|
|
History of Shared Vision Planning
History of Shared Vision Planning in the Army
Corps of Engineers
In 1989, on the heels of severe droughts in much of
the West, Southeast and the Missouri-Mississippi Valley, the Corps of
Engineers began the National Drought Study to find a better way to
manage water for drought. After
a year of study and collaboration with many groups focused on drought that
year, the Corps proposed a drought preparedness method and applied it in
test cases around the country. The
method was a form of the systems analysis approach designed during the
Harvard Water Program of the late 1950s and early 1960s that later
became the basis for Federal water resources planning, "Principles and
Standards" (1973) and "Principles and Guidelines" (P&G, 1983). The Drought Preparedness Method, however, went further than the
P&G. It required planners to find out what criteria decision makers
and stakeholders would use in accepting or rejecting a drought plan and
then develop metrics so that each alternative could be evaluated according
to those criteria.
In 1991, Richard Palmer, now a civil engineering
professor at the University of Washington, attended a workshop of the
Cedar and Green River Case Study in Seattle (a case study of the ongoing
National Drought Study). There
he proposed that the Corps develop system simulation models in each test
case and showed how the models could be built with stakeholders and
decision makers. Each of the
five case study managers (for the five National Drought Study case
studies) agreed to do so, although they were not allowed any increase in
budget or time for what might appear to be an “extra” task. At the time, Dr. Palmer was using an object-oriented software
called STELLA®,
which made it easier to create models that could be understood by
non-modelers because the functional relationships were diagrammed, as they
were mathematically defined. Stakeholders
could literally see the factors that affected any variable. Reservoir systems appeared as a series of boxes connected by flows.
Two of the five planning efforts (the Kanawha River in
West Virginia and the Cedar-Green River in Washington) convinced people to
manage water differently. In
West Virginia, whitewater rafters had lost considerable income because
whitewater releases had been reduced to conserve water needed to provide
minimum flows for wastewater dilution. Dr. Richard Punnett led a workshop using the basin STELLA® model in which he demonstrated reservoir operating rules that would
improve both water quality and whitewater dependability. All the necessary decision makers and stakeholders had participated
in the planning and model building process; so new operating rules were
put in place quickly. Participants
estimated that the new plan would save $10 million in regional tourism
revenue during the next severe drought while improving water quality. In Tacoma, Washington, Dr. Palmer and the Corps conducted a
“Virtual Drought” that simulated several months of drought in a
seven-hour workshop. The
“drought” proceeded in two-week intervals. At the end of each interval, a “forecast” would be made and the
“press” would characterize conditions and criticize decisions. Decision makers all used the model they had helped build to assess
water supplies and demand and to analyze and negotiate decisions as the
drought progressed. Discussions
were sometimes heated, but by day’s end participants reported increased
faith in their model and its potential to help them manage
collaboratively. The model
and the relationships developed in this exercise helped reduce the time,
effort and stress in subsequent reservoir management decisions in the
basin.
During the National Drought Study this planning approach was
called the “DPS method” (Drought Preparedness Study). Dr. Brian Mar, a University of Washington professor, suggested
a different label that was more descriptive and reflected the fact that
the process would be useful for other topics than drought management. Based on Dr. Mar’s suggestion, the Corps named this combination
of systems based planning, advanced public involvement and stakeholder
built models “Shared Vision Planning.” The models were called “Shared Vision Models.”
This "History of Shared
Vision Planning in the Army Corps of Engineers" is from a presentation entitled “The Future of Shared
Vision Planning” by William Werick, Institute for Water Resources, for
the ASCE 2000 Joint Conference in Water Resources Engineering and Water
Resources Planning and Management. Minneapolis,
MN. August 2000.
Reviewed 13 Feb 2009
|
History of Shared Vision Planning
Historical Context |