need to continue to receive clear support to follow through and vote down the 2023 draft Land Use Code Revision in its current form, in order for the issues to be addressed.

February 28th is the scheduled upcoming hearing for public input and for the County Commissioners to vote on whether this version of the land use code revision will be adopted. It is critically important for the Commissioners to hear from residents of Delta County at this hearing. An auditorium has been booked for this meeting and a large number of county residents are expected to attend and voice their input. Each person is likely to have only 3 minutes to speak, so it is recommended to have notes and prepared comments.

Meeting details:

Date: February 28th

Time: 4:30pm to 7:30pm

Location: 822 Grand Ave., Delta, Colorado

NOTE: this hearing will be available to watch on zoom, but public comments via zoom will NOT be allowed.  You must attend the hearing in person to make comments to the commissioners.

We encourage concerned community members to educate themselves on how the proposed code will affect you, contribute constructive feedback to the county at the hearing, and attend even if you don’t plan to speak in order to show the Commissioners that this topic is important to you.

For information on specific major issues identified in the code or examples of how the proposed 2023 LUC revision might affect you, your property, business, or farm, visit our Issues Page.

What is a Civic Partnership Association?

BUILDING A BETTER FUTURE THROUGH CIVIC PARTNERSHIP

A Civic Partnership can create a pathway for citizen groups and local authority leaderships to work together to create and build resilient and healthy communities. A Civic Partnership is a framework for developing partnerships between governments, regional and local authorities, civil society organizations and other relevant actors,

Local efforts to build effective civic partnerships need to engage with various complexities and challenges.

Some aspects of the local strategies required to work with this complexity for civic gain include:

  1. Setting clear goals through defining valued outcomes.
  2. Working across agency and other boundaries so as to engage whole systems.
  • Making local people active partners in co-producing the future.
  1. Strengthening local resilience to cope with uncertainties.
  2. Working with multiple stakeholders with various interests.
  3. Bringing all these processes together to seek cooperative solutions to local challenges.

Civic partnerships work to establish clear goals to guide the action required to meet a complex set of local challenges through outcomes based policy-making. This concept is a simple idea to encourage civic leaderships, working with their communities and other local  stakeholders to ask – and answer – the question ‘what are the key things (the  valued outcomes) we are seeking to achieve overall in this locality?’ and then to  use this public statement of priorities as the template to guide and evaluate  everything which is done e.g. through the enabling role of the local authority, the  services it commissions/provides and different kinds of community action.

Local people become active partners in shaping and delivering the actions which affect them and their communities now and into the future.  People are experts in their own lives and this expertise needs to be the key contribution. Communities are typically rich in the capabilities of their members, their reciprocity and social networks. These are all important assets in improving local well-being.

Communities joining in Civic Partnership with public agencies to build a better future has come to be described as ‘co-production’. This partnership may be at the level of the individual or involve a particular group or be about challenges facing the whole community.

Each Civic Partnership is unique but always involves shared goals and agreements on how to best achieve those goals.  There is no specific framework for creating a Civic Partnership because it is created through processes of building relationship to achieve positive outcomes for challenges faced within a community.  Therefore it is a self-defined partnership based on trust and mutual benefits for all involved in those outcomes.