lemongrab
Active Member
Sorry for spamming this thread, but there is some interesting stuff about the engagement process through to the 'What we Heard' report.
I believe City Council just had a motion about concerns around the engagement process. This situation is a great example. Here is the high-level summary:
This is just a bald-faced misrepresentation of the engagement, though I can see where they tried to have a little wiggle room with the text I bolded.
I did a CTL+F for 'interchange' in the verbatim comments. There were 26 comments supporting an interchange. And 52 comments explicitly against! (also another ~25 comments where support/non-support wasn't totally clear, but I inferred that more were leaning against than for).
Subjectively, a lot of the supportive comments were very brief (655 words total), whereas the rejecting comments were generally more thoughtful and showed their work (1926 words) - but of course I acknowledge my bias here. I've got them all copied into a spreadsheet; perhaps I'll find a way to share it if anyone is interested.
Now obviously engagement has its limitations, but it is insulting to see feedback so blatantly ignored and misrepresented.
I believe City Council just had a motion about concerns around the engagement process. This situation is a great example. Here is the high-level summary:
"Support for an interchange or other infrastructure
changes to improve traffic flow and safety in the
study area."
This is just a bald-faced misrepresentation of the engagement, though I can see where they tried to have a little wiggle room with the text I bolded.
I did a CTL+F for 'interchange' in the verbatim comments. There were 26 comments supporting an interchange. And 52 comments explicitly against! (also another ~25 comments where support/non-support wasn't totally clear, but I inferred that more were leaning against than for).
Subjectively, a lot of the supportive comments were very brief (655 words total), whereas the rejecting comments were generally more thoughtful and showed their work (1926 words) - but of course I acknowledge my bias here. I've got them all copied into a spreadsheet; perhaps I'll find a way to share it if anyone is interested.
Now obviously engagement has its limitations, but it is insulting to see feedback so blatantly ignored and misrepresented.