It is clear that land use decisions made
in one community can have impacts upon neighboring towns. A city’s
failure to provide housing might push people to live in rural towns and
commute long distances. A town’s desire to see commercial growth along
a highway might result in strip development, draining a downtown
economy. Sediment loads entering a river from poor construction
practices in an upstream town may affect water quality and stream
behavior in all communities through which then river flows.
Vermont’s eleven regional
planning commissions were created, in large part, to provide a forum to
examine such concerns, and the framework and staff to address them.
The 2008 Central
Vermont Regional Plan articulates CVRPC’s vision for a
region in which important land use decisions are made in a way that is
mindful of their broader implications. Accordingly, it provides member
municipalities, regulators, and the general public with a number of
goals, policies, and strategies designed to achieve a well-balanced,
well integrated region.
The Regional Plan also provides the
framework for CVRPC’s participation in Act 250, Vermont’s development
review process. As a statutory party to the
Act 250
process, the Regional Commission provides testimony on those projects
determined to be regionally significant.
From time to time the Commission conducts
more specialized regional studies. The
Central
Vermont Natural Resource Inventory
and the Central Vermont Recreation Report are examples of such
works.