All, 

Thank you to those of you at the Ped Safety meeting this week for your time and attention to this important topic of Open Streets. I've taken the recommendation to pursue this topic with the upcoming Traffic Commission meeting as well, and believe we're confirmed for the upcoming Sept 10 NCC meeting. I do not believe we have a confirmed time with the Health & Wellness Commission. I'm including the slides from our discussion attached as a PDF and also here is the live link:

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1IEk1gya6641fLwL_7zM7F2SZg2alYJEESidpNI3MeZY/

And the links to the example videos providing an overview of open streets style of events shared previously:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0MSsAG8DOzs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQyPS1Epzqw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZa8KJkIsFk

As follow up items and enhancements to the slidedeck which should be incorporated for those upcoming discussions, I'm taking some constructive feedback from Bill, Penny, and others from the Ped Safety meeting and will work on:

Sundays after church services and non-game Saturdays are the most appealing time frames, by most accounts of feedback. I'll also be working on some route proposals with visual aides to facilitate conversation.

I have arranged a meeting with Penny Lane to do a walking tour around Evansdale neighborhood tomorrow and I have an outstanding request for a similar discussion with Rachel Fetty perhaps next week in First Ward as our schedules align. Temporary place making and points of interest were also discussed in this meeting, and one potential venue suggested was Krepps Park as a potential anchor to Open Streets in Suncrest. These, along with the NCC meeting next month should be great stepping stones for continuing to build a broader coalition of partners.

As noted in the slides attached, I do wish to speak more with Jenny Selin and Ella Belling about potential opportunities to organize something near-term for Sept 21 PARKing day. This would be an aggressive turn around but I believe it may be doable with rail trail access points or possibly local road closures vs. processing permits, state road closures, requests for police time, and so on. 

If there are other high level items those who attended feel were missed, please reach out.  I'd also like to plan for a regular stand alone public meeting for anyone interested in joining to collaborate with planning, so watch for an open invitation for that soon. 

Thank you for your time and support.

Sincerely,
Jesse





On Wed, Aug 1, 2018 at 3:43 PM, Jesse Heady <jesse@heady.name> wrote:
Agreed! I called earlier today and spoke with Carol re getting this on the agenda with Paul Brake and the NCC. I owe her an email summarizing this and will send that out before COB today. Thanks all and I look forward to speaking with you all more Aug 13 and Sept 10 if not sooner.

Jesse

On Wed, Aug 1, 2018 at 3:27 PM Stanley Cohen <Stanley.Cohen@mail.wvu.edu> wrote:
I agree and look toward the discussion.

Make it a great day!
Stan Cohen
304-685-4671

On Aug 1, 2018, at 2:54 PM, Bill Kawecki <wm_a_kawecki@comcast.net> wrote:

This would be a good topic to discuss at the Neighborhood Coordinating Council meeting, at City Hall the next meeting is Monday, September 10. We will be able to involve all of the neighborhood associations in the conversation.

On July 30, 2018 at 9:43 AM Jesse Heady <jesse@heady.name> wrote:

Matthew,

Thank you for your reply and support. In the many discussions I've had with different groups and leaders about this topic, the DOH control of city streets seems always to come up as a concern. We're aware of that one in particular and sensitive to permits only being granted for 2-3 hour spans for state controlled streets and roads. I believe it's feasible to accommodate routes that are managed by the city and extend timeframes for an event well beyond a 2-3 hour window. 

Additionally, the Atlanta Streets Alive events that I referenced is a good example of community unity where different neighborhoods host the event in rotation. In other words, we might approach the neighborhood associations of neighborhoods adjacent to downtown to hold events on their streets and would likely have less restrictions than with the DOH example for downtown streets. That said, I am volunteering myself to be work with DOH to establish routes that would take over state controlled streets. 

If there is an upcoming Pedestrian Safety board meeting we could use 15 mins to discuss this with the board and public, that would be wonderful. I've also received a similar invitation by the Health and Wellness Commission on Aug 13 which I plan to attend and present.

Ella,

Thank you! I love this idea as anchors for a route. I'm compiling some notes and responses today around the overall open streets proposal, and would like to reach out for more details if you have time. We may be able to combine this with similar feedback received for specific pedestrian route proposals that are being drafted. 


Sincerely,

Jesse

(404) 314-9787




On Mon, Jul 30, 2018 at 9:25 AM, Ella Belling <ella@montrails.org> wrote:
I will just throw out a possible date and event-

International PARK(ing) Day

When:September 21, 2018
Location:worldwide
Around the globe, people are celebrating the international PARK(ing) Day, an initiative to promote re-thinking of public space. It always takes place the 3rd friday of september. The idea is to transform parking lots into parks, playgrounds, BBQ parties, gardens...Grey parking places are beeing transformed into a liveable and creative space. 



Ella Belling
Executive Director
Mon River Trails Conservancy
P.O. Box 282
Morgantown, WV 26507
http://montrails.org
304-692-6782

On Jul 30, 2018, at 1:56 AM, matthew < crossnyc@hotmail.com> wrote:

Greetings, Matthew Cross of the Morgantown Pedestrian Safety Board here.  Thank you Jesse for volunteering towards this effort.  With attempts in the past the biggest hurdle is WVDOH control of the primary downtown streets.  They have been reluctant to close off vehicular traffic.  But we can come up with another attempt or different plans entirely as we have some great creative minds to work with.  I have a flexible schedule so just let me know of any meeting plans.  The Ped Board could also host you at one of our meetings to get things started.

Hello,

I’ve recently met with the Morgantown Bicycle Board at their July 12 meeting regarding promotion and advocacy for Open Streets style of events in and around the Morgantown area. We had a very positive discussion about the potential we have in Morgantown for recurring events focused on bicycle and other pedestrian traffic in downtown and surrounding neighborhood   streets. We also covered a number of previous discussions and individuals who have been instrumental to bringing this topic up in the past and understand this is not a new concept, and would like to work together to build a broader coalition.

I've been collaborating with Jonathan Rosenbaum of Positive Spin in the interim and your name or your group has come up as a potential partner and advocate for a broader coalition in the Morgantown area. We need your help to build support and organize a formal working group to bring an Open Streets event series to Morgantown and surrounding neighborhoods.
 

We have a very vibrant, strong, and growing community in Morgantown. Open street style events have the potential be great attractions for local and regional participants of every age group and interest for all pedestrian traffic on open streets. They also reinforce other working group efforts to bring unity between communities through arts, small business, and community collaboration while highlighting individual neighborhoods and commerce downtown. 

These points are the focus for discussion with you and/or your group at your next regular meeting, or a time where we can all meet to discuss as a group:

 
  • Develop a plan for community-based, organized and executed bicycle and foot traffic public events mirroring larger city events like Atlanta Streets Alive and Open Streets Pittsburgh to include:
    • Daytime, multi-part community rotating street festival that encourages pedestrian foot traffic, bicycling, and skating with vendors and businesses on city streets and neighborhoods
    • Evening time pedestrian course with emphasis on community interaction, connection of neighborhoods, artistic expression and movement, and light-based decoration of bicycles and other creative lanterns or devices -- rail trail is an obvious and non-intrusive option
    • Examples of inspiration:   Atlanta Streets Alive,   Atlanta Moon Ride, and   OpenStreetsPGH
    • Project framework:  Open Streets Project 
  • Develop strategies to over come challenges in permitting/budget and other area, align to existing events and working groups, sponsorships through leading entities in our region, promotion and advocacy partnerships, and understand how and what is possible to achieve these events on a regular cadence
In the examples linked above, these types of events are proven to draw crowds and attention, and bring interconnected communities closer together. Now is the time for Morgantown to adopt more of these events, to compliment and expand upon the success of events such as Kids Day downtown. Events like these also reinforce the positive message of being green through cycling, reinforcing pedestrian traffic in high volume vehicle areas, and highlight the need for pedestrian safety in a positive and interactive setting. This last point is especially important given deadly accidents involving pedestrians in the last couple of years in Morgantown. 

We are working to carry the same message to other board meeting(s), groups, and leaders to solicit a broader coalition of stakeholders. I'm offering my time as a volunteer citizen interested in reinforcing positive and deliberate progress for this and other initiatives in Morgantown through organization, advocacy, writing, web development, and any other way I can be of service. I hope we can count on your own passion and advocacy to join our initiative to make this vision a reality for Morgantown.

I also ask that you please freely share this message with your colleagues as we work to further expand education, understanding, and support for this initiative. There may be individuals or groups that were missed in this initial phase of communication; this was not intentional and we want to ensure every group who wants to contribute, or who may be an invaluable partner, to know they are welcome and encouraged to participate.

Thank you! I very much appreciate your time and attention to these items in this unsolicited and lengthy email, and I very much look forward to your feedback, and meeting with you to organize and bring this shared vision to a reality. Our next steps are scheduling time to meet and discuss the items above in more detail. Thank you in advance for your reply with your availability to meet.


Sincerely,

Jesse Heady

(404) 314-9787