Heated sidewalks? Residents chime in on how to make Saskatoon more winter friendly - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 09:20 PM | Calgary | -16.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatoon

Heated sidewalks? Residents chime in on how to make Saskatoon more winter friendly

Heated sidewalks, winterized washrooms, lighting for nighttime cross-country skiing: people have plenty of ideas on how to make Saskatoon a better place to live during the winter season.

Winterized washrooms, lighting for nighttime cross-country skiing among ideas shared in survey

Residents in Saskatoon cited heated sidewalks as one way to make the city more winter friendly. (Hridaynath Bhattacharjee/Submitted to CBC)

Heated sidewalks, winterized washrooms, lighting for nighttime cross-country skiing: people have plenty of ideas on how to make Saskatoon a better place to live during the winter season.

The City of Saskatoon is sharing the results of recent surveys that asked people how the city could beat its reputation as a primarily summer-focused city.

In addition to hosting nine roundtable sessions with 48 community organizations, the city also received 531 online responses during itsWinterCityYXEreach-out.

"Given that it's an open-ended survey, not just a checkbox thing, that's pretty darned good engagement from our community," said Brenda Wallace, the city's director of environmental and corporate initiatives.

Some of the other ideas floated include:

  • Creating walkable spaces for pedestrians that are shielded from the wind.
  • Allowing seasonal businesses along the Meewasin Trail.
  • Providing more indoor parking lots.
  • Holding smaller events and festivalsin neighbourhoods.

Public information session

The city will share the full results of the survey Thursday at a public information session at the Legion Hall at 606 Spadina Cres. W.starting at 8 a.m.

Wallace said the city wants to know which of these ideas people feel most passionateabout.

"We need to spend some time deciding as a community what we actually want to do and what are the priorities," she said.

Asked if the recent financial pressures caused by the 2017-2018 provincial budget could put a damper on any of these initiatives, Wallace responded:"I would say the strategy has largely been about what we can leverage, what we can co-create with the communityand where is there community energy, so that if we band our community together we can make oneplus oneequal three."