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Chapter One: Planning for the Twin Cities Region <br /> Thrive MSP 2040 <br /> Our region is anchored by three great rivers, dotted by hundreds of lakes, and endowed with wide <br /> expanses of green space, giving our residents beautiful landscapes that inspire and renew. Its largest <br /> river - the Mississippi - gave birth to two frontier settlements - Minneapolis and Saint Paul. Since then, <br /> our region has grown and prospered, and is now well-known for its high quality of life, its strong, <br /> resilient economy, and many other assets: <br /> • Vibrant arts, music and theatre communities and professional sports teams <br /> • Rich cultural diversity <br /> • Abundant parks, recreational trails, conserved open space, fertile agricultural land, and natural <br /> resources <br /> • A civic tradition of shared action. <br /> Today, the Twin Cities metropolitan area - the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Council - is a thriving <br /> region of nearly three million people living in 186 communities across the seven counties of Anoka, <br /> Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, and Washington. The region has emerged as a world-class <br /> metropolitan area - a great place to live, work, play and do business. <br /> As we plan for our next 30 years, key challenges lie ahead - constrained fiscal resources, new <br /> demands stemming from demographic shifts, emerging environmental challenges, new regional <br /> planning priorities, and the increasing necessity of regional economic cooperation. <br /> Under state law, the Metropolitan Council is responsible for preparing a comprehensive development <br /> guide for the seven-county Twin Cities metropolitan area. The Council's Thrive MSP 2040, adopted in <br /> May 2014, provides a framework for a shared vision for the future of the region over the next 30 years. <br /> Thrive establishes the policy foundation used by the Council to develop its regional systems and policy <br /> plans, as well as development policies and implementation strategies. Taken together, these constitute <br /> the comprehensive development guide that guides the orderly and economical development of the <br /> region. State statute specifies three metropolitan systems plans: <br /> • Transportation Policy Plan (including Aviation) <br /> • Water Resources Policy Plan <br /> • Regional Parks Policy Plan <br /> In addition to the three statutory metropolitan systems plans, the Council is developing a Housing <br /> Policy Plan. The Housing Policy Plan will provide an expanded policy framework to inform the Council's <br /> review of the housing elements and housing implementation programs of local comprehensive plans <br /> required in statute. <br /> Thrive is the result of extensive engagement with the region's residents, civic, nonprofit and business <br /> leaders, and governmental officials. As a regional plan, Thrive addresses issues greater than any one <br /> neighborhood, city, or single county can tackle alone to build and maintain a thriving metropolitan <br /> region. Using an outcomes-based approach, Thrive puts forward five outcomes and three principles as <br /> the foundation of a prosperous, equitable, and livable region for today and generations to come. <br />