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Highlights of the Center’s History

by John M. DeGrove

The Joint Center for Environmental and Urban Problems was established in July 1972, by its inclusion in the legislative special projects budget and with support from the Florida Board of Regents. It got there through the strong support of State Senator Bob Graham, later Governor and now United States Senator, and through other legislative backing. Senator Graham and I, among others, including a House Republican from the Fort Lauderdale area, met at the Mai-Kai Restaurant in Fort Lauderdale and formulated a plan for what we first called the Center for Urban and Environmental Studies that would focus on applied research and public service. I was in the midst of helping lay out Florida’s first try at putting a system in place to assure the better management of its very strong growth pressures, with the full support of Governor Reubin Askew. Both Graham and I were frustrated by the failure of the state university system to be better organized so as to be useful to and used by local, regional, and state agencies involved in finding better ways to manage the state’s growth. To us the time had come to change that by getting a university center in place to fill the gap.

The Joint Center for Environmental and Urban Problems was the result. An applied research and public-service unit that would join the resources of the two state universities in Southeast Florida - FAU and FIU - but one that could also reach out to other state universities and, through my involvement in efforts to manage growth and change around the nation and beyond, draw ideas from national and international growth strategies.

The major purpose of this short piece is to make it clear that the original mission of the Joint Center and the actions to achieve that mission have not changed in the past 30 years. The mission was and is to be useful to and used by local, regional, and state agencies as they struggle to effectively implement Florida’s growth management system.

Some key assumptions shaped and continue to shape the Center’s activities. The first was the strong conviction that environmental and urban issues are in fact joined, and that you can’t deal with one without the other. This assumption rejects the notion that you can have a clean environment or a strong economy but not both. The next key assumption was that local governments acting in isolation from one another could never effectively manage their growth; it must be approached on a regional basis, which in turn called for a state/regional/local framework in which local, state, and regional actions were mutually supportive of each other.

As an applied research and public-service unit, the Joint Center is not directly involved in teaching, although its applied research and public-service projects continue to have a major positive impact on teaching, not only at FAU and FIU, but also throughout the state university system and beyond.

And so, to reiterate, Joint Center conducted and funded research is aimed at producing and making available research results to public and private agencies attempting to deal with environmental and urban problems. That was the Joint Center’s goal at the beginning in 1972, and it is still its goal 30 years later.

John M. DeGrove Founding Director