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         Ohio Cities & Communities Geography:     more detail
  1. Beyond Edge Cities (Contemporary Urban Affairs) by Richard D. Bingham, William M. Bowen, et all 1997-10-01
  2. Urban land use for transport systems and city shapes.: An article from: Geographical Analysis by Francesca Medda, Peter Nijkamp, et all 2003-01-01
  3. Derelict Paradise: Homelessness and Urban Development in Cleveland, Ohio by Daniel Kerr, 2011-02-28
  4. DESIGNING MODERN AMERICA: THE REGIONAL PLANNING ASSOCIATION OF AME (URBAN LIFE & URBAN LANDSCAPE) by EDWARD K. SPANN, 1996-12-01

61. Urban Affairs @ The Libraries
EZ/EC Empowerment Zones and Enterprise communities; Government Information CommunityDevelopment (ohio State University Grade Reports on cities, counties, and
http://www.libraries.wright.edu/libnet/subj/urb/
Urban Affairs
Electronic Indexes and Abstracts Full-Text Databases Research Guides Urban Affairs at Wright State University Job Opportunities Professional Organizations Government Agencies

62. Reason Magazine -- July 2000, Horizontal Cities By Nick Gillespie
Other scholars, such as ohio State's Jack Nasar are recognizing is that suburbs,like cities and small understanding that socalled bedroom communities can in
http://reason.com/0007/ed.ng.horizontal.html
R EASON * July 2000 Horizontal Cities
Suburbia is finally getting its due from social critics. By Nick Gillespie For those of us who grew up in "suburbia"that geographic and psychic region that has long been synonymous with all that is "plastic" and "soulless" in American lifethe April 9 edition of The New York Times Magazine was a real stunner. Who would have expected one of the nation's great arbiters of taste and sensibility to sanctify "The Triumph of Burbopolis" with a special issue that actually had some good things to say about the suburbs? One story even went so far as to praise Levittown, Long Island, that reportedly irradiated Ground Zero of the post-war suburban explosion: "Held up as an example of conformity and monotony, Levittown's 17,000 identical capes have mutated into an exuberant architectural Babel: the sparrows on a wire have each grown their own distinctive plumage." Such thoughts underscore a significant shift in elite opinion regarding suburbia, the place where most Americans138,231,000 of them, according to the Census Bureaunow choose to live. The original critique had been fully articulated by the 1920s, when social critic Lewis Mumford suggested that if "the 19th century American town...was the negation of the city," then "suburbia was the negation of that negation. The result was not a new synthesis, but a deterioration." Though Mumford's archly negative take was among the first, and most influential, he was hardly alone in castigating what historian Frederick Lewis Allen dubbed "the suburban nightmare" and efficiency expert Christine Frederick derided as "sugary and commonplace and pathetic."

63. Web Sites By Subject
Net City net is a international guide to cities countries and communities aroundthe world. Kids Com - For grades 2-6 . It is an interactive geography game.
http://internal.vusd.solanocoe.k12.ca.us/buck/study_links.htm
Elise P. Buckingham Charter School
Web Sites By Subject
Careers Geography Art Business ... BCS Site Index/Site Search BCS Presents FIND IT BY KEYWORD
Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Tools
A comprehensive collection of web sites containing information for all school subject areas. Each link opens in a new page, enabling you to keep this BCS page open in the background for browsing to the many helpful links provided here. Additionally included are Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia tools, educational software links, and search engine links. Unfortunately, and outside of our control, sometimes links change, go dead, or the domains are sold to someone other than the original owner of the linked site. Although we try our best to keep abreast of these changes and keep all links updated, some may be missed. If you come across any of these please inform the Webmaster . For more information please visit the BCS Help Page and read the and information.

64. Three: What's Needed: The Policy Arena
as the state regulatory commissions in ohio, Indiana, and the underlying problemsof inner cities and disadvantaged schools in lowincome communities have made
http://www.benton.org/Library/Low-Income/three.html
Contents
Intro

The Gap

Barriers

What's Needed
What's Working

Resources
What's Needed: The Policy Arena Government policies will go a long way toward determining whether new information technologies widen or narrow social divisions. To ensure that the digital future brings opportunity for everybody, regardless of income or geography, public interest advocates must play an active role in the continuing debate over telecommunications policy. Universal Service The debate over universal service is far from over. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) must periodically review what communications services should be covered by universal service policies. At the same time, states are free to establish their own definitions that go beyond federal conventions. Although the definition currently is drawn rather tightly, public interest advocates foresee a day when some services that currently aren't eligible for universal service support will be recognized as essential. For instance, Maxine Rockoff, a founder of the Information Technology Initiative at United Neighborhood Houses of New York, argues that our definition of universal service should be expanded to include at least three new components: access to a computer with a World Wide Web browser, a personal Internet email address, and the capability to make one's own information available via the Web. At the moment, public officials haven't been willing to go as far as Rockoff recommends. Even the states that have established the most expansive definitions have not required discounted rates for much beyond basic telephone service; they simply have defined basic services to include touch-tone dialing, access to long-distance carriers, and 911 services. Wisconsin has concluded that advanced services should be accessible in some form, though it doesn't require that they be provided to every home or be subsidized as substantially as basic services. California lawmakers recognize community organizations as eligible for universal service support, while Louisiana moved to include community networks as eligible for universal service discounts.

65. Caroline Nagel
assimilation in London’s Arab communities, Ethnic and a special section on ‘dividedcities’ in honour of geography, Miami University of ohio, January 1999
http://www.lboro.ac.uk/departments/gy/staff/gycrn/
Dr Caroline Nagel
BA University of California, Berkeley (Political Science and Latin American Studies), PhD University of Colorado, Boulder (Geography) Lecturer in Human Geography email: C.R.Nagel@lboro.ac.uk
Tel : +44 (0) 1509 223723
Fax: +44 (0) 1509 223930
Room JJ.0.14
Ann Packer Building, JJ, grid ref: h5
East Park Research Interests My interests centre on the globalisation of cities, and in particular, on questions relating to migration and cultural politics. One of my major theoretical aims has been to rethink the way in which ‘culture’, ethnicity, and identity have been conceptualised in academic literature. Theoretical perspectives on migration and cultural politics: the case of British Arabs
For several years now, I have been conducting research on London’s Arab communities. I have been especially interested in the ways in which groups excluded from traditional ‘race relations’ discourses are, in fact, implicated in the politics of ‘race’ and identity in British society, and how these politics are spatialised through everyday behaviours and interactions. The larger theoretical significance of the research has been to question the key paradigms used to interpret relationships between immigrants and receiving societies—including assimilation models, multiculturalism, cultural studies approaches, and theories of transnationalism and diaspora.

66. GEOG 234--Course Syllabus
As an enrolled ohio University student, a campus email names and locations of the50 largest cities in the developed on the web about ethnic communities in the
http://www.ohiou.edu/summer/online/2000/handbook/234.html

fonseca@ohiou.edu
GEOG 234Geography of the United States and Canada (4 credit hours)
Summer Quarter: June 12-August 18, 2000
Register from April 3-June 12, 2000
Hello and welcome to this web course on the Geography of the United States and Canada at Ohio University! My name is Jim Fonseca. I am a Professor of Geography and I am also the Dean of Ohio University - Zanesville, one of the five regional campuses of Ohio University. You can learn more about me and see my picture by clicking on www.zanesville.ohiou.edu/dean.htm
How to contact me
The easiest and quickest way to reach me is via e-mail. You can also call me. My fax number is 740-588-1436. As I am the campus dean, I am generally on campus from 8:00 to 5:00 everyday, unless I am out of town. I will always try to respond to e-mails and phone calls as soon as possible. If you have a concern that requires a meeting, or if you simply want to come by to say hello, I will also be happy to meet with you by appointment at any time that is mutually convenient. If you do want to meet in person, please call Gail Porter, my assistant, at 740-588-1434 to set up a time for us to meet.
Course Decription
In this course you will learn about the human and physical geography of the United States and Canada. Physical geography refers to the natural or environmental earth systems such as climate, weather, topography, vegetation, soils, etc. Human geography means human-created systems such as transportation networks, cities and settlements, agriculture, land use patterns, population distribution and migration, industrial location, etc. When you have completed the course, you will also have learned quite a bit about what modern geography is about it's a lot more than memorizing state capitals and learning major exports as you may have done years ago in a grade school geography class! You will also learn about geographic concepts and geographic tools and analytical techniques such as GIS (Geographical Information Systems).

67. Sense Of Community Project Team
involves measuring the health of cities and communities and implementation in multiculturaland diverse communities. degree from Miami of ohio University in
http://www.msu.edu/user/socomm/team.htm
The Sense of Community in Lansing Project Team current team members click images to view larger picture
Current Team Members
John H. Schweitzer
, Ph.D., is a professor in Urban Affairs Programs at Michigan State University and Director of the SOC Project. His current research involves measuring the health of cities and communities through assessment of their social/political fabric and infrastructure, measurement and improvement of racial/ethnic climate, and evaluation of human service and education programs. He has served as a Fulbright lecturer in Singapore and as a consultant/evaluator for numerous city, state, and federal agencies. http://www.msu.edu/user/schweit1 Annalie Campos received her Master of Resource Development and Urban Studies from Michigan State University. She has assumed a number of positions in the area of community development; primarily community organizing, and community program development and implementation in multicultural and diverse communities. Her present research interest is in promoting and increasing recycling and pro-environment behavior through community environmental collective action. This was also the topic of her thesis. Corey Warren is currently working on her Masters in geography-urban studies, she received a bachelors degree in Interdisciplinary Humanities from Michigan State University in 1998. Her research interests include sustainable urban design, public/private uses of space, and community development.

68. Ink Technology Communications, Corp. - Siebel Corporation: National Cities Bank
Siebel Corporation National cities Bank. quality of life in the communities theyserve diversified financial services company, headquartered in Cleveland, ohio.
http://www.inktc.com/samples/successstories/successstory5.htm
Siebel Corporation: National Cities Bank
National City Knows No Geography in Banking
Banks of yesterday were often defined by maps 3/4 "who" they were was tied to "where" they operated. Not so at National City. Customer relationships drive their business, and they strive to provide "anytime, anyplace" financial services. By serving their customers better and more profitably, they also create value for their stockholders, and enhance the quality of life in the communities they serve. Founded in 1845, National City (NYSE:NCC) is an $84 billion diversified financial services company, headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio. National City operates banks and other financial service subsidiaries principally in Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Indiana, Kentucky and Illinois. National City subsidiaries provide financial services that meet a wide range of customer needs, including commercial and retail banking, trust and investment services, item processing, mortgage servicing, and insurance. National City has prospered because it has retained the integrity of its commitments and remained focused on service to its customers, communities, stockholders, and employees.
Chasing Paper
National City offers wealth management services, called Private Investment Advisors, which provide trust and investment management services for mid- and upper-level investors. Traditionally, an investor was assigned a trust officer, who was responsible for the management of 400-500 other accounts. Time and resource restrictions kept trust officers from meeting with each of their customers, and valuable opportunities for cross-selling and improving customer satisfaction were being lost.

69. Urban And Community Design
cities, Towns communities Net links to information about planned communities. divisionof Centex Homes, builds on your lot in ohio, Washington, Virginia
http://architecture.about.com/cs/urbandesign/
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Urban and Community Design
Guide picks Urban and community planners are architects and designers who examine neighborhoods, streetscapes, highways and the total fabric of our built environment. New Urbanists seek to create traditional, pedestrian-friendly communities. Here are resources and links.
Charter of the New Urbanism
Key principles of New Urbanism, as outlined by the Congress for the New Urbanism. The Spread of Sprawl Our neighborhoods are being replaced by soulless alien substitutes. A new book, Suburban Nation , offers hope. Here's commentary plus an excerpt. Adaptive Reuse of Older Buildings Adaptive Reuse is a process that adapts buildings for new uses rather than demolishing them. Best Books About Urban Design From our Architecture Bookstore, top titles for New Urbanism and other approaches to city and community planning.

70. 1998 Conference Proceedings
Appalachia ohio families with disabilities and found that people who with the fastpaced life in the big cities. don't leave the rural communities appears to
http://www.csun.edu/cod/conf/1998/proceedings/csun98_018.htm
1998 Conference Proceedings Go to previous article.
Go to next article.

Return to 1998 Conference Table of Contents
Increasing Access Through Assistive Technology for People With Disabilites in Rural Areas
William M Bauer, M. S. Ed.
Director of Regional Centers
Ohio Technology Related Assistance Information Network
(Ohio TRAIN)
710 Colegate Drive
Marietta, Ohio 45750
(740)374-8716 ext 807
Fax (740) 376-9435
James G. Piazza Program Coordinator Ohio TRAIN Southeast Regional Center 710 Colgate, Ohio 45750
I. Introduction
People with disabilities often face traumatic consequences when trying to access assistive technology. Often times people with disabilities in rural areas face significant barriers when approaching local government and community organizations for services or funds for access to assistive technology. State and federal government agencies are obligated to include people with disabilities in their programs and functions. Depending on the various factors, accessibility' may be a figment of one's imagination. Assistive technology in the education process of the rural community increases the potential for persons with disabilities to succeed in independent living and to engage in productive employment, as well as enjoy what life has to offer to all. Considering the variety of equipment and devices that are available, the field of assistive rehabilitative technology is rather broad and foreign to most people, especially to those who live and work in rural areas. Consumers, therapists, vendors, manufacturers, and advocates understand how assistive technology can make a difference in the life of a person with a disability.

71. South Bay Cities Council Of Governments
trying to control urban sprawl and build real communities. In cities Back from theEdge, acclaimed author Roberta of urban recovery from Mansfield, ohio to Los
http://www.southbaycities.org/livable/top_ten.htm
Suburban Nation: The Rise of Sprawl and the Decline of the American Dream by Andres Duany, Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk and Jeff Speck Progressive town planners Duany and coauthors share the fruits of their extensive experiences designing new neighborhoods and community revitalization projects in this cogent and illuminating investigation into the nature of sprawl and the failure of suburbs. They mince no words in condemning the soulless, "repetitive and forgettable" landscape of subdivisions, shopping malls, office parks, and congested roadways that ring our cities, and articulate with great precision exactly how and why such places are detrimental to social health. They contrast traditional neighborhoods"mixed-used, pedestrian-friendly communities" where people of diverse backgrounds and economic levels interact, with suburbia, where housing, work, shopping, and public facilities are segregated from one another, so people are forced to drive everywhere. Using numerous examples, the authors explain how and why sprawl has occurred, discuss why the quality of balkanized suburban life is so deplorably low, and offer suggestions for a more viable approach to planning in the immediate future. Cities in Civilization by Peter Hall Seduction of Place: The City in the Twenty-First Century by Joseph Rykwert To understand why people love or hate their cities and why cities succeed or fail their inhabitants, Joseph Rykwert examines a broad spectrum of urban centers. Among them are Mexico City, the world's largest metropolis, sprawled around its old center; Berlin, newly reunited and furiously rebuilding; New Delhi and Islamabad, new capitals that exist alongside older towns; grandly planned cities like Chandigarh, Canberra, and Brasília; and more modest new towns like Columbia, Maryland, and Celebration, Florida, built in an attempt

72. Geographers Convene In Pittsburgh April 4-8 - Directions Magazine
getting bigger, but by small communities welcoming new MOVE OUTWARD Homeowners incentral cities, inner suburbs Hazel A. MorrowJones of ohio State University
http://nt1.directionsmag.com/pressreleases.asp?PressID=1574

73. Migration Bibliography: Ohio Valley, Old Northwest, & Midwest
Stephen A. Southern Seed, Northern Soil AfricanAmerican Farm communities in the ofPioneer Life in the Early Settlements and cities of the {ohio River Valley
http://book-smith.tripod.com/migration-ohio-valley.html
Abernethy, Thomas P. Western Lands and the American Revolution. Alvord, Clarence W. The Illinois Country, 1673-1818. Springfield: Illinois Centennial Commission, 1920. Alvord, Clarence W (ed). The Illinois-Wabash Company. Chicago: npub, 1915. Alvord, Clarence W. "Virginia and the West; an Interpretation." Mississippi Valley Historical Review Bailey, Kenneth P. The Ohio Company of Virginia and the Westward Movement, 1748-1792. Glendale, CA: Arthur H. Clark, 1939. Baldwin, Leland D. The Keelboat Age on Western Waters. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1941. Barnhart, John D. "Sources of Southern Migration into the Old Northwest." Mississippi Valley Historical Review 22 (June 1935). Indiana to 1816: the Colonial Period. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Bureau, 1971. Birk, Russell C. "Shortest Route to the Galena Lead Mines: the Lewiston Road." Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 66 (Summer 1973). Bloom, Alan S. "The Role of the Army in Western Settlement: Josiah Harmar's Command, 1785-1790. 93 (April 1969).

74. Detroit Can Learn From Cleveland On Ways To Stop Sprawl
In October, the Consortium — comprised of 10 communities which each pay of Albuquerque,NM and author of cities without Suburbs, ohio’s population
http://www.mlui.org/projects/growthmanagement/sprawl/pzncleve.html
Detroit Can Learn from Cleveland on Ways to Stop Sprawl
By Keith Schneider
A version of this article was published in Planning and Zoning News in the December, 1998 edition.
Formed in 1996, the First Suburbs Consortium already has made its presence known in the Cleveland region, and increasingly in state politics. It joined the fight two years ago to halt the widening of Interstate-90, an east-west corridor, because of concerns the project would accelerate flight to the distant suburbs. Though the highway will be widened, the fight led to changes in how the state Department of Transportation spends money in older communities, especially to repair existing roads. The battle was the first ever waged by local governments in the Cleveland region against a major road.
More recently, the Consortium joined Cleveland city and civic leaders who are seeking to halt the widening of Interstate 71. The goal is to redistribute transportation spending to support alternatives, among them a new light rail line, more bus service, and money to repair roads, curbs, and sidewalks.
Will it fly in the legislature? One of those who attended the conference was an aide to Robert Taft 2nd, the Republican governor-elect, who said growth management would be a priority in the Taft Administration. Two others who spoke were a Republican and Democratic state representative who have teamed up to pass new legislation next year to conserve farmland, and asked for support from the Consortium. In addition, mayors from suburbs in Columbus, Dayton, and Toledo agreed to join suburbs in Cleveland to expand the First Suburbs Consortium into a statewide organization.

75. The Internet, Cities And Civil Society
Through the Northeast ohio Software Association and its Seed foot traffic in mostof the communities studied on how the Internet shapes public space in cities.
http://www.cisp.org/imp/may_2001/05_01horrigan.htm
May 2001 The Internet, Cities and Civil Society
"There are encouraging signs of how the Internet might help build civil society, from efforts to make cities more hospitable to innovators to programs to extend technology’s reach to the less well-off.  But having a new space for public deliberation will not happen by accident.  . . At this stage, it is easy to see the foundations that have been laid, but it will take sustained effort over several years to build long-lasting civic structures."
John B. Horrigan
Dr. Horrigan is Senior Research Specialist at the Pew Internet and American Life Program.
The city, the Internet and civil society are three things that together might seem a little incongruous.  The city is a physical place that remains an important part of modern society, not withstanding prophecies that communications technology will render cities irrelevant.  Civil society is in some ways an ideal, a place where “citizens are active, responsible, engaged members of groups and communities that, while having different values and conflicting interests, are devoted to arbitrating those differences by exploring common ground, doing public work, and pursuing common relations.”

76. Walkable Communities: Complete CV
corporation helping North America develop walkable communities. Maryland, Wyoming,Virginia, ohio and Washington, DC. $600,000 for Liveable cities, $350,000 for
http://www.walkable.org/cvgen.htm

Welcome
Services Download Center Order Forms ... Charrette CV DAN BURDEN Curriculum Vitae Bicycle/Pedestrian Specialist CAREER HIGHLIGHTS:
Twenty-five year progressive government and nonprofit association career developing/promoting/evaluating alternative transportation and sustainable communities at national, regional, state and local levels. Specialist in transportation and land use planning, research and implementation of bicycling and walking. Communications expertise in technical manuals production, training, public hearings, charrettes, visioning, and other citizen participation techniques; legislative and courtroom preparation and testimony, planning, audio video productions, and fund raising.
  • Member of Florida Governor Lawton Chiles' Transportation Transition Team, setting the transportation vision for Florida to the year 2020.
    Member of Greenbook Committee, which oversees minimum standards for the construction of streets and highways for Florida. Member of Florida Highway Design Safety Task Force, which oversees desirable standards for Florida streets and highways. Wrote Bicycle Section to Institute of Transportation Engineers "Traffic Safety Toolbox". TRB bicycle committee. Chair, Traffic Calming Subcommittee to Greenbook, charged with preparation of Traffic Calming Chapter.
    Course development and trainer for Federal Highway Administration/National Highway Traffic Safety Administration/Institute of Police Technology and Management topics in pedestrian/bicycle safety, planning, engineering, and related topics. Independent course development for Vermont, Washington, Oregon, Colorado, Ohio, Florida, Hawaii, Washington, D.C. Curriculum writer for graduate civil engineering and urban/regional planning.

77. About The USA - Travel & Geography > Regions Of The United States
still function in many New England communities today and crowd the skylines of suchcities as Atlanta Missouri Nebraska North Dakota ohio South Dakota
http://www.usembassy.de/usa/travel-regions.htm

Travel to the United States

The Regions of the United States New England The Mid-Atlantic The South The Midwest ... The West Americans often speak of their country as one of several large regions. These regions are cultural units rather than governmental units formed by history and geography and shaped by the economics, literature and folkways that all the parts of a region share. What makes one region different from another? A region's multicultural heritage as well as distinct demographic characteristics like age and occupation also make regions different and special. Within several regions, language is used differently and there are strong dialects. There are also differences in outlook and attitude based on geography. E-Texts Megalopolis The Bypassed East New England
Connecticut
Maine Massachusetts New Hampshir ... Vermont
New England has played a dominant role in American history. Until well into the 19th century, New England was the country's cultural and economic center. The earliest European settlers of New England were English Protestants who came in search of religious liberty. They gave the region its distinctive political format town meetings (an outgrowth of meetings held by church elders) in which citizens gathered to discuss issues of the day. Town meetings still function in many New England communities today and have been revived as a form of dialogue in the national political arena. New England is also important for the cultural contribution it has made to the nation. The critic Van Wyck Brooks called the creation of a distinctive American literature, in the first half of the 19th century, "the flowering of New England." Education is another of the region's strongest legacies. The cluster of top-ranking universities and colleges in

78. Real Cities.com | 06/05/2002 | THE 2000 CENSUS
Minnesota outpaced those in the Twin cities, according to Beacon Journal, June 2002All of ohio's census stories show no Lone Star State communities on the
http://www.ohio.com/mld/ohio/news/3269309.htm
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Our Site Tools Weather Akron Cleveland Cincinnati Local Events Yellow Pages Discussion Boards ARCHIVES Miss a story? Search our archives as far back as 1990. Click here for archives Back to Home Thursday, Apr 10, 2003 News Posted on Wed, Jun. 05, 2002 THE 2000 CENSUS
  • Americans go it alone on the way to work
  • Government encouragement to take public transportation, fluctuating gas prices and warnings about the harmful effect of car exhaust on the environment do not dissuade more commuters from driving alone. GENARO C. ARMAS, Associated Press
    U.S. Census Bureau Links to articles and resources about the 2000 census from the U.S. Department of Commerce. State-by-state coverage from Knight Ridder newspapers of the 2000 census: CALIFORNIA FLORIDA ILLINOIS INDIANA ...
  • More elderly `shacking up'
  • Census Bureau data show that the elderly are among a growing number of Americans living together. There are at least 112,000 such couples, a survey found. Associated Press, July 30, 2002

    79. Urban Sprawl In The Great Lakes Region
    Suburbs Consortium of Northeastern ohio is a Creating betterplanned communities wouldalso promote more alternatives to car transportation, cities can provide
    http://www.great-lakes.net/teach/pollution/sprawl/sprawl_6.html
    GO TO.... Fish and fishing Native flora Water levels TEACH Environment Home
    Work with your neighbors
    Land-use decisions are best made when looking at the entire region, rather than just a small portion of it. Development not only affects your community, but those to the north, south, east, and west of you. Communities may be created within political boundaries, but ecosystems, rivers, wildlife habitats, and the air you breathe don't follow these boundaries, so by including other communities in planning development, more responsible and efficient growth can result.
    The Great Lakes region provides some examples of regional cooperation. The First Suburbs Consortium of Northeastern Ohio is a group of 10 Cleveland suburbs who decided that working together, instead of separately, would provide better solutions to Cleveland's growth and sprawl problems. The Consortium has brought together more than 200 city and state leaders in the fight against sprawl, and Columbus, Dayton, and Toledo now all have First Suburbs organizations as well. The Grand Valley Metro Council is another good example of regional cooperation, bringing together over 30 townships in the Grand Rapids, Mich., area in order to promote anti-sprawl land-use issues. And the

    80. CompletePlanet - Directory Cleveland
    Your guide to ohio's Web sites Keywords cities, travel, fort, sports, government,communities, health, st, weather, today, seniors, parenting, food, lottery
    http://www.completeplanet.com/Geography_Country_Region/Local_Cities/Cleveland/in
    Search Databases for: Search All Within Cleveland Top Geography (Country or Region) No further results below this node. NODE RESULTS 1-10 of 74 cleveland.com: Homes
    Keywords:
    online, local, relocation, area, news, tools, classifieds, builder, listings, place, estate, yellow, apartments, rent, calculators, check, cleveland, resources, guide, auctions, stores, town, reserved, marketplace, coupons, construction, ad, car, job, feedback
    http://www.cleveland.com/homes/
    Categories...
    Relevance Popular Links Cleveland based Web Design:PKT Web Designs-Fast loading,...
    Keywords:
    pkt, designs, services, comments, business, information, engine, solutions, fast, placement, design, located, cleveland, loading, economical, requested, submit, form, button, thank, name, city, state, phone, please, restaurant, legal, retail, specify, conclusion
    http://www.pktwebdesign.com/mailform.html
    Categories...
    Relevance Popular Links Sports Betting and Stocks at BetDayton
    Keywords:
    sports, news, cleveland, bonus, deposit, below, gcsports, stock, information, dayton, cincinnati, odds, betdayton, major, live, button, time, info, sportsnews, online, sportsbook, local, updates, schedules, field, bengals, subscribe, cavaliers, indians, score
    http://64.69.86.55/index.cfm?DisplayURL=28

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