What does the first section of the AICP Code of Ethics cover? - Principles to which we aspire
What does the second section of the AICP Code of Ethics cover? - Our rules of conduct
What does the third section of the AICP Code of Ethics cover? - Our code procedures
What does the fourth section of the AICP Code of Ethics cover? - Planners convicted of serious crimes -
automatic suspension of certification
How many sections does the AICP Code of Ethics have? - 4
How many aspirational principles are there in the AICP Code? - 3
How many rules of conduct are there in the AICP Code? - 26
How many code procedures are there? - 17
How many points are there under part 4 of the code? - 4
What do the code's aspirational statement address? - 1. responsibility to the public
2. responsibility to clients and employers
3. responsibility to profession and colleagues
What is a Metes and Bounds survey - A system or method of describing land from English Common Law
that uses physical features of the local geography, along with directions and distances, to define and
describe the boundaries of a parcel of land. The boundaries are described in a running prose style,
working around the parcel in sequence, from a point of beginning, returning back to the same point.
(The term "metes" refers to a boundary defined by the measurement of each straight run, specified by a
, distance between the terminal points, and an orientation or direction. A direction may be a simple
compass bearing, or a precise orientation determined by accurate survey methods. The term "bounds"
refers to a more general boundary description, such as along a certain watercourse, a stone wall, an
adjoining public road way, or an existing building.)
What is 'satisficing'? - A decision-making strategy that attempts to meet criteria for adequacy, rather
than to identify an optimal solution. Satisficing occurs in consensus building when the group looks
towards a solution everyone can agree on even if it may not be the best.
Housing Act of 1934 - Created the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and the Federal Savings and
Loan Insurance Corporation. Part of the New Deal, designed to stop the tide of bank foreclosures on
family homes. (Also known as the Capehart Act)
Housing Act of 1937 - Tied slum clearance to public housing. Povided for subsidies to be paid from the
U.S. government to local public housing agencies (LHA's) to improve living conditions for low-income
families. (Also known as the Wagner-Steagall Act).
Housing Act of 1949 - Created the Urban Redevelopment Agency and gave it the authority to subsidize
three fourths of the cost of local slum clearance and urban renewal.
-Provided federal financing for slum clearance programs associated with urban renewal projects in
American cities (Title I),
-Increased authorization for the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) mortgage insurance (Title II),
-Extending federal money to build more than 800,000 public housing units (Title III)
-Fund research into housing and housing techniques
-Permitting the FHA to provide financing for rural homeowners.
Housing Act of 1954 - Modified urban redevelopment and renewal by requiring communities engaged in
such activities to adopt code enforcement, relocation, and other measures that would prevent the
further spread of urban blight.
Popularized the phrase "urban renewal"; made these projects more enticing to developers, by among
other things, providing FHA-backed mortgages.
Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965 - Established the Cabinet-level Department of Housing and
Urban Development.
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