1 / 10

Mission Create excellent mobility choices and vibrant, healthy neighborhoods

WalkSanDiego, created 1998 Move San Diego, created 2004 Merged 2014 12 Staff 18 Board Members $1,040,000 Annual Budget. Mission Create excellent mobility choices and vibrant, healthy neighborhoods. Board of Directors. Staff. Executive Director Deputy Executive Director Office Administrator

gaerwn
Download Presentation

Mission Create excellent mobility choices and vibrant, healthy neighborhoods

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. WalkSanDiego, created 1998Move San Diego, created 2004Merged 201412 Staff18 Board Members$1,040,000 Annual Budget

  2. MissionCreate excellent mobility choices and vibrant, healthy neighborhoods

  3. Board of Directors

  4. Staff • Executive Director • Deputy Executive Director • Office Administrator • Programs Manager • Policy Manager • Community Health Initiatives Manager • Project Coordinator (2) • Project Assistant • Policy Assistant • Community Engagement Coordinator (2)

  5. Programs & Activities • Projects in 13 San Diego County Cities • Safe Routes to School – 34 schools/30,000 students • Regional Transportation Planning • Community Based Transportation Planning • Public Outreach & Engagement • Land Use (Smart Growth, TOD, Infrastructure) • Complete Streets Policy & Planning • MOVE Alliance • Public Health (HIAs, Health Elements)

  6. The Individual – People First Freedom to Choose - Communities should be designed to make the healthy and environmentally responsible choice the easy choice. Equity - Decision-makers should focus on the well-being of all people who may be impacted directly or indirectly by a transportation or land use decision. Civic Engagement - Residents and employers should be educated and empowered to make informed planning decisions. Economy - Public investments should support increased prosperity and quality of place for all citizens. Guiding Principles

  7. The Community – Neighborhoods Worth Caring About Freedom to Choose - Neighborhood and community plans should lead to more complete neighborhoods served by attractive, complete streets and a choice of transportation modes. Equity - Marginalized communities disproportionately impacted by poor transportation choices should be prioritized for infrastructure improvements that enhance access while preserving affordability. Opportunity- Since transit-oriented, multi-family housing is likely to be the dominant growth form in the future, local governments should seize this opportunity to provide a diversity of housing, a mix of destinations, and excellent transportation options. Economy - New development should lead to local job creation and improving the safety of the community. Guiding Principles

  8. The Region – Think Locally, Plan Regionally Equity - Regional transportation projects should support local efforts to extend opportunity and healthy environments to people of all means, ages, and abilities. Freedom to Choose - The region’s transportation spending strategy should focus less on short-term congestion relief and more on providing long-term alternatives to driving. Fiscal Responsibility - Regional transportation decisions should account for all costs and benefits, acknowledge long-term consequences, and maximize return on investment. Health - Improving public health should be a pillar of all regional projects, policies, and programs. Environment - All regional initiatives should ensure progress toward a cleaner environment, preservation of open space, and lower greenhouse gas emissions. Guiding Principles

  9. Overarching Goals • Champion human-scale land use, transportation, and placemaking strategies in the San Diego region. • Connect neighborhoods and people with a multi-modal transportation network that is appealing, convenient, and safe. • Promote increased funding and policies that support active transportation and healthy, sustainable neighborhoods.

More Related