The importance of a notable degree for networking and learning best practices
by Meredith Dault, 鈥婱ay 22nd, 2011
鈥媁hen Pamela Sweet started her Master鈥檚 degree in Urban Planning at Queen鈥檚, she had no idea where it was going to take her. 鈥淚n those days - the 1970s - planning wasn鈥檛 a well-known profession,鈥 she recalls, 鈥渂ut it was coming to the forefront. So I applied to Queen鈥檚 and never looked back.鈥
Sweet, who is Senior Vice President and Principal with , was one of the first graduates of the program in Urban and Regional Planning (she finished her course work in 1974, but graduated formally in 1978). She says it was a great time to get into the business. 鈥淲hen we were graduating we were being recruited at campus,鈥 she laughs. 鈥淲e were getting various employers interviewing the whole class and picking the bright ones. We had job offers in March and April, well before we had finished the course requirements.鈥
But as Sweet explains it, that鈥檚 because the notion of planning was still relatively new. Her first job was with the provincial government, where she worked for the Ministry of Housing (which she describes as being equivalent to today鈥檚 Ministry of Municipal Affairs) in Toronto and then Ottawa. 鈥淢unicipalities were less interested in planning,鈥 she explains, 鈥渁nd didn鈥檛 necessarily have official plans and zoning by-laws. So the province had to set up its own policies and grant program on planning, and also to protect resource lands.鈥
One of Sweet鈥檚 jobs at the time was convincing rural communities in eastern Ontario to draft municipal plans. She describes driving home late at night after meeting with small city councils to discuss zoning by-laws. 鈥淭hey saw it as a restriction,鈥 she explains, 鈥渙r as the government imposing their ideas about (what they should do). They didn鈥檛 want people telling them what do with their land.鈥
Sweet says that the idea seems preposterous now. 鈥淚鈥檝e gone from trying to convince people on the merits of planning and zoning, to today, where even small municipalities in Northern Ontario have planners on staff, or at least a planning administrator!鈥 she says with a laugh. 鈥淎nd now the public expects at least some kind of degree of control in planning.鈥
Sweet鈥檚 career has seen her work in a number of different capacities - as head of policy and infrastructure planning with the Region of Ottawa-Carleton, as well as in land use planning and transportation. Since joining FoTenn in 2001, she鈥檚 worked with communities in Nunavut, Yellowknife and in Northern Quebec, as well as Eastern Ontario. She admits that working in northern communities can be challenging, but satisfying. 鈥淵ou have to adapt,鈥 she explains, 鈥渁nd you have to be sensitive to the issues (in a community).鈥
In fact, Sweet says being a good planner means more than merely thinking about urban design and planning policy. 鈥淚 think a good planner also needs some basic skills that makes them more adaptable to the environment (they鈥檙e working in),鈥 she explains, 鈥渓ike good presentation skills, good writing skills, the ability to be flexible and to think on your feet.鈥 She says that good planners are adept at drawing the public into the consultation process, and interpreting data. 鈥淚t takes a fairly confident person,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou have to be able to come up with good ideas. And you have to be brave, because you鈥檙e going out to communities, and you鈥檙e often travelling on your own.鈥
While Sweet acknowledges that planning is a far more competitive industry now than it was when she first got her start, she says there are many interesting career options new graduates can consider. Besides government work, she says many planners today work as consultants, entrepreneurs and project managers within the private sector. 鈥淎 lot of my colleagues and friends have migrated into senior management roles, as city managers, or as heads or major city organizations or corporations,鈥 she says. 鈥淐ommunication and consultation and community engagement -- they are skills that you can apply to a lot of different areas.鈥
Sweet, who has been back to campus as a guest lecturer, still remembers her time at Queen鈥檚 with fondness. 鈥淭here were some great people,鈥 she says warmly. 鈥淚 remember coming out of school and that at the time, there were a lot of new, young planners. But I always felt I had a leg up. We had really good, rigorous training that give us the opportunity to step into a lot of jobs.鈥
She says that the Queen鈥檚 name is a recognized one in the planning industry today. 鈥淨ueen鈥檚 maintains good alumni relations across Canada and is accredited by the Canadian Institute of Planners,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd that goes a long way in terms of networking, and providing people with best practices across the country. It鈥檚 a great school, and Kingston is a great place.鈥