A. Bruce Dotson
Personal Statement
His research interests include land use, growth management, dispute resolution and consensus building. His most recent works examine the efforts of communities to contain development within urban growth boundaries. His studies include Portland, Oregon; Boulder, Colorado; Lexington, Kentucky; Montgomery County, Maryland; and similar US communities that serve as benchmarks for other localities. His research also includes a US-UK comparison with particular attention to the pattern, or footprint, of rural development and the degree to which it is contained within villages and towns as compared to a scattered pattern of sprawl. The major finding is that US communities have done a better job than the English of containing development in a dominant urban center but the English have done a much better job of containing rural development in rural towns, villages and hamlets leaving the countryside much less disturbed. To expand this research, he has recently completed a data base of US metropolitan areas and their exurbs and is developing recommendations for better ways to plan for exurban areas. He is consulting with Bundoran Farm, a two thousand acre agriculture based conservation development located in Albemarle County Virginia. As Senior Associate at Institute for Environmental Negotiation, he has been active for many years in collaborative planning and consensus building projects.
Bruce Dotson is a former member of the Albemarle County Planning Commission. He served on the county's in-fill strategy committee that examined ways to promote compact growth. He was recently re-appointed to the Albemarle County Acquisition of Development Rights (ACE) Committee, a body that purchases development rights and places land under conservation easement.