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02-18-14 Joint WS With PTRC
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02-18-14 Joint WS With PTRC
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2-18-14 Joint WS With PTRC
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2-18-14 Joint WS With PTRC
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2-18-14 Joint WS With PTRC
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2/18/2014
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<br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />D. Committee Expectations: <br />While the work required of PTRC members will vary both across members and across time, the <br />following expectations are generally held of all committee members: <br /> <br />1. The interests of Arden Hills and its citizens are foremost <br />2. Participation of PTRC members is key to their contribution~ <br /> a. Members should be present and involved in meetings of the <br /> committee. <br /> b. Members should be actively engaged in discussing issues, sharing <br /> perspectives, and raising questions that are essential to good <br /> decision-making. <br />c. Effective participation derives from continually learning about <br /> Arden Hills parks, trails, and recreation and the physical and <br /> political environments in which they exist. This learning includes <br /> those formal opportunities afforded by the PTRC, as well as <br /> <br />d. As a general guideline, members should expect to spend <br /> approximately 3 to 4 hours per month in their work on the <br /> committee. <br />3. The PTRC is a group of peers no one member has more standing or power than <br />others. <br />4. Respect for the opinions of each other, and for those with whom the PTRC interacts, <br />views, and represent a sense of stewardship in all that they do. <br />5. PTRC members engage in continual self-assessment of their performance on the <br />committee. As needs arise, they seek education and skills necessary to their <br />performance. As a collective, the committee develops changes in its composition, <br />structure and function as needed. <br />6. The PTRC provides opportunities for the education of its members, both as part of <br />committee meetings, and through access to educational events in other settings. <br />Members actively engage in this education as part of their responsibility to the <br />committee. <br />7. Some of the work of the PTRC is in areas of subjective judgment, where there is not <br />enough hard information to make the decisions that are necessary. Members who are <br />most successful in these decisions are those who are aware of the values they hold, <br />willing to engage in the discussion of those values, and respectful of those values <br />held by others that may differ from their own. <br />8. The PTRC is composed of individuals with diverse perspectives and experience. The <br />committee benefits from the contrasts that this diversity engenders, and seeks to <br />improve the decisions it makes and the actions it takes by understanding the conflicts <br />and resolving the disputes that arise in the discussion of issues and plans. <br />2 <br /> <br />
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