LTC 171-2018 Urban Land Institute Advisory Services PanelMIAMIBEACH
OFFICE OF THE CITY MANAGER
NO. LTC # LETTER TO COMMISSION
171-2018
TO: Mayor Dan Gelber and Members of the Cit Comission -
FROM: Jimmy L. Morales, City Manager
DATE: April 3, 2018
SUBJECT: Urban Land Institute Advisory Services Panel
I am pleased to provide more detail about the upcoming Urban Land Institute Advisory
Services Panel review of our stormwater management program. ULI has assembled a
diverse and talented team of professionals from around the world to convene in Miami
Beach and provide expert opinion, please see summary biographies attached. Also
included here is a two-page overview of the panel scope and agenda.
Please note that there are two public meetings scheduled as follows:
Tuesday, April 17
Panel Meet and Greet: 5:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Outside Commission Chambers
Public Listening Session: 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Commission Chambers (Televised)
Thursday, April 19
Panel Report Presentation: 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. Commission Chambers (Televised)
We encourage all interested parties to attend and share thoughts and experiences, as
well as listen to the preliminary findings at the end of the week.
A final report will be provided by ULI by summer, 2018 informing the city on its status
and best practices in regard to its decision making process and stormwater program.
The findings will inform the Greater Miami and the Beaches Resilience Strategy
scheduled for release in early 2019.
This expert panel review is made possible thanks to the generous support of the 100
Resilient Cities Network, pioneered by the Rockefeller Foundation. 100 RC is dedicated
to helping cities around the world become more resilient to the physical, social and
economic challenges that are a growing part of the 21st century. Miami Beach joined the
100 RC network in 2018 in partnership with the City of Miami and Miami Dade County.
JLM/SMT
Joyce Coffee — President, Climate Resilience Consulting & Panel Chair
Joyce Coffee, LEED AP, is the founder and President of Climate Resilience Consulting,
and an accomplished organizational strategist and visionary leader with over 20 years
of domestic and international experience in the corporate, government and non-profit
sectors implementing resilience and sustainability strategies, management systems,
performance measurement, partnerships, benchmarking and reporting. Joyce is a
Senior Sustainability Fellow at the Global Institute of Sustainability, where she advises
various high level resilience groups, including the Global Adaptation and Resilience
Investment work group and the National Science Foundation's Urban Resilience to
Extremes Sustainability Research Network. She received a B.S. in biology,
environmental studies and Asian studies from Tufts University and a Masters in city
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Jeff Hebert — Vice President for Adaptation and Resilience, The Water Institute of the Gulf
Jeff Hebert serves as the Institute's first Vice President for Adaptation and Resilience
where he is leads the interdisciplinary work being done to help communities better
adapt to changing environments. In addition, Hebert is an adjunct faculty member in
the graduate sustainable development program at the Tulane School of Architecture.
Prior to joining the Water Institute, he served as Deputy Mayor and Chief
Administrative Officer of the City of New Orleans, and as New Orleans' first Chief
Resilience Officer, where he developed the city's first climate action strategy. Prior to
joining the City of New Orleans, he served as the Director of Community Planning for
the Louisiana Recovery Authority following the devastation from hurricanes Katrina and
Rita. Jeff holds a bachelor's degree from New York University, a master's degree in City
Planning from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and is a graduate of the Achieving Excellence in
Community Development program at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government, where he was a Ford
Foundation Fellow.
Walter Meyer— Founding Principal, Local Office Landscape Architecture & Adjunct Professor, Parsons The New
School
Walter Meyer is an adjunct professor at Parsons The New School for Design and
founding Principal of Local Office Landscape Architecture. Operating between
infrastructure, urbanism, and territory, the firm has won awards from across the
disciplines of architecture, landscape architecture, public policy, science and art. Prior
to founding the firm in 2006, Wafter worked in urban and landscape design at Cooper
Robertson and Wallace Roberst & Todd. Walter received his bachelor's degree in
Landscape Architecture from the University of Florida and his master's degree from
the Harvard University Graduate School of Design.
Greg West — President & CEO, ZOM & Chair, ULI Southeast Florida/Caribbean
Greg West the President and Chief Executive Officer of ZOM Holding Inc. and is
responsible for all of the Company's real estate activities. Since joining ZOM in 1997 he
has since been involved with all aspects of the development process including
identifying new opportunities, compiling due diligence and underwriting parameters,
and has been directly responsible for over $3.5B of development. Prior to joining
ZOM, he worked in a development capacity for Paragon Group, where he implemented
new multifamily developments and repositioned existing projects in the Midwest and
Florida. Greg received a Bachelor of Arts in Accounting from Southern Methodist
University and has received two Masters of Science degrees from Texas A&M
Development and Construction Management. He serves on the Board of Directors of the
Multifamily Housing Council and sits on the Advisory Board and Management Committee of the ULI
Southeast Florida District Council.
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Greg Lowe—Global Head of Resilience and Sustainability, Aon
Greg Lowe is Global Head of Resilience and Sustainability at Aon plc, the leading
provider of risk, retirement, and health solutions. Greg heads Aon's Weather and
Climate Risk Innovation platform that brings together industry leading capabilities in
alternative risk transfer to non-traditional climate risks. Strategically responding to
the capital efficiency gap and climate finance needs, Greg leads dialogues with
clients, investors, and regulators on climate risk disclosure, urban resilience, financial
institution exposure to physical risk, and lowering the cost of capital for the energy
transition. Partnering with start-ups, he's collaborated with organisations as varied as
the United Nations, OECD, and Urban Land Institute. He is also responsible for Aon's
strategy on addressing its own environmental impacts. Prior to working at Aon, Greg
was an Executive Director at Willis Towers Watson, having begun his career in investment banking at UBS. Greg
holds and MSc in Environment and Development from the London School of Economics and a BA in Political
Economy from the University of Maryland Baltimore County.
Philip Kash — Principal, HR&A Advisors
Phillip Kash is a principal at HR&A Advisors specializing in climate adaptation and
housing affordability for cities. He has led the evaluation of climate risks for cities,
developed adaptation strategies and supported the implementation of adaption
projects. Most notably, Philip developed the climate change adaptation plan for the
City of Boston, is supporting the implementation of a "resilience district" in the
Gentilly neighborhood of New Orleans, and advised on the development of 100
Resilient Cities.
Phillip also leads HR&A's housing affordability work to help cities create
neighborhood, city, and regional housing plans; develop new affordable housing programs and policies; and
redevelop public housing. Prior to joining HR&A, Phillip was a Director at Enterprise Community Partners and lead
multiple technical assistance engagements focused on disaster recovery, resilience and affordable housing.
Juanita Hardy—Senior Visiting Fellow, ULI Center for Creative Placemaking
Juanita Hardy is the ULI Senior Visiting Fellow for Creative Placemaking, where she
supports the Institute's Building Healthy Places Initiative. As the SVF, Hardy has done
extensive writing and research on creative placemaking, and has worked with ULI
District Councils on programming and capacity building activities. Hardy has over 43
years of business experience, including 31 years with IBM, and over 35 years in the
arts as a nonprofit leader, trustee, collector, and patron of the arts. After retiring from
IBM in 2005, she founded Tiger Management Consulting Group, a global training and
business consulting firm. She is the former Executive Director of CulturaIDC, where
she worked closely with developers to integrate arts and culture into development
projects across the Washington, D.C. area. She currently serves as an executive coach
with Right Management, and on many nonprofit art boards in the region.
Mark Osler—Vice President, Michael Baker International
Mark Osler serves as an Associate Vice President of Michael Baker International and
leads the firm's Coastal Science and Engineering practice, where he focuses on the
analysis of coastal hydrodynamics, impacts of sea level rise, and resilient coastal
design. He has provided management and technical leadership for a range of coastal
resiliency projects, from rural community settings to urban, State and Nation-wide
studies, encompassing considerations of riverine and coastal flood risk, changing
precipitation patterns and tsunami risk. Following Superstorm Sandy, Mr. Osler lead
the flood risk vulnerability study and resultant flood mitigation design at the World
Trade Center, as well as analyses of climate change impacts to JFK, LaGuardia and
Newark airports. Osler serves on the National Institute of Building Sciences Scientific Resolution Panel, an
independent group that reviews the accuracy of FEMA's flood analysis and mapping. Mr. Osler holds a Bachelor's
Degree from Lehigh University and a Master's degree from the University of Delaware's Center for Applied
Coastal Research.
Christian Nielsen — Director, Climate Adaptation and Landscape, Ramboll Water
Christian Nielsen is the Senior Director for the Global division for Climate Adaptation,
Landscape and Flood Risk Management at Ramboll Water. He has more than 20
years' experience in stormwater management and engineering and extensive
experience with project management of large scale projects within infrastructure
planning, urban development and resiliency planning, including flood risk
management for cities, regions, infrastructure -owners etc. Christian's international
expertise in the field of climate adaptation and flood risk management has been
developed and implemented on numerous projects on a global scale, including the
screening of Megacities in Asia for the Asian Development Bank, Cloudburst Pilot in
New York City for NYCDEP, Storm surge protection planning for Washington DC, Low Impact Developments in
Copenhagen and the detailed flood protection plans for Copenhagen and Gothenburg.
Jacob Macomber—Senior Lecturer of Finance, Harvard Business School
John Macomber is a Senior Lecturer in the Finance unit at Harvard Business School. His
professional background includes leadership of real estate, construction, and
information technology businesses. At HBS, Mr. Macomber's work focuses on the
urban impacts of private finance and delivery of public infrastructure projects in both
the developed and emerging worlds. His teaching combines infrastructure finance
(including public-private partnerships), economic development, and urban planning
with the impact of new technologies and the onset of new exposures including sea
level rise. Prior to joining HBS, Mr. Macomber spent several decades in the real estate
and construction industries, and he remains a principal in numerous commercial real
estate assets. With ULI, Mr. Macomber has been active in climate adaptation and
resilience work. Mr. Macomber is a graduate of Dartmouth College and Harvard
Business School and is a former member of the YPO Young Presidents Organization International Board of
Directors.
IN Urban Land
Institute
Advisory Services Program
Overview:
Advisory Assistance Panel
Stormwater Management &
Climate Adaptation Assessment
Miami Beach, FL 1 April 16-19, 2018
Overview, Scope & Agenda
Three-day ULI Technical Assistance Panels are intensive, on-site engagements
conducted by volunteer panelists that provide strategic advice to governments
and organizations on a wide variety of land use challenges. These panels
provide objective, candid advice from outside senior practitioners from a variety
of real estate and land use disciplines, and have been credited with
accelerating and improving the development/design processes used by
communities in their land planning efforts.
Panel Scope:
1. Are on the right track in our approach to mitigate for flooding caused by
tidal and rain events? Are we on the right track in term of elevating roads,
harmonization, placemaking and aesthetics?
2. Refer to the neighborhood/project boundary map and question the
rationale for the drawing of project boundary lines. Also, test the logic
used for project prioritization and sequencing.
3. What other investments in public infrastructure improvements could occur
where construction is already underway?
4. How can the City best communicate with residents and stakeholders
about potential solutions and costs, and otherwise engage the
community in the on-going stormwater management program?
5. How can the City ultimately advance climate adaptation in private
development, including residential and commercial development,
including perhaps adaptation strategies such as raising buildings.? What
strategies could be used to involve the private sector and/or public-
private partnerships in the design, funding and delivery of stormwater
management and flood mitigation strategies?
6. How might the City use its upcoming Business Case analysis to advance
future climate adaptation/stormwater management decision-making?
Monday. April 16th: Arrival and Orientation
Throughout the day
®Urban Land
Institute
Advisory Services Program
Advisory Assistance Panel
Stormwater Management &
Climate Adaptation Assessment
Miami Beach, FL 1 April 16-19, 2018
Tuesday. ADril 17th: Briefing, Tour, and Interviews
City of Miami Beach Offices: 1700 Convention Center Dr, Miami Beach, FL 33139
8:00 am Panel Briefing Session
10:00 am Tour of Study Area
12:30 - 1:30 pm Working Lunch: Interview Preparations
2:00 - 5:00 pm Stakeholder Interviews
5:30 - 6:00 pm Panel Meet & Greet - City Hall, third floor, outside Chamber
6:00 - 7:00 pm Public Listening Session, Commission Chambers - televised
7:30 pm Working Dinner for panelists, location TBD
Wednesday. April 18th: Work Day (Deliberations and Report Preparation)
8:00 am
12:00 pm
1:00 pm
7:00 pm
Panelist workday -group discussion/deliberation, small group
brainstorming, preparation of report materials
Working Lunch
Panel Work Session continued
Working Dinner for panelists
Thursday. April 19th: Presentation of the Panel's Findings
8:00 am Final Panel Work Session
12:00 pm Working Lunch
12:30 pm Panelists rehearse presentation
3:00 pm Report Presentation - City Commission Chamber - televised
4:00 pm Question & Answer Session
4:45 pm Closing Remarks
5:00 pm Adjourn
A final written report will be provided by June 30, 2018. This report will inform the
City of Miami Beach decision making process and stormwater program.
Findings will also inform the Greater Miami & the Beaches Resilience Strategy
scheduled for release winter 2018-2019.
Thank you!