APWA Reporter, June 2012 issue

Page 78

Donald C. Stone and the American Public Works Association Howard Rosen, Ph.D., Program Director, and Stephen T. Pudloski, P.E., Program Director, Department of Engineering Professional Development, University of Wisconsin-Madison

1937 While APWA was officially founded in 1937, it was the culmination of a long series of developments going back to at least the 1890s. In 1894, the American Society of Municipal Improvements was formed. It would eventually become the American Society of Municipal Engineering (ASME). In 1935, this organization asked Donald C. Stone to become their Executive Director. At the same time, the International Association of Public Works Officials (IAPWO) made a similar request to Stone. Both organizations had come to know of Stone, who was a leading figure in the development of modern public administration. As the Director of Research for the International City Management Association

Stone understood that these two organizations lacked the resources to support a full-time paid staff. At this time, these organizations together only had 750 members, many of whom were delinquent in paying their dues. Working part-time as the Interim Executive Director, Stone introduced initiatives to increase membership, develop programs and generate resources. He organized a joint meeting in 1935 of the two organizations, which was the first Congress of Public Works Engineers. He then started the Public Works Engineers Newsletter, as well as new services for

Donald C. Stone

76 APWA Reporter

(ICMA) Stone began a project in 1931 to develop “an objective method of measuring, reporting and evaluating sanitation services.” This effort was sponsored by the National Committee of Municipal Standards. This committee included representatives of APWA’s two predecessor organizations, along with others. The studies conducted as part of this process led to a series of demonstrations in various communities. Their success led to the creation of the Public Administration Service (PAS), which provided public works consulting services. The PAS produced The Management of Municipal Public Works with Donald Stone as the author of this key book. He was also the Executive Director of the PAS. For all these reasons, Stone was the most logical choice to head an association of public works officials.

June 2012

members. Thanks to these efforts, by the time of its creation in 1937, APWA had the resources to hire an Executive Director and take its place among the many public services associations that would come together in the new building dedicated to public administration. The 1313 building opened on the campus of the University of Chicago in 1938. Known officially as the Public Administration Building (until 1979 when it was named the Merriam Center in honor of Charles E. Merriam), 1313 was home to the headquarters of APWA, along with organizations focused on city management, planning, government finance, housing, public welfare, municipal leagues, state governments and many others. 1313 was the physical embodiment of the vision of Merriam, a political science professor at the University of Chicago, along with Beardsley Ruml and Louis Brownlow. These individuals believed it was possible to use research and education to introduce methods and practices of public administration to improve the efficiency of government services and that could be best accomplished through voluntary professional associations rather than by a political process. This is a key reason why they explicitly wanted the building that would serve as the headquarters of so many state and local government technical professionals not be in Washington, D.C.


Articles inside

Ask Ann

5min
pages 94-96

Professional Directory

3min
pages 103-105

APWA: Using history to advance appreciation of public works

4min
pages 88-89

Challenge the Future

11min
pages 90-93

Products in the News

10min
pages 97-102

Donald C. Stone and the American Public Works Association

9min
pages 78-81

The Bureau of Reclamation: 110 years providing water and electricity to the West

8min
pages 82-84

Best practices in public works are not static

5min
pages 86-87

Building the Aviation Infrastructure: A brief history of the Aviation Trust Fund

3min
page 85

APWA 75th Anniversary: Thoughts on evolution in the organization

1min
page 77

Reflections on fifty years in the profession

9min
pages 74-76

Public Works Past and Future: A brief reflection

3min
page 73

APWA Past Presidents reflect on history and future of the industry

15min
pages 64-67

APWA’s History: In Perspective

18min
pages 59-63

Cleaning up with new technology

4min
pages 56-57

A brief history of our beginnings

2min
page 58

From developing needs to developing solutions

5min
pages 54-55

Enterprise GIS facilitates cooperative projects and reduces costs throughout city departments

3min
page 53

Pavement surface grinding techniques provide safer, smoother and quieter roads

8min
pages 50-52

Preserving the past and maintaining the future of public bridge infrastructure

3min
pages 48-49

The long public works legacy in Louisiana’s retreating coastline

4min
page 47

Equal Access: Taking it to the streets

9min
pages 44-46

Project planning, engineering priorities and political decision making

8min
pages 40-43

Innovative design-build road maintenance strategy: a proven direction for Kansas City

8min
pages 37-39

Demystifying the CIP

10min
pages 34-36

Promoting our technical expertise

11min
pages 28-31

Using technology for enhanced public communication

6min
pages 32-33

Global Solutions in Public Works

9min
pages 24-27

You could be saying, “I heard it from my mentor

6min
pages 18-19

Accreditation process helps organization assess service and performance

5min
pages 16-17

A View from the Top: A diverse view of women in public works

6min
pages 12-13

Attending the APWA Congress pays dividends

2min
page 10

Anaheim: a car-free good time

4min
pages 14-15

President’s Message

7min
pages 4-5

Technical Committee News

3min
page 8

Washington Insight

3min
pages 6-7

Recognize Your Leaders

3min
page 9
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