City of Kamloops - Transportation Department, Community Development and Planning Department
Implemented 1999
In response to rapid population growth and cost concerns about developing additional road capacity, the City of Kamloops launched an integrated land use and transportation planning program called TravelSmart.
Using computer modeling, TravelSmart evaluated different growth scenarios to identify a preferred land use scenario that minimized demands on the municipal transportation system to ensure its most efficient evolution.
The preferred land use scenario identified by TravelSmart was adopted in 1999 as a component of Kamloops' Official Community Plan.
Since its implementation, TravelSmart has helped improve local air quality, reduce transportation-related energy consumption and reduce planned future capital transportation expenditures from $120 million to $14 million.
TravelSmart received both an FCM-CH2M Hill Sustainable Community Award in 2000 and an Award for Innovation from the International City Managers Association in 2001.
Budget: $245,000. Funded through City general revenue, development cost charges funds and contributions from specific developers.
Jen Hay, P. Eng., Environmental Services Supervisor
City of Kamloops
Telephone: (250) 828-3697
E-mail: jhay@kamloops.ca
Kamloops is a fast growing city of 85,000 in British Columbia's southern interior and a major regional centre. With a relatively diversified service and resource economy and a high quality of life, the city has experienced significant growth over the past ten years.
Over the next 20 years, Kamloops is expected to grow by 35% to 120,000 people, placing considerable and possibly unbearable strains on the existing road network. To maintain quality of life and long-term community mobility, Kamloops embarked upon a unique planning exercise in 1997 called TravelSmart.
TravelSmart provided clear direction for updating land use planning policies in Kamplan, the city's Official Community Plan, and is included as a section of the Kamplan document.
Its inclusion in Kamplan is considered one of the TravelSmart's key strengths and has helped ensure that transportation/land use integration remains a vital component of Kamloops' long-term strategic vision.
"Because TravelSmart is part of the OCP, it's part of the city's overall guiding policy," says Marni Gillis, the city's Environmental Management Coordinator. "Even though the people might change at City Hall, the overall strategic vision - integrating land use and transportation - remains the same and illustrates the sustainability of the program itself."
Kamloops' growth has placed considerable demands upon its transportation system and has been responsible for an increase in transportation-related air pollution and the loss of agricultural and open space areas to urban development, including the construction of transportation facilities.
Unlike past transportation planning exercises that responded to growth by identifying new road and other capital facility requirements, TravelSmart integrates land use and transportation system planning to accommodate population growth and new development while maintaining community mobility and quality of life.
By blending and balancing transportation supply and demand management, TravelSmart directs growth to optimize use of existing transportation facilities as well as to make the most efficient use of any additional facilities that may be required in the future. The approach accommodates the realities of reduced municipal budgets and actively promotes more sustainable community design.
The first objective of TravelSmart was to:
Other objectives or planning principles were also developed with public input. They included:
TravelSmart was officially adopted by the City in 1999 as one component of Kamloops' revised Official Community Plan (OCP), Kamplan. It includes the following key components and initiatives:
The first step in the TravelSmart plan was the development of two land use scenarios to be evaluated for their transportation and urban development implications, including the cost of any capital improvements and facilities each would require. The models were developed using Module 5 software and used the most recently available land use data and transportation behaviour information (1995 baseline).
The two scenarios developed were:
In developing the two growth scenarios, community input on personal mobility was collected through public process that also determined the levels of acceptance for travel delay amongst residents, public concerns and ideas for neighbourhood design and transit system options, and suggestions for modifying transportation behaviour.
Evolution of the preferred land use growth scenario
Following public review and input from a special project Steering Committee, the two scenarios were evaluated using the following criteria:
During the evaluation process, the Alternative Land Use Scenario quickly emerged as the superior scenario and was selected as the Preferred Land Use Scenario that became the basis for the development of final TravelSmart policies, programs and recommendations.
TravelSmart reduced projected future road network improvements from $120 million to $14 million. The projected reductions were accomplished without reaching unacceptable mobility levels.
Other forecast results of TravelSmart (forecast through traffic count, transit usage and vehicle kilometres traveled modeling) include:
Although these results have yet to be more formally quantified, Kamloops will be monitoring quantifiable results more closely in the future, particularly with an update planned for this year.
"This time round we'll be looking more closely at a wider range of measurable results and outcomes," she says, adding, "We want to know exactly how successful we are with the update."
Other developments attributable to TravelSmart include the implementation and initiation of the following transportation demand management-related programs and developments:
Proposed improvements — 1991 Transportation Plan
Proposed improvements - 1999 TravelSmart Plan
A wide range of community stakeholders and agencies participated in the development of the TravelSmart program, including:
The total budget for TravelSmart's development and implementation was $245,000 funded through:
The province also funded $55,000 through the BC Transportation Financing Authority and federal infrastructure funds. Additional network improvements have been funded through City general revenue, development cost charges, BC Transit and the Ministry of Transportation and Highways.
The success of TravelSmart has illustrated the importance of several key factors in developing more sustainable urban transportation options, including:
Dave Dean, the now-retired City Transportation Manager responsible for bringing TravelSmart to fruition, believes that it can serve as an example for other communities in Canada.
"There are many approaches to managing a community's transportation system, but TravelSmart demonstrates that blending both the transportation supply and demand approaches in a balanced way will help ensure the most efficient evolution of a city's transportation system," says Mr. Dean. "The approach holds tremendous potential for communities in Canada and internationally."
Despite TravelSmart's successes, there is some concern that its policies have yet to be played out effectively at an operational or day-to-day level. "To be truly successful, TravelSmart requires a little more attention and a little bit of tweaking," says Gillis.
"Although we are working towards fuller and better implementation of the plan, we still need to do a better putting the principles on the ground and incorporating them as part of regular, every day operations so that they get the constant attention they need."
In order to help "bring down" more of the TravelSmart principles and objectives to an operational level, an Environmental Management Strategy and an Asset Management System are proposed to be developed for Kamloops Transportation Department over the next two years.
"We know that our day-to-day decision making needs to be more sustainable," says Gillis, "and we're hoping that these initiatives will really help build our commitment to TravelSmart and help with succession planning - we don't want the ideas behind TravelSmart to stay locked up at the OCP level only."
In addition to Environmental Management Strategy and Asset Management System initiatives, some of the specific program areas being targeted for update include bicycle and pedestrian facilities and an expansion of Kamloops' trip reduction programs.
Images are courtesy the City of Kamloops
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