Phil von Hake Accepted into Transit Alliance
"Citizens' Academy" to Help Shape the Future
of Metro Denver around FasTracks!
January 17, 2007
Phil von Hake has been accepted into the Transit
Alliance "Citizens' Academy." Voter approval of the "FasTracks"
initiative in 2004 will help transform the Denver Metro Area into a
more transit-oriented and sustainable community. The Transit Alliance
was a major contributor to the FasTracks campaign, and this Citizen's
Academy will produce citizen activists who will work to create more
Transit Oriented Development (TOD).
A citizens academy for transit
By Susan Thornton
Denver Post Staff Columnist
January 17, 2007
-> http://www.denverpost.com/thornton/ci_5033212
The metro area is a "national laboratory" for transit.
That's the official word from the Transit Alliance, a nonprofit coalition
of 40 businesses, local governments and organizations. The coalition
was instrumental in helping to pass FasTracks in November 2004, raising
funds and organizing speakers, mailings and grassroots efforts to educate
voters about the 12-year, $4.7 billion plan to build 137 miles of transit
across the metro area.
Now, with both the southwest and southeast light rail lines carrying
record numbers of passengers, the alliance has turned its attention
to educating citizens about the remaining lines and how to turn the
75-plus transit stations and areas around them into "people-oriented
places."
According to Kathleen Osher, executive director of the alliance, people-oriented
places are locations where people feel safe, where there is food, shopping,
art and music, and where people want to just "come and hang out."
Such places occur, she says, when the "four Ds" - design,
density, diversity and distance - encourage a sense of belonging.
Osher adds, "We need to get people to understand the long-term
implications of the developments that will come around transit stations.
We need an army of people with educated, open minds" about transit-oriented
development.
To build that "army," the alliance is planning a Citizen
Academy, modeled after those used by police departments across the nation
to explain policing issues.
Up to 30 participants in the academy will meet one evening a week for
seven weeks. Each meeting will include a dinner, followed by speakers
representing the perspectives of land planners, business leaders, home
builders, Realtors and others. Discussions will span a wide range of
topics, from how transit stations and stops can be integrated into existing
neighborhoods to how the changing demographics of the metro area - increasing
numbers of older people, and immigrants, who are used to using public
transit - are fueling the desire for more transportation choices. Participants
will focus on what great people-oriented places look and feel like,
and how residents of the metro area can positively affect the change
that is coming so quickly.
FasTracks is due to be completed within 10 years, Osher points out.
"Environmental studies are underway and major decisions are being
made right now," she says. "We want people to explore how
we can make the most of this opportunity."
Graduates of the Citizen Academy are expected to become active participants
in planning for multimodal transportation options. Osher says that change
of the scope that is coming with the build-out of FasTracks is "always
affected by emotion," so additional topics of the academy will
include active listening and conflict-management skills.
In addition, the debate about transit is often complicated by a "battle
of semantics," Osher states. As a result, participants will also
learn a "common language" about transit, such as the meaning
of "transit-oriented development" and "density."
What is dense to someone living in rural Colorado is likely very different
from what density is to someone living on Capitol Hill, for example.
Participants in the academy will form teams based on common interests.
They will be expected to complete homework assignments and develop action
plans specific to a transit station in their neighborhood or to metro-wide
goals, such as making pedestrian and bicycle access a priority at all
transit stops. Eventually, Osher expects that they will become part
of an "alumni network," participating in planning for individual
corridors, helping to educate others, and nominating interested community
members for future academies.
As difficult as the FasTracks election campaign was, it may have been
the easy part. The sheer magnitude of building out so many stations
and stops requires input from residents who are educated about the complex
issues involved. In Madison and Seattle, where planning for transit
is also underway, community leaders are struggling to engage people
in the process. With its Citizen Academy, Transit Alliance is taking
important steps to ensure that is not the case here.
Nominations are now being accepted for participants in the first Transit
Alliance Citizen Academy, which will begin Feb. 28. For more information,
go to www.TransitAlliance.org or call Osher at 720-596-9962.
Susan Thornton (smthornton@ aol.com) served 16 years on the Littleton
City Council, including eight years as mayor. She writes on suburban
issues on alternate Thursdays.