2021 Active Transportation Symposium Survey Results
Presented Virtually October 26-28, 2021
The 2021 Active Transportation Symposium was a three-day, free, virtual event hosted by the Active Transportation Resource Center (ATRC). The goals of the Symposium are to bring together active transportation stakeholders, share information on relevant active transportation topics, and provide attendees with implementable solutions.
Keynote Presentations
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Monique G. López is a Social Justice Planner and founder of Pueblo Planning, an anti-racist values-driven participatory planning and design firm that intentionally engages and includes communities that are often left out of the planning process and those most vulnerable to the impacts of planning decisions. This includes Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC), LGBTQ, unhoused, and other communities that experience marginalization. Monique utilizes storytelling and participatory art-making to engage communities in the planning process in order to dismantle unjust systems and co-develop equitable communities.
For the past 15 years, Monique has been a social justice planner and policy advocate working on transportation justice, environmental justice, and public space access projects, plans, policies, and designs. Specifically, Monique has worked in partnership with communities to co-create meaningful change by defeating polluting industries, stopping freeway expansion and co-developing with the community sustainable alternatives, developing popular education materials to advance justice-centered movement demands, and challenging and changing planning methodology and practice to center the stories and solutions of BIPOC and other communities that experience marginalization. Monique also brings this justice-centered approach and practice into the classroom as a lecturer at Antioch University, Pitzer College, and Cal Poly Pomona.
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Angie Schmitt is one of the country’s best known writers on the topic of sustainable transportation. She was the long time national editor at Streetsblog. Her writing and commentary have appeared in the New York Times, The Atlantic and NPR. She is the founder of the new firm 3MPH Planning and Consulting, a small Cleveland-based firm which is focused on pedestrian safety. Her book Right of Way: Race, Class and the Silent Epidemic of Pedestrian Deaths in America was published in August by Island Press.
Presentation Description: The Pedestrian Safety Crisis in America: Why it’s happening and what we can do about it, with author Angie Schmitt.
More than 6,000 pedestrians are getting killed every year on American streets, representing an enormous 50 percent increase from the first part of the decade. Angie Schmitt, the author of the new book Right of Way: Race, Class and the Silent Crisis of Pedestrian Deaths in America will talk about the social trends that are putting people at risk. And why fundamentally, it is a problem of systematic, structural inequality.
Sessions
Building Strong Community Partnerships
Tue Oct 26, 2021 @ 9:45am
Building strong community partnerships goes far beyond just outreach. It begins with equitable engagement and a focus on ensuring that all voices are heard. In this panel, hear from experts that successfully engage with the public on active transportation projects through their work with rural communities, schools, Tribes, and underserved communities.
Short-Term Project, Long-Term Impact
Tue Oct 26, 2021 @ 11:15am
By using only temporary materials, demonstration projects allow communities to envision future roadway improvements. Not only are demonstration projects an excellent forum for engagement, working with CBO’s, and data collection, but they allow the public to actually experience and interact with what could be possible, leading to support for something much more permanent.