A Pembrokeshire planner is to play a key role in her profession this year.
Cath Ranson was inaugurated as President of the Royal Town Planning Institute earlier this month.
The mother-of-three from Crymych takes over in the Institute’s Centenary year at a time when planners across the UK and Ireland are facing the demands of difficult economic times, a housing crisis and controversial issues such as fracking.
Cath, who has been Development Plans and Conservation Manager for Pembrokeshire County Council since 2009, is looking forward to meeting the challenges during her year in office.
“The Centenary is about both our past and our future,” she said.
“We must use the anniversary not just to reflect on what has gone before in the 100 years of professional planning, but also look to the future in both the medium and long term and try to anticipate and meet the challenges we will face.”
Cath’s route into planning began through holiday jobs and a job creation post at West Glamorgan County Council before working for several local authorities in Wales, including the Snowdonia National Park Authority and, for a spell in its early days, the Welsh Government.
Planning, she said, is not merely a process but something to feel passionately about because it affects everybody’s lives - although people are often unaware of it.
“It affects the way that we live and regulate ourselves in society and without it there would be chaos,” she said.
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