Tamika Butler of the Los Angeles Neighbourhood Trust visited Halifax last week as one of the keynote speakers for the organized by students in the 麻豆传媒 School of Planning.
Inclusive urban planning means creating cities that are safe, accessible and equitable 鈥 places that work for everyone.
For this to happen, experts say we need to acknowledge those who have historically been left out of the conversation.
鈥淲e have to acknowledge that people experience things differently,鈥 said Tamika Butler (left), executive director of the Los Angeles Neighbourhood Trust. 鈥淭here are people who have been historically neglected and planned against, and we have to start doing things that plan for them.鈥
Butler delivered the annual Carmichael Lecture last Thursday evening at the SHIFT: Streets conference, a three-day gathering with panels and workshops organized by students in Dal鈥檚 School of Planning. An annual affair, this year鈥檚 SHIFT conference centred on the theme of making 鈥済reat streets together.鈥
In order to do this, Butler explained that it is necessary to look to the past and see the way historical inequities in our laws and customs continue to impact the way our communities are planned.
鈥淵ou will repeat history if you are afraid to have honest conversations,鈥 said Butler, whose organization addresses social and racial equity issues by building parks and gardens in park-poor communities across greater L.A.聽聽 聽
Feeling safe in one's community
Butler described her experience as a black woman in America and the fears that she has every day.
鈥淓very time I go to the park, I worry that people will call the cops on me,鈥 she told the audience gathered at the Halifax Marriott Harbourfront for her talk.
She also mentioned the story of Eric Garner, who lost his life in 2014 for standing on a sidewalk, because the police suspected him of selling cigarettes. If this were truly a shared street, Butler noted, this tragedy would not have happened.
People who do not have to worry about being unsafe in their own community have a certain level of privilege. Having this privilege means that one has to think outside their identity, and plan for those who have experienced oppression, she said.
While trying to improve communities, it is important to ask the hard questions, such as: are the changes making the area nicer for the people who are already there? Or are they simply trying to push those people out?
鈥淚f you want to plan for a community, you have to be able to acknowledge the reality that community faces,鈥 said Butler.
Working together
The community also has to be part of the planning itself. It is not simply about having diverse people at the table, but about giving them decision-making power. 鈥淲e have to get past diversity, and to inclusion,鈥 said Butler.
In order to make streets more equitable, according to Butler, we must become allies for the historically disadvantaged. This requires taking risks, acknowledging past-wrongs, and working towards solutions. 聽
Butler believes it is important to 鈥渃o-power鈥 community members rather than 鈥渆mpower鈥 them 鈥 a distinction that lies in understanding the insights that locals bring to the conversation.
鈥淵ou have to realize that when you鈥檙e working in communities, the power is already there,鈥 said Butler. 鈥淵ou have to work with them.鈥