Projecting Change» social media http://projectingchange.ca Thu, 24 Apr 2014 23:47:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.8.11 Projecting Transportation Change in Vancouver http://projectingchange.ca/2011/05/24/projecting-transportation-change-in-vancouver-2/ http://projectingchange.ca/2011/05/24/projecting-transportation-change-in-vancouver-2/#comments Tue, 24 May 2011 05:25:47 +0000 http://projectingchange.ca/?p=1079 Easy and convenient transportation is key to Vancouver’s status as one of the world’s most livable and sustainable cities. However, as population and employment continue to grow, transportation needs and trips overall increase. To manage this growth, while maintaining livability and creating a more sustainable city, we need a robust transportation system.

Last Wednesday, Yuri sat down and talked with Neal LaMontagne. Neal is a senior planner with the City of Vancouver, responsible for city-wide and regional planning. This means he’s part of the team responsible for the planning of the entire city. His division focuses on initiative like the Regional Growth strategy, eco-density, and the industrial land strategy.

Recently, Neal joined a team responsible for Vancouver’s Transportation Plan update. This team is made up of representatives from both the planning and engineering departments. This is in recognition that transportation is a city-building activity as much as it is a traffic-moving one.

TalkVancouver.com's Transportation 2040 Banner

Here is an overview of their discussion:

You’ve talked about the City’s Transportation Plan Update. Can you tell me a bit more about it?

Good transportation systems rely on strategic long-term planning. Vancouver’s Transportation Plan outlines an overall transportation strategy for the city. It sets out a direction consistent both with the regional transportation policy and the principles of the broader city plan. As Vancouver grows and changes, it is important that our transportation planning keeps up.

The existing Vancouver Transportation Plan was adopted in 1997. This plan put transit, pedestrians and cycling at the top of the city’s priorities. Overall, the plan have been successful. Both population and employment in Vancouver grew steadily between 1996 and 2006. This led to a 23% increase in trips to Vancouver. However, because of the re-prioritization, the number of vehicles entering and leaving the city has actually decreased by 10% over the same period! New trips have been by transit, cycling and walking.

We have completed almost all the 76 invitees outlined in the 1997 plan. In addition, we have met or exceeded most of the targets the 1997 plan set—many years ahead of schedule. As such, it is time to update the plan and look towards 2040.

Transportation 2040 is a two-phase consultation process:

  1. The first phase runs from now until mid-July. We’re focusing on gathering ideas for Vancouver residents and commuters. This will offer a high-level view including our transportation successes and challenges to date, best practices and proposed goals. These consultations will form the basis of the draft 2040 Transportation Plan.
  2. The second phase will be from January to March 2012. Then, residents can give feedback on the draft Transportation Plan.

 

To many residents, transportation planning seems dry and boring. Why should we care?

We all share the streets as commuters, residents and businesses. As such, transportation is something that effects everybody on a daily basis. Whether we are commuting to and from work, or school, going shopping, meeting friends or taking kids to hockey practice we are moving through the city. As a ‘complete city,’ Vancouver wants this movement to occur in a sustainable way.

In addition to impacting people on an individual basis (“am I stuck in traffic?”), transportation also impacts us on a city-wide level:

  • It is central to our economy. The ability to move goods and services; and connect people to share ideas is central to our economy growth.
  • It is closely linked to sustainability. If Vancouver is to be the greenest city by 2020, we are going to have to make some movement on how we move.
  • It has a big impact on our public health, especially in areas like air quality, accidents and obesity.
  • It matters in terms of community. Not only by connecting people within community, but ensuring that we keep public space for social interaction and celebrations.

As a general strategy, the City of Vancouver does not plan to expand road capacity. It will need to absorb growth without building new roads. Thus, the city needs to find other ways to absorb the demands of increased people, jobs, and trips without increasing the amount of traffic on our streets. The 1997 plan was able to do just that. The challenge for Transportation 2040 is how can we keep up with the trends of more people walking, more people cycling, and more people taking transit.

Photograph of SkyTrain and Science World

Image from TalkVancouver.com

Projecting Change focuses on individual efforts. How can residents of Vancouver get involved in the process?

The City of Vancouver is encouraging all city residents, commuters, businesses,neighborhoods and industry groups to provide input during the Transportation 2040 consultation process. We want to hear people’s approaches, ideas, concerns and where they see opportunities for improvement. The more people involved, the better sense we will have of what Vancouverites want .  this will help us realize our collective goals.

We are at the beginning of this process. Public consultations sessions start this week. There will be one on May 25 at Marpole Community Centre (990 West 59th Avenue) from 7 to 8:30 pm. there will be another at the Kitsilano Community Centre (2690 Larch Street) on May 26 from 7 to 8:30pm. Hockey fans need not worry, we’ll keep participants updated on games. You can find other public meetings on the Transportation 2040 events calendar.

But you never know where great ideas will come from. So not only do we want a collective discussion, we also want collective brainstorming to come up with unexpected ideas. A great examples of an unexpected idea implemented because of public input was the Laneway Housing initiative that came out of the EcoDensity consultations.

A lot of the city’s transportation initiatives will be small-scale, incremental and at the neighborhood level. One existing example of this is the city’s Greenways program. This is a project that has really relied on local participation, including neighbors planning their roundabouts and boulevards.

On a larger scale, the more people thinking and talking about transportation—even completely outside of the city’s process—the better. Additionally, the city would like people to try the different ways of getting around the city. If you normally drive, try out one of our bike lanes. If you normally take the bus, try walking along Main St, 4th Ave or Commercial Drive. Ride a skateboard, paddle a kayak, use a scooter. Taking a step outside your normal routine is a great way to get you thinking about transportation in our city.

Photograph of a female cyclist on Dunsmuir Street separated bike lanesImage from TalkVancouver.com

Projecting Change is also about embracing new technologies. How is Vancouver embracing social media?

The home base for public engagement is our interactive website, TalkVancouver.com. We will also be setting up a Twitter account, hosting discussion forums and a Facebook pilot project. Our social media strategy will be dynamic and adapt over time. We are really interests to see how people respond, communicate and interact. We learned a lot from Greenest City and hope to build on that.

For the less technologically inclined, we are still conducting public meetings and getting out to hear from people face to face.

“If you can get 15 people in a room together we’ll come out and have a meeting with you.”

Photograph of an elderly couple walking

Image from TalkVancouver.com


What role does an event like the Projecting Change Film Festival play in the City’s efforts?

We need people talking among themselves. An event such as the Projecting Change Film Festival is phenomenal for getting people talking and for people representing their ideas to each other. The more you are talking, the more you are thinking. The more you are thinking the more you’re being creative and coming up with really interesting and provocative ways for us to move the discussion forward. That is a phenomenal benefit.

“Even if were are no in the room, we want people talking transportation. And then we want people talking transportation with us.”

A big part of what the city does is communicate with the public; listening and telling our stores and ideas. We also want to facilitate a broader city-wide discussion. We want people talking not just about transportation, but about transportation in the context of the type of city we want to live in.

More Information

For more information on the public consultation efforts for the Transportation 2040 update, check out this video below or visit TalkVancouver.com.

Yuri -@YuriArtibise

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Recap of Projecting Change Through Social Media http://projectingchange.ca/2011/05/20/recap-of-projecting-change-through-social-media/ http://projectingchange.ca/2011/05/20/recap-of-projecting-change-through-social-media/#comments Fri, 20 May 2011 22:37:08 +0000 http://projectingchange.ca/?p=1015 Yuri Artibise gives us a recap of the Projecting Change Through Social Media event we co-presented with Social Media Club Vancouver on Tuesday, May 17th.

Last Tuesday’s Projecting Change Through Social Media was an incredible event. A partnership between by SMCYVR and the Projecting Change School Media team, it was held at the soon-to-be finished HiVE Vancouver.  The HiVE is a 9,000 square foot collaborative workspace for sustainability and creativity focused people located at 128 West Hastings Street in downtown Vancouver.

65_RedRoses

The evening kicked of with a welcome from Rebecca Peel, our social media director. Rebecca introduced the first plenary speakers, Nimisha Mukerji and Kat Dodds who talked about the experience with the 65_RedRoses project. Nimisha is the co-Director, of 65 Red Roses a documentary film. Kat is the founder of Hello Cool World, a communicate agency specializing grass roots campaigns for non-profits and independent films.

65_RedRoses is a documentary film on the lives of Eva Markvoort and her two online friends who all battled Cystic Fibrosis (CF). CF is a fatal genetic disease affecting the lungs and digestive system. The name “65 Roses” comes from what children with cystic fibrosis (CF) call their disease as the words are easier for them to pronounce.

Without fully realizing it, Eva Markvoort started a global campaign for organ donation by writing about her experiences with cystic fibrosis on her Live Journal site. Sadly, on March 27, 2010, while waiting for a second transplant, her breath ran out. She was 25. The documentary, website and campaign site is her legacy. 65_RedRoses aims to leave viewers with a new appreciation of life and the digital world. To keep up to date on the latest developments, search for #4Eva on Twitter.

With Glowing Hearts

Next up was Jon Ornery, the producer of With Glowing Hearts, and social media guru Kemp Edmonds, who spearheaded the social media efforts to raise funds and promote the film. With Glowing Hearts tells the story of the 2010 Winter Games’ effect on Vancouver from the perspective of people directly impacted by the Olympics: downtown eastside residents, bloggers, photographers, activists, proponents and opponents.

In order to complete the film, Jon, Kemp, and director Andrew Lavinge created the “Tweet and Toonie Torch Relay.” This is a crowd-sourced social media campaign to promote the film’s message and help raise the $10,000 needed to complete the film, $2 at a time. Special props were given to east-side resident and citizen journalist, April Smith.  April is still drawing attention to the film through her social media activism in the DTES.

HiVE Vancouver

The last plenary speaker was Jeremy Murphy, the man behind HiVE Vancouver, our hosts for the night. The HiVE is an up and coming sustainability and creativity co-working space in downtown Vancouver. It will be home to non-profit organizations, small businesses, social entrepreneurs and independent contractors all working in creative and sustainable industries.
HiVE Vancouver Logo

The HiVE will provide co-workers with a great work space, awesome networking opportunities, and access to the knowledge, capital and resources that will help them project change. Check out Rebecca’s interview with Jeremy for more information on him and HiVE Vancouver.

You can’t project change without the right tools!

The second half of the evening was dedicated to workshops. There were two sessions of there concurrent workshops. Since I wasn’t alble to be three places at once. I’ll rely on some notes from my friend, Tracy Bains and the twitosphere. Here are some key takeaways from each workshop:

Being Strategic Using Twitter

Stephanie Michelle Scott of Wildfire Effect and Monica Hamburg led back to back workshops on Twitter basiscs. Their discussion was truly old school as Stephanie and Monica illustrated their points with stand up board twitter signs! Through their workshops, Stephanie and Monica created a few new social media converts, who will now go out and project their own change through social media!

Stephanie Michelle Scott using real live twitter blocks like @ during her Projecting Change Through Social Media workshop

Photograph by @masalapuri on TwicPic

Inside HootSuite

Kemp Edmonds led another set of back to back sessions on how to maximize what Hootsuite, a Twitter dashboard has to offer. Kemp offered his insider expertise on how to use Hootsuite to help even most the most advanced twitter user improve theri ability to project change Some of his most useful tips included how to use Hootsuite analytics tools, the geo-location search function and how to mass schedule tweets. You can find out more about these subjects and more at http://learn.hootsuite.com.

Transforming the dialogue: How questions & media can create change

Camille Jensen from Axiom News led this workshop. Axiom News is and organization “committed to sharing stories about movements making a difference.” Camille illustrated how the questions we ask will create thr stories we tel. She refered to Peter Block, a writer and consultant, who noted that: “If you want to change the world – or the culture – all you have to do is change the conversation.”

Camille also talked about generative journalism: telling positive stories to support positive change.

Camille Jensen from Axiom News leading a workshop at Projecting Change Through Social Media

Photograph from @check_your_head on TwicPic

Taking offline community organizing online

Ajay Masala Puri led this session that was based on the question: What is the purpose of engaging on social media unless you can make a difference? His main take aways were to avoid the temptation of “over-institutionalising” your message and instead take complex issues and make them simple for your friends and followers to digest. Doing so will allow many more friend and followers to connect with your message.

Ajay suggests creating your ideas offline, take them online to gain momentum, then back offline for execution. He talked about how, by following thrice strategy he was able to leverage just 15 of his Facebook friends to attract thousands of people to an event.

Final Reflections

All in all this was an incredible event that taught something to everyone who attened, regardless of their level of social media knowledge. It was great to see people completely unfamiliar with social media, not only being invited to attend an event, but being welcomed and guided. It is always cool to see somebody learn what a # is for the first time.

 Team picture from our Projecting Change with Social Media event

Photograph from @smcyvr on YFrog

—Yuri @yuriartibise

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Projecting Change Through Social Media http://projectingchange.ca/2011/05/11/projecting-change-through-social-media/ http://projectingchange.ca/2011/05/11/projecting-change-through-social-media/#comments Wed, 11 May 2011 01:21:37 +0000 http://projectingchange.ca/?p=819
Photo Credit: Curtis Miller (curtm95) on Flickr

Social Media is transforming the way we communicate with one another. I’m living proof of this. How? I moved from Phoenix, Arizona to Vancouver just over a week ago. Before social media, I would have spent, weeks, if not months and years trying to figure out who’s who and what’s what. It would have taken even longer to meet people and build friendships. Longer still to find opportunities to engage with the community. But—thanks to Twitter—within my first week here, I’ve not only met some really cool people; I’ve already begun to get involved here and project change.

A Stranger in a Not-So Strange Land,

When I knew I would be moving to Vancouver, I started seeking out people on social media sites like Twitter and Facebook. I began finding out about what was going on in town and what events were upcoming. One of the first Vancouverites I met online was Rebecca Peel, who was looking for help spreading the word about the Projecting Change Film Festival. We emailed back and forth and before I knew it I was a member of the Projecting Change social media team.

This anecdote shows the true power underlying social media tools. If a guy from the desert can arrive in Vancouver and begin projecting change almost instantly, imagine what people like you who already have built a community here can do.

Social Media Club Vancouver is Here to Help

Yes, social media can feel daunting to some, and trivial to others, but with a basic understanding, social activists, advocates and change makers will find tools like Twitter and blogs can amplify our ability to project change.

This is why I’m so excited to be part of the team that is hosting the “Projecting Change with Social Media” workshop with Social Media Club Vancouver (SMCYVR).

SMCYVR is a proud community partner of the Projecting Change Film Festival. They will be kicking it off with a distinctively social twist on Tuesday May 17th at the HiVE Vancouver, a brand new innovation work space located at 128 W Hastings, Suite #210.

This Workshop Is Going to Rock!

Whether you are a complete newbie, or a season specialist. SMCYVR has brought together a stellar team of social media masters and mavens to help social change makers like yourself better share our work through social media channels. Throughout the evening you will get to choose from a variety of sessions focused on answering your social media questions and exploring powerful tools and techniques in new communications. Rather than the usual one way training sessions, these workshops will be highly interactive. Our goal is to give you tangible skills and knowledge that you can use immediately to project change in your community.

For just $20 dollars you will get access to specialists who usually charge several time more for their time and insights. Better yet, you will get a unique opportunity to engage and interact with them in an imtimate setting. All proceeds go to the 2011 Project Change Film Festival.

Learn from Vancouver’s Best

I’m particularly looking forward to meeting Kemp Edmonds. Kemp is an educator, strategist and speaker, who is not only the Vice President of Social Media Club Vancouver, but also the Program Coordinator at Hootsuite University If there is a better guy in Vancouver to talk about social media or teach you the ins and outs of the popular Twitter client, Hootsuite, I’m not sure who it could be.

Another speaker I’m interested in meting is Ajay Masala Puri. Ajay is an advocate for community empowerment. For the past ten years, he has been projecting change through volunteering, working and providing important research to improve the lives of many marginalized populations including at-risk youth, visible minorities, sex workers, and people suffering from mental health issues and addictions. Ajay will be leading an interactive workshop to help guide you in building your social movement, both online and off.

Other notable speakers include Monica Hamburg, Stephanie Michelle Scott of Wildfire Effect Consulting, Camille Jensen from Axiom News. You can find the entire schedule on the SMCYVR site.

Register Today! TICKETS

Due to the interactive nature of the sessions, there will be very limited seating, so get your ticket now!

Details

Date: Tuesday May 17
Time: 6:30pm – 8:00pm
Location: The HiVE Vancouver
Address: 128 W Hastings, Suite #210
Tickets: $20, All proceeds to Projecting Change Film Festival 2011. Purchase HERE.

—Yuri @yuriartibise

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