On the Move Posted: Wednesday, Dec
01, 2004 - 04:53:04 pm PST By
PAUL PETERS Whitefish Pilot
Understanding growth and the economy in
Whitefish
Flathead on the Move, an informal
citizen's group, has been bringing diverse interests together in the
Flathead Valley for the last few months to find ways of
understanding and benefiting from growth and changes in the local
economy.
Growth itself was the catalyst for the group's
formation.
In May of 2003, the National Parks Conservation
Association and the Center for the Rocky Mountain West (CRMW), a
public policy center based out of the University of Montana, put out
Gateway to Glacier, a synthesis of three studies on the Flathead
Valley economy and its relationship to Glacier National Park.
Liz Harris, president of the Kalispell-based economic
development organization Jobs No Inc., has been active in Flathead
on the Move.
According to Harris, information in the study
helped people understand how national trends have brought growth and
change to the Flathead Valley.
"People are taking their jobs
to where they want to be," Harris said. "They figure out where they
want to live, and find a way to make a living."
Because of
natural amenities like Glacier National Park, Big Mountain and
Flathead Lake, the Flathead Valley has become one of those places
where people want to take their jobs to.
Similar situations
exist in communities centered around Missoula, Bozeman, Great Falls,
Helena, Billings and Butte. According to CRMW economist Larry
Swanson, 90 percent of economic and population growth in Montana has
taken place around these seven communities.
The CRMW saw that
these seven communities were heading in a different direction than
much of Montana. They began the "On the Move" project as a way of
providing accurate information on these changing economies and
bringing communities together to find ways of guiding
change.
Flathead on the Move has brought together a wide
variety of groups and people in the Flathead, including Flathead
County commissioner Gary Hall, Whitefish mayor Andy Feury, Kalispell
Mayor Pam Kennedy, the Whitefish, Kalispell, Lakeside-Somers and
Columbia Falls chambers of commerece, Flathead Valley Community
College, Montanans for Multiple Use, Jobs Now Inc. and the National
Parks Conservation Association.
Three seminars were given by
CRMW in September and November to provide information to the
community. According to Harris, about 150 people attended each of
the last two meetings. They have now broken up into several smaller
groups which will study and discuss specific issues, then report
back to the main group early next year.
The groups will
discuss issues like growth policies, infrastructure, education and
communication and the shift from a resource extraction economy to
other economic bases.
Specifically, they will look at the
possibility of coordinating curriculum between high schools, FVCC
and the business community, increasing road funds in rapid-growth
areas, developing mass-transit in the valley and looking at the
possibility of a local option tax.
According to Susie Burch,
a former Kalispell Chamber of Commerce director who helped organize
Flathead on the Move, people from all political stripes have
attending the meetings.
Despite this, "It's been beyond
civil," Burch said. "It gives a chance to roll up our sleeves and
work alongside people we don't always agree with."
According
to Harris, "Bringing people together in a civil way to resolve
conflict" is one of the points of Flathead on the Move.
In
the end, action is the goal of the seminars and discussions. This
includes crafting a legislative agenda based on discussion results
Harris said. Some of the issues on the agenda would be the state tax
structure, work force training programs and education
budgets.
Flathead on the Move does not appear to have started
with any particular agenda, but rather looks to inform the community
with unbiased scientific information, and then allow them to shape
their own agenda.
Whitefish Chamber of Commerce director
Shelia Bowen was positive about Flathead on the Move's
work.
"The process has been very enlightening," she
said.
Bowen said the meetings provided her with updated
information on growth and changes in the Flathead Valley. She also
learned more about the valley as a whole, and how it effects
Whitefish. Bowen said she also hopes to share what Whitefish has
learned with the rest of the valley.
"We don't want to be an
island, we want to remain as connected as possible," Bowen
said.
Bowen said she plans on taking part in the smaller
group discussions on education in the Flathead Valley.
The
future of Flathead on the Move is in the hands of its members,
according to Harris. After the seminars, group meetings and reports,
Missoula on the Move formed the City Club, which holds monthly
community forums/discussions on a range of topics.
If the
interest is there, this could happen in the Flathead also.
So
far, Flathead on the Move's budget has come solely from a $10,000
pledge from Jobs Now Inc. Flathead on the Move cannot apply for
grants unless it becomes a non-profit. At this point, costs have
been low because all group members work on a volunteer
basis.
Times and dates of for future meetings and discussion
groups will be released soon. For more information on Flathead on
the Move, or to become part of a discussion group, leave a message
at 881-4547, or e-mail flatheadport@centurytel.net