: South Burlington City Council - Transportation Public Meeting
Download: H.264/AAC mp4 file
Agenda Items
- Open to the public for items not related to the agenda - 0:00
- Welcome, Introduction, and Meeting Objectives - Sandra Dooley, City Council Chair and Meeting Moderator - 0:38
- The Studies - Historical and Current Planning Activities - Presentation by Christine Forde, CCMPO - 3:47
- The Transportation - Land Use Connection - Presentation by Brian Shupe, Vermont Natural Resources Council & Michael Oman, Oman Analytics on the relationship between land use patterns and major infrastructure projects - 18:38
- What Is Transportation Modeling and How Does It Work- -Presentation by David Roberts on the CCMPO’s regional transportation modeling program - 49:15
- Community Land Use Objectives and Interstate Interchange Options - Presentation by Paul Conner & MPO Staff on options: Exit 12B, Exit 13, Exit 14N, Others - 64:24
- Questions and Discussion - City Council, Planning Commission, Public in Attendance - 72:39
- Next Steps: Timeframe, Activities, and Public Engagement Opportunities - Consideration of Transportation Network Needs Analysis & Discussion and Action by City Council - 130:59
Tell us about your experience with this online video, click here.
Description
The South Burlington City Council is made up of 5 citizens who live in the City of South Burlington, elected at-large by the voters of the City. These five councilors sit with 2-3 year terms expiring in an annual rotation. The City Council meets regularly on the 1st & 3rd Mondays of each month to conduct business of the City and carry out the provisions of the City Charter. Special or emergency meetings can be called in the event that an urgent need arises for City Council authorization. Normally, City Council meetings are held at City Hall in the conference room and begin at 7pm.
Featured Story
CCTV Receives NEH Grant to Support Community Archives
CCTV Center for Media & Democracy is pleased to announce receipt of a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Humanities Collections and Reference Resources grant alongside 32 peer archival institutions across the country. This $49,927 grant award will support efforts to preserve and expand access to audio/visual community history materials in the CCTV Archives. Read more about this opportunity here!