Bloustein graduate studio, NJCAA receive NJ Planning Excellence Awards by APA-NJ Chapter

November 6, 2017

The Bloustein School spring 2016 graduate studio “Plainfield District School Travel Plan,” and the New Jersey Climate Adaptation Alliance (NJCAA), a project facilitated by the Bloustein School and the Rutgers School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, are recipients of 2017 Planning Excellence Awards.

The awards are presented annually by the New Jersey Chapter of the American Planning Association.

Members of the Plainfield School District Travel Plan project.

The “Plainfield District School Travel Plan” is the recipient of the Outstanding Student Project Award, presented to outstanding class projects or papers by a student or group of students that contribute to advances in the field of planning. Graduate students in the class, taught by staff at from NJ Safe Routes to School Resource Center, analyzed demographics, mapped pedestrian and bicycle crashes and school catchment areas, gathered survey data on student travel mode and school principal concerns, conducted walkability assessments with a photo inventory, gathered feedback from the steering committee, crossing guards and parents, and identified municipal or school district policies that support or hinder walking and bicycling. The students developed an action plan that describes barriers and solutions that address education, encouragement, enforcement, engineering, and evaluation. The plan supported an application for over $300,000 in federal funding that was recently awarded by New Jersey Department of Transportation.

Graduate students in the class included Nan Chen, Yupo Chiu, Karan Gandhi, Ziye Guo, Ganlin Huang, Chao Lyu, Chihuangji Wang. Leigh Ann Von Hagen, AICP/PP, senior research specialist and Sean Meehan, research project coordinator at the Bloustein School’s Alan M. Voorhees Transporation Center, served as class advisors.

Earlier this year, the travel plan was the recipient of a New Jersey Future Smart Growth Award.

Marjorie Kaplan, associate director of the Rutgers Climate and Environmental Change Initiative and Jeanne Herb, associate director of the Bloustein School’s Environmental Analysis and Communications Group.

The New Jersey Climate Adaptation Alliance was the recipient of the inaugural James W. Hughes Applied Research Award. The award is presented to an individual or organization whose applied research has affected change in New Jersey, as the substantive basis for legislative, regulatory or policy change, or as the driver of a shift in a fundamental approach to planning.

NJCAA is a network of diverse sector leaders enhancing climate change preparedness in New Jersey. The Alliance created a Science and Technical Advisory Panel (STAP) to develop consensus science projection regarding sea level rise, coastal storms and coastal flood hazards to support local planning and decision-making. The outcomes of the STAP’s efforts are already being used by planners in several contexts in New Jersey. In addition to developing science-informed projections, the Alliance also developed a framework that planners and decision-makers can use to apply the scientific projections for purposes of coastal planning and decision-making.

Jeanne Herb, associate director of the Bloustein School’s Environmental Analysis and Communications Group and Marjorie Kaplan, associate director of the Rutgers Climate and Environmental Change Initiative at the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, accepted the award on behalf of NJCAA.

Recent Posts

Laurie Harrington named Executive Dir. of Heldrich Center

Laurie Harrington has been appointed Executive Director of the Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers University. She has been serving as Acting Executive Director of the center since February 2024 and previously served as the center’s Assistant Director...

NJSPL – Safely Accommodating Micromobility Innovations

From Lab to Streets: Safely Accommodating Micromobility Innovations By Clinton J. Andrews, Leigh Ann von Hagen, Robert Noland, Hannah Younes, Wenwen Zhang, Jie Gong, Dimitris Metaxas, Desheng Zhang Electric scooters have been widely visible on our streets only...

New Jersey State Policy Lab Celebrates 3rd Anniversary

By Elizabeth Cooner, Ed.D. As we celebrate three years since the inception of the New Jersey State Policy Lab (NJSPL), we are proud of the solid foundation of public policy research we have built. Working with more than 120 faculty members, 80 students, and experts at...

RAISE-24 Recap: Does News Media Spread Fear of AI?

Summary The final round for the RAISE-24 Informatics – Data Science competition was held Friday, April 19, 2024 at the Bloustein School. Hosted by the Master of Public Informatics (MPI) program, the inaugural competition challenge asked competitors “Does News Media...

NJ Unemployment Insurance Claims Dashboard Released

The New Jersey Statewide Data System has released the New Jersey Unemployment Insurance Claims Dashboard. This dashboard uses linked, longitudinal administrative data from the New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development and the New Jersey Office of the...

Upcoming Events

Bloustein School Convocation

Jersey Mike's Arena 83 Rockefeller Road, Piscataway, NJ, United States

The formal BLOUSTEIN SCHOOL CONVOCATION ceremony will recognize each graduate individually with pomp and circumstance.  Students will cross the stage and have their names read as they are recognized. Seating is general […]

Implications of Robotics for Public Policy

Virtual

This presentation offers a systematic analysis of the emerging routes by which applications of embodied artificial intelligence—robotics—elicit public policy responses.