Sustainable Community Development Education in the Finger Lakes
Helfrich JSE Nov 2015 Hope Issue PDF
Abstract: This paper explores the creation and successes to date of an undergraduate minor program in Sustainable Community Development at Hobart & William Smith Colleges (HWS) in Geneva, New York. As a case study, it describes the program that HWS faculty created, the various components that comprise the undergraduate minor, some reasons why faculty chose to create a program based on sustainable community development rather than “sustainability studies,” the projects on which the students have worked, and some reasons for the success of the program. This program can be used by other colleges and universities as an alternative to programs that focus on sustainability studies only.
Keywords: sustainable community development, education, interdisciplinarity, collaboration, college and town relations
Sustainable Community Development Education in the Finger Lakes
However conceived, described, or analyzed, sustainability is the issue of our time, all others being subordinate to the global conversation now under way about whether, how, and under what terms the human experiment will continue. David W. Orr
In 2011, Hobart & William Smith Colleges (HWS), a private liberal arts college in the Finger Lakes wine region of Upstate New York with 2,300 students, was approached by a recent graduate about the possibility of funding the creation of a program in real estate development. (At HWS, technically two small liberal arts colleges, men attend Hobart and women attend William Smith.) A generous philanthropist and thriving real estate developer, the alumnus felt that he had benefited from his time spent learning from faculty in the Colleges’ programs in Architectural Studies and Urban Studies. He had already funded the renovation of a design studio for the Colleges’ successful Architectural Studies program.[1] Campus administrators responded by stating that HWS did not have the faculty nor resources to create such a program and pitched a new idea: creating an interdisciplinary minor program in Sustainable Community Development (SCD). The program would be housed within the Environmental Studies Program, which, depending on the year, is the largest on campus major (and nearly always the largest interdisciplinary minor). Representatives from other programs and departments, such as Architectural Studies, Economics, Biology, and the Finger Lakes Institute (FLI, an on-campus office dedicated to promoting environmental research and education about the Finger Lakes region), rounded out the planning committee. In response, the alumus, through his relationship with the not-for-profit Isabel Foundation in Flint, Michigan, granted HWS $100,000 to pilot the initiative. HWS received two additional years of funding, which came to an end in the Summer of 2014, to launch the program.
This case study describes the program that HWS faculty created, the various components that comprise the undergraduate minor, some reasons why faculty chose to create a program based on sustainable community development rather than “sustainability studies,” the projects on which the students have worked, and some reasons for the success of the program, as well as some successes to date.
The alumnus initially asked HWS faculty and staff to look at the University of Michigan’s real estate development certificate program as a model.[2] “We tried to develop an HWS version of some of the same skill sets while acknowledging that we are a liberal arts college,” according to FLI Director Lisa Cleckner.[3] Based on the available HWS course offerings and beliefs among the committee members about skill sets that students should master by completing the minor, students are required to complete six courses, including a required introductory course (ENV 101) titled “Sustainable Communities” and an intense, cross-listed “capstone” course (ARCH/ENV 351), usually completed in a student’s third or final year of study, titled “Sustainable Community Development Methods.” Students select one technical writing course (e.g., “The Science Beat”); one methods course (e.g., statistics, GIS, film editing, or design studio); one service learning course; and one elective course from a list of pre-approved courses in the humanities, social sciences, or sciences to round out the minor.[4] Regardless of a student’s declared major or minor, we have already seen a number of students who come to the SCD program having completed at least three of the six courses.
The “bookends” of this program, courses ENV 101 and ARCH/ENV 351, are keys to its success. By the end of the first three Spring semesters during which ENV 101 was offered to six class sections total (2012-2014), the number of students totaled more than 200. By the end of the 2014-2015 school year, that number reached more than 265 students. ENV 101 is an extremely popular class. Although students come to this class with a fair amount of knowledge about environmental topics, they have limited knowledge of sustainability. The course begins with an interrogation of the 3 Es of sustainability: environmental protection, economic development, and social equity.[5] Students take to heart several important points from the Brundtland Commission’s 1987 report, that sustainable community development “meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” According to the Brundtland report, “It contains within it two key concepts: the concept of ‘needs,’ in particular the essential needs of the world’s poor, to which overriding priority should be given; and the idea of limitations imposed by the state of technology and social organization on the environment’s ability to meet present and the future needs.”[6]
As a survey course, ENV 101 introduces students to the concept of sustainable community development as applied to real world communities. The course not only focuses on the United Nation’s three “interdependent and mutally reinforcing pillars” of sustainable development but also on intertwined subjects such as agriculture, architecture, biology, culture, ecology, education, historic preservation, landscape design, public policy, and urban planning, to name a few. Rochester, Geneva, and local communities in the Finger Lakes area serve as case studies to discern how cities and towns are working to become more sustainable. Students learn about opportunities to become civically engaged and involved within those communities.[7]
Guest speakers play an important role in ENV 101, both in the classroom and as part of four or five required evening presentations and lectures by recognized leaders in sustainable community development. Various architects, city planners, community activists, engineers, farmers, and neighborhood leaders offer their time for the Sustainable Community Development Spring Lecture Series.[8] The lecture series, which is open to the general public, touches on the key themes of the course: sustainability concepts generally; the built environment (including historic preservation and transportation); energy and waste; food and water; science, business, and technology; and “healthy communities.” Through their interactions with guest speakers, students are able to investigate and better understand renewable energy, what makes certain neighborhoods successful, green cities and infrastructure, the value of nature, biomimicry, LEED rating standards, Community Supported Agriculture (CSAs), and the High Line in New York City, among many other topics.[9]
Students in this course spend the entire semester working in groups on a larger project. Several of the projects have focused on the following places: the Seneca Army Depot, which once provided the most munitions for the U.S. during World War II all the way until the first Gulf War; the separation, differences, and possible overlap of services between the Town and City of Geneva; neighborhood issues and development; urban water quality concerns and stormwater runoff mitigation, especially regarding Castle Creek, which runs through Geneva; the future of tourism in the Finger Lakes; and the nexus of water and energy in the Finger Lakes.[10]
The work of one group of students is noteworthy. In the Spring of 2013, one group selected as its project the proposed demolition of Finger Lakes Community College’s (FLCC) satellite campus in Geneva, which is located in the old Geneva High School. FLCC planned to demolish the school in order to make way for a new, smaller building at the same location. The students in ENV 101 spoke to the architect of the new school, conducted research in the local archives, located newspaper articles about the old building, interviewed neighbors, and reached out to City Council leaders. They then used their respective knowledge and skills in sustainability, design and architecture, environmental consciousness, and social media to produce an informative video project.[11] Although the building was eventually demolished, these students felt that they had participated in community discussions about this place and taken informed action. They showed through their efforts that—to borrow a phrase from a National Trust for Historic Preservation campaign—“This Place Matters.”
After the introductory course was up-and-running, ARCH/ENV 351 “Sustainable Community Development Methods” was created.[12] By the time students enroll in the capstone course, it is anticipated that they will not only have a firm grounding in sustainable community development but also have learned several skills and tools that can be brought to bear on their final project. In its first semester, this co-taught seminar focused on downtown Geneva, looking at what to do with several parcels of vacant land and underutilized spaces.[13] In its second semester, this course had as its project the development of a Brownfield into a park in the East Lakeview Neighborhood. Working in groups, students had countless brainstorming sessions, multi-stakeholder meetings, and charrettes within the community; they interviewed various residents and business owners, spent countless hours pursuing research within the community, and devised several plans to implement on this particular piece of land.[14] In the Spring of 2015, students worked and collaborated on two projects for the Town of Canandaigua: multi-modal transportation master planning and stormwater planning.[15] The students who have completed this course have helped strengthen the Colleges’ connections to the local community, while gaining relevant skills by participating in real-world projects.
A number of on-campus initiatives led to the selection of a path in SCD rather than simply “sustainability studies.” The Environmental Studies (ES) and Architectural Studies (AS) programs at HWS have experienced exponential growth within the last few years and, as a result, student enrollment in these programs is at an all-time high. Students are being exposed to the ways in which myriad environmental challenges and the built environment go hand-in-hand, and have learned the value of interdisciplinary work. HWS students also have seen a rise in the number of employment opportunities within urban planning, sustainability-related careers, and the environmental not-for-profits, as well as unique and new graduate programs globally. As a result, the ES program has witnessed a 55 percent increase in declared majors and minors, while the AS program has seen an increase by 50 percent in declared majors. Indeed, the program in SCD not only is a differentiator that allows HWS to set itself apart from other colleges but also allows HWS to build on unique and existing strengths that few other liberal arts colleges have.[16]
The decision to create this program was intentional: “by 2011, many colleges and universities were launching or had recently established sustainability majors and minors, and we thought integrating a community development focus would help to distinguish an HWS program from the others,” according to Cleckner. “The ‘real-world’ skills were something that the granter emphasized and we wanted to make sure that the program would appeal to students from [various] disciplines.” And since a focus area of FLI is economic development and its staff “recognize[s] the value and impact of higher ed[ucation] institutions on communities,” Cleckner and other faculty felt that “sustainable community development is a form or economic development for our community and our region.” Such deliberate decisions to be good stewards within the community and of local resources go hand-in-hand with projects elsewhere on campus, in the nearby Town and City of Geneva, and in the larger Finger Lakes region of Upstate New York.[17]
Indeed, HWS is committed to working with community leaders and citizens within the small, 13,000-person city of Geneva, New York, to establish ways in which both the Colleges and the city can collaborate and grow in mutually beneficial ways. HWS recently launched the Geneva Initiative, a plan to commit $2 million dollars over ten years to the municipality. Such efforts go hand-in-hand with HWS’s longstanding service learning initiatives in which students on campus perform a variety of tasks, volunteer at several local not-for-profits, and generally act in ways that provide examples of serious citizenship and public ethics.
The Colleges were also committed to several sustainability efforts that predate the grant funding. Like several other colleges and universities, HWS became a charter signatory to the American College and University Presidents’ Climate Commitment. Foremost among the commitments was the announcement in 2011 that the Colleges would purchase 100 percent of its electricity from wind power, as well as the establishment of an Office of Sustainability, the strong support of the student Eco-Reps Program, the construction of electric vehicle (EV) charging stations, and high levels of student interest in environmental studies topics generally.[18] The Colleges recently acquired a farm and students have played a large role in the planning for the property. It is anticipated that the farm will be devoted to sustainable agriculture, while some portion of the land will include the installation of a solar array.[19] Indeed, there are a number of exciting on-campus initiatives, as well as campus-community programs, that made easy the decision to adopt a program in sustainable community development.[20]
After receiving the initial funding, HWS and FLI hired a Program Manager to establish a committee of faculty and staff to plan for the program, to facilitate its planning, and to work with faculty to create the entry-level survey course. The Program Manager arranged for guest lecturers for that class, networked with local businesses, governmental, and not-for-profit organizations, and brought dozens of people to campus, including environmental educator David Orr, architect and urban planner Doug Farr, and journalist and NPR radio host Steve Curwood.[21] To make this project successful, it was crucial to have dedicated staff.
The CSD Program soon added a Community Design Center (CDC), which became the Finger Lakes Community Development Center.[22] The Center provides paid Summer internships to undergraduate students. In its initial Summer, the CDC worked on two projects: first, working within Ontario County to design green infrastructure elements and, second, assessing the needs of a main entrance into both the Town and City of Geneva.[23] In its second summer, the CDC staff and students worked on the City of Geneva Parks Master Plan.[24] One early “client” was Ontario ARC, which determined that it wanted to construct an outdoor recreation area at its Eberhardt Center in nearby Canandaigua. The design center’s director and a group of paid student interns developed sensory gardens and new paths and structures, in an effort to enrich the place, make it useful to the 70 adult residents, and improve their quality of life. The students had to determine what was non-poisonous, low maintenance, and sustainable in terms of plant selection. What is exciting about this example is that the Ontario ARC has already started to build the selected design. Indeed, these were real-world experiences for students that had positive real-world consequences.[25]
The SCD minor was approved by HWS faculty in Spring 2014 and has already proven successful. Just a few weeks after approval, the program graduated its first four seniors with the minor, several of whom have jobs “in the field.”[26] Seven students earned the minor in 2015 and at least 13 students will graduate with the SCD minor in 2016.[27] More than 20 additional students are currently declared and 22 out of 62 students in the “Sustainable Communities” course during the Spring 2014 semester expressed a strong interest in pursuing the minor. Lastly, in part because of the success of the SCD program, the Environmental Studies faculty in Fall 2014 launched a new live-learn community for first-year students that is dedicated to sustainable living.[28] These are not boastful observations. Rather there exists the hope that the work that has been pursued and the steps that have been taken will act as a model for other schools.
The SCD Program has also had additional successes. The two faculty members who taught the capstone course were recently recognized by the Geneva Neighborhood Resource Center with a “Quality, Research, and Design” award for their work with students on the East Lakeview Neighborhood park.[29] The establishment of this program has made it possible to hire two new faculty members in Environmental Studies, as well additional staff. The SCD Program has also helped and will continue to strengthen “town and gown” relations. Part of what has also helped this program is the creation of a regular blog series as part of the Finger Lakes Institute’s monthly newsletter, Happenings, with the tag line, “SCD Concepts.”[30] HWS is already starting to see that, along with other programs, SCD acts as a recruitment tool for undergraduates. Furthermore, students from various programs across the HWS campus are realizing that there are a multitude of benefits to completing this minor.
As a result of taking SCD courses or completing the SCD program, a great amount of what the students are exposed to is the benefits of interdisciplinarity.[31] Oftentimes academics can become fixed within specific disciplines and silos of study. Studying sustainable communities, however, gets students away from “fixed” thinking and enables them to see the benefits of learning across a broad range of disciplines. Each semester students in the SCD program learn from, among other people, architects, engineers, business owners, economists, experts in advertising and other fields, historic preservationists, and community members. The students see how it is important to have an understanding of what makes a good building or neighborhood or community or project and that most often it is because of successes on multiple levels—at the level of the individual, as a result of the built environment, or in response to various social, cultural, environmental, and economic forces. No one “thing” by itself makes a community successful. Most importantly, through the projects that students have completed in ENV 101, ARCH/ENV 351, and during internships through the Community Development Center, students are engaged and doing something to help create a more livable present and future.
The Sustainable Community Development minor program at Hobart & William Smith Colleges, because it utilizes existing resources and is also perhaps more appealing to a greater number of students than the amorphous “sustainability studies,” is model that other academic institutions might wish to emulate. In creating this dynamic and innovative program, the faculty and staff at HWS stand behind the words of Oren Lyons, Faithkeeper of the Turtle Clan of the Onondaga Nation (Haudenosaunee-Six Nations Iroquois Confederacy), who once stated, “Even though you and I are in different boats, you in your boat and we in our canoe, we share the same River of Life. What befalls me, befalls you. And downstream, downstream in this River of Life, our children will pay for our selfishness, for our greed, and for our lack of vision.”[32] Sustainability concepts must be connected and infused throughout our entire education system. We sincerely hope that HWS’s program in Sustainable Community Development and other programs that it influences will help start the discussion and movements toward informed action, and that our efforts will be replicated and improved upon, spurring on a legion of informed activists bent on making this world a safer, healthier, and more sustainable place.[33]
[1] Joshua Unikel, “Redesigning Architecture’s Space,” The Pulteney St. Survey (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), Spring 2009, http://www.hws.edu/alumni/pssurvey/spring09/architect.aspx, accessed 4 August 2014.
[2] Taubman College, University of Michigan, Graduate Certificate in Real Estate Development, http://taubmancollege.umich.edu/degrees-certificates/graduate-certificate-real-estate-development, accessed 29 December 2014.
[3] Lisa Cleckner to author, email, 22 August 2014.
[4] For a full list of requirements and courses that can be used for this minor, see: “Requirements for the Minor,” 2014-2016 Course Catalogue: Sustainable Community Development, http://www.hws.edu/catalogue/scd.aspx, accessed 28 December 2014.
[5] Kaid Benfield, “More on the semantics of sustainability: is it time to reframe the ‘triple bottom line’?” Switchboard: Natural Resources Defense Council Staff Blog, 8 September 2010, http://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/kbenfield/more_on_the_semantics_of_susta.html, accessed 29 December 2014.
[6] Brundtland Commission, Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development: Our Common Future (October 1987), 41, http://www.un-documents.net/our-common-future.pdf, accessed 10 October 2015.
[7] Adam Maurer, “First Course Offering in the HWS Sustainable Community Development Program,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 December 2011, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2011/12/01/first-course-offering-in-the-hws-sustainable-community-development-program/, accessed 30 December 2014; Adam Maurer, “SCD Program Initiatives in Community Engagement,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 3 January 2012, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2012/01/03/683/, accessed 30 December 2014.
[8] For example, see: Adam Maurer, “Sustainable Community Development Lecture Series,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 2 March 2012, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2012/03/02/sustainable-community-development-lecture-series/, accessed 30 December 2014; Adam Maurer, “SCD Concepts: Final Spring 2013 Lectures Scheduled,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 30 March 2013, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2013/03/30/final-scd-lectures-scheduled/, accessed 30 December 2014; “FLI Hosts Sustainable Development Series,” The Daily Update (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), 13 February 2014, http://www.hws.edu/dailyupdate/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=17513, accessed 8 August 2014.
[9] Joel Helfrich, “SCD Concepts: HWS Sustainable Communities Course,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 May 2013, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2013/05/01/scd-concepts-hws-sustainable-communities-course/, accessed 29 December 2014.
[10] Adam Maurer, “Project Update: Sustainable Communities Interdisciplinary Team Projects,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 June 2012, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2012/06/01/sustainable-communities-interdisciplinary-team-projects/, accessed 30 December 2014; Joel Helfrich, “Demolition, Historic Preservation, and Sustainability: A Case Study from Geneva, New York,” d-build blog, 2 July 2013, http://d-build.org/blog/?p=3257, accessed 8 August 2014.
[11] Emgem228, “Finger Lakes Community College and Old Geneva High School,” 2 May 2013, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Alk4Uj-8W0, accessed 29 December 2014.
[12] Finger Lakes Institute, Hobart & William Smith Colleges, “ARCH/ENV 351 Spring 2013, Downtown Geneva,” http://www.hws.edu/fli/projects_arch_env_351.aspx, accessed 23 August 2014; Finger Lakes Institute, Hobart & William Smith Colleges, “ARCH/ENV 351 Spring 2014, East Lakeview,” http://www.hws.edu/fli/projects_arch_env2014.aspx, accessed 23 August 2014.
[13] Cari Varner, “Invigorating & Greening Downtown Geneva,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 June 2013, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2013/06/01/invigorating-greening-downtown-geneva/, accessed 30 December 2014; “SCD Concepts: Design Leads to Change,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 June 2013, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2013/06/01/scd-reports-2/, accessed 31 December 2014; ARCH/ENV 351: Sustainable Community Development Methods & Tools, “Project Area Press Releases,” Hobart & William Smith Colleges, Spring 2013, http://fliresource.wikispaces.com/file/view/Arch2013_Press%20Release.pdf/435132470/Arch2013_Press%20Release.pdf, accessed 30 December 2014.
“Designing a Sustainable Geneva,” Hobart & William Smith Colleges News, 6 June 2013, http://www.hws.edu/dailyupdate/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=16709, accessed 30 December 2014.
[14] Hannah Brunelle, Cari Varner, and Robin Lewis, eds., “From Brownfield to Park: A Proposal for the former Filling Station Site in East Lakeview,” Spring 2014, http://www.hws.edu/fli/pdf/proposal_sp14.pdf, accessed 29 December 2014; David Shaw, “Park eyed for former gas station,” The Finger Lakes Times, 11 May 2014, http://www.fltimes.com/news/article_32bd461a-d8b0-11e3-8856-0019bb2963f4.html?mode=jqm, accessed 8 August 2014; “The East Lakeview Vision: Transforming Brownfield to Garden,” The Seneca Daily News, 11 May 2014, http://senecadaily.com/?p=1040530#axzz33182Ddey, accessed 8 August 2014; Julie Anderson, “The East Lakeview Vision: Transforming Brownfield to Garden,” Geneva Neighborhood Resource Center Neighborhood News (Geneva, NY), 13 May 2014, http://genevanrc.org/the-east-lakeview-vision-transforming-brownfield-to-garden/, accessed 8 August 2014; Julie Anderson and Robin Lewis, “SCD Concepts: The East Lakeview Vision: Transforming Brownfield to Park,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 June 2014, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2014/06/01/scd-concepts-3/, accessed 29 December 2014; Cari Varner, “SCD Concepts: The Community Design Process—Extra Work for Extra Reward,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 August 2014, http://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2014/08/01/scd-concepts-the-community-design-process-extra-work-for-extra-reward/, accessed 1 August 2014
[15] Robin Lewis to author, email, 3 December 2014. See also, Mike Murphy, “Students helping chart town of Canandaigua’s future course,” Daily Messenger (Canandaigua), 18 March 2015, http://www.mpnnow.com/article/20150318/NEWS/150319619/1994/NEWS, accessed 10 October 2015; “HWS Students, Canandaigua Collaborate,” The Daily Update (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), 27 March 2015, http://www.hws.edu/dailyupdate/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=18578, accessed 10 October 2015; “Environmental Research Aids Town of Canandaigua,” The Daily Update (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), 26 June 2015, http://www.hws.edu/dailyupdate/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=18874, accessed 10 October 2015.
[16] Many Liberal Arts colleges do not have degrees in architecture, due to its pre-professional curriculum, nor architectural studies nor urban studies. Martha Bond to author, email, 11 May 2012; Lisa Cleckner to author, email.
[17] Cleckner to author.
[18] “Running a Campus on Wind Energy,” The Daily Update (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), 15 November 2011, http://www.hws.edu/dailyupdate/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=14906, accessed 21 August 2014; “HWS on EPA’s Green Power List,” The Daily Update (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), 20 December 2011, http://www.hws.edu/dailyupdate/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=14995, accessed 21 August 2014; Hobart & William Smith Colleges, “Sustainability,” http://www.hws.edu/about/green/, accessed 21 August 2014; “HWS Named Princeton Review’s Greenest,” The Daily Update (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), 3 May 2013, http://www.hws.edu/dailyupdate/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=16645, accessed 21 August 2014.
[19] “Fribolin Donates Property to HWS,” The Daily Update (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), 10 Feb 2014, http://hws.edu/dailyupdate/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=17501, accessed 21 August 2014; “Summer Sees Farm Development,” The Daily Update (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), 7 July 2014, http://www.hws.edu/dailyupdate/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=17996, accessed 21 August 2014; Ellen Mitchell, “Cultivating the Local Environment,” The Pulteney Street Survey (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), Summer 2014, http://www.hws.edu/alumni/pssSummer14/environment.aspx, accessed 21 August 2014; Sarah Meyer and Natalie Munderville, “Food and Field Notes: A Project in Growth,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 15 September 2015, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2015/09/15/food-and-field-notes-a-project-in-growth/, accessed 10 October 2015.
[20] Adam Maurer, “SCD program collaborates with HWS entities,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 3 February 2012, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2012/02/03/scd-program-collaborates-with-hws-entities/, accessed 31 December 2014.
[21] Lisa Cleckner, “Introducing Project Manager of Sustainable Community Development Program,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 November 2011, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2011/11/01/intro-adam/, accessed 30 December 2014; Adam Maurer, “Science and Technology in Agriculture,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 April 2012, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2012/04/01/science-and-technology-in-agriculture/, accessed 31 December 2014; “David Orr to Speak at HWS,” Daily Update (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), 29 November 2012; “David Orr to Speak at HWS,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 3 December 2012, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2012/12/03/david-orr-to-speak-at-hws/, accessed 31 December 2014.
[22] Cari Varner, “An Addition to the HWS Sustainable Community Development Team,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 2 October 2012, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2012/10/02/introducing-hws-sustainable-community-development-faculty/, accessed 30 December 2014; Lisa Cleckner, “SCD Concepts: Transitions in Sustainability and Community Development at HWS,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 31 July 2013, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2013/07/31/scd-concepts-transitions-in-sustainability-and-community-development-at-hws/, accessed 30 December 2014; Cari Varner, “Finger Lakes Institute – Community Design Center Promotes Sustainable Design in the Region,” Finger Lakes Woman, Oct/Nov 2013, p. 37, http://www.flwoman.com/pdfs/FLWOMAN_OCT_NOV_2013_web_linked.pdf, accessed 30 December 2014; Cari Varner, “The Benefits of Community Design,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 November 2013, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2013/11/01/scd-concepts-the-benefits-of-community-design/, accessed 30 December 2014; “Finger Lakes Community Development Center,” http://www.hws.edu/fli/ecodev.aspx, accessed 29 December 2014; Jim Ochterski, “Community Development Center: Introducing Program Manager Jim Ochterski,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 October 2014, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2014/10/01/community-development-center/, accessed 29 December 2014.
[23] Cari Varner, “The FLI-Community Design Center’s Inaugural Summer,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 June 2013, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2013/06/01/the-fli-community-design-centers-inaugural-summer/, accessed 30 December 2014; Cari Varner, “SCD Concepts: Community Design Center Makes Progress on Regional Projects,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 July 2013, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2013/07/01/scd-reports-3/, accessed 30 December 2014; Audrey Yifei, Margaret Markham, Joellen Mauch, Chelsea Encababian, Jamal Combs, “Community Design Center: A Summer of Sustainable Design,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 30 August 2013, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2013/08/30/community-design-center/, accessed 30 December 2014; Ted Baker, “Summer Interns Develop Projects for FLI,” The Finger Lakes Daily News, 1 September 2013, http://fingerlakesdailynews.com/news/details.cfm?clientid=16&id=91355#.VKM5utLF_sg, accessed 30 December 2014.
[24] Cari Varner, “SCD Concepts: FLI-CDC Takes Off For Another Summer of Sustainable Design!” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 May 2014, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2014/05/01/scd-concepts-fli-cdc-takes-off-for-another-summer-of-sustainable-design/, accessed 30 December 2014; “Sustainability Issues Discussed in Geneva.” Hobart & William Smith College News, 1 July 2014, http://www.hws.edu/dailyupdate/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=17990, accessed 8 August 2014; Cari Varner, “SCD Concepts: Sampson State Park Interpretive Cell Phone Tours and the Geneva Parks Master Plan,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 September 2014, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2014/09/01/scd-concepts-sampson-state-park-interpretative-cell-phone-tours-and-the-geneva-parks-master-plan/, accessed 30 December 2014.
[25] Cari Varner, “A Sensory Garden for Ontario ARC,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 October 2013, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2013/10/01/scd-concepts-designing-a-sensory-garden-fli-cdc-partners-with-ontario-arc/, accessed 30 December 2014; “Creating a Garden for ARC,” The Daily Update (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), 26 November 2013, http://www.hws.edu/dailyupdate/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=17295, accessed 8 August 2014.
[26] “Sustainable Minor Earned,” The Daily Update (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), 22 May 2014, http://www.hws.edu/dailyupdate/NewsDetails.aspx?aid=17856, accessed 4 August 2014; Gable, Lori. “Sustainable Community Development: New Minor Connects Students with Community,” The Pulteney Street Survey (Hobart & William Smith Colleges), Summer 2014, http://www.hws.edu/alumni/pssSummer14/commdev.aspx, accessed 8 August 2014.
[27] Robin A. Lewis, “The Sustainable Community Development Program—Reflections from Within,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 6 October 2015, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2015/10/06/sustainable-communities-the-sustainable-community-development-program-reflections-from-within/, accessed 10 October 2015.
[28] Robin Lewis and Mollie Smith, “Increasing Sustainability Across the Curriculum: Insiders’ Perspective on the Colleges’ New First-Year Sustainable Living and Learning Community (SLLC) Program,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 August 2014, http://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2014/08/01/increasing-sustainability-across-the-curriculum-insiders-perspective-on-the-colleges-new-first-year-sustainable-living-and-learning-community-sllc-program/, accessed 1 August 2014; Hobart & William Smith Colleges, “Sustainable Living: A Learning Community for Frist-Year Students,” Orientation: First-Year Seminars, http://www.hws.edu/studentlife/orientation/lc_sustainable.aspx, accessed 21 August 2014.
[29] Joe Nittler, “2014 GNRC Awards Announced,” Finger Lakes Daily News, 24 October 2014, http://fingerlakesdailynews.com/news/details.cfm?clientid=16&id=149460#.VJ3FCsAI, accessed 29 December 2014.
[30] For examples, see: Cari Varner, “Designing for Public Health: Collaborating for Sustainable Community Development,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 July 2013, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2013/07/01/designing-for-public-health-collaborating-for-sustainable-community-development/, accessed 30 December 2014; Bryan L. White, “SCD Concepts: City of Canandaigua Main St. Streetscape And Green Infrastructure Project,” 1 December 2013, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2013/12/01/scd-concepts-city-of-canandaigua-main-st-streetscape-and-green-infrastructure-project/, accessed 30 December 2014; David Zorn, “SCD Concepts: Finger Lakes Region Focused on Sustainability,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 January 2014, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2014/01/01/2680/, accessed 30 December 2014; Jessica Hayes-Conroy, “SCD Concepts: Human Rights and Spatial Inequality in Geneva, New York,” Happenings: the monthly newsletter of the Finger Lakes Institute, 1 April 2014, https://flihappenings.wordpress.com/2014/04/01/scd-concepts-human-rights-and-spatial-inequality-in-geneva-new-york/, accessed 30 December 2014.
[31] Elizabeth Dzeng, “How to inspire interdisciplinarity: lessons from the collegiate system,” The Guardian, 15 March 2013, http://www.guardian.co.uk/higher-education-network/blog/2013/mar/15/interdisciplinary-academic-universities-research, accessed 29 December 2014.
[32] Oren Lyons, “Haudenosaunee Faithkeeper, Chief Oren Lyons addressing delegates to the United Nations Organization opened ‘The Year of the Indigenous Peoples’ (1993) in the United Nations General Assembly Auditorium, United Nations Plaza, New York City, December 10, 1992,” http://www.ratical.org/many_worlds/6Nations/OLatUNin92.html, accessed 10 October 2015. See also, M. C. Burns, “Oren Lyons: An Extraordinary Life,” Central New York Magazine, January/February 2011, 38-59, 144, http://www.peacecouncil.net/NOON/docs/Oren-CNYMagazine.pdf, accessed 10 October 2015.
[33] Helfrich, “SCD Concepts: HWS Sustainable Communities Course.”