BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//ITE Canada - ECPv6.16.1//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-WR-CALNAME:ITE Canada
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.itecanada.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for ITE Canada
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Toronto
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20230312T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20231105T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20240310T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20241103T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20250309T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20251102T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20260308T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20261101T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20270314T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20271107T060000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Vancouver
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:20230312T100000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:20231105T090000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:20240310T100000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:20241103T090000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:20250309T100000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:20251102T090000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:20260308T100000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:20261101T090000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:20270314T100000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:20271107T090000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Edmonton
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0600
TZNAME:MDT
DTSTART:20230312T090000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0600
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:MST
DTSTART:20231105T080000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0600
TZNAME:MDT
DTSTART:20240310T090000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0600
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:MST
DTSTART:20241103T080000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0600
TZNAME:MDT
DTSTART:20250309T090000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0600
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:MST
DTSTART:20251102T080000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0600
TZNAME:MDT
DTSTART:20260308T090000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0600
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:MST
DTSTART:20261101T080000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260512T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260512T150000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20260407T140409Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260507T012335Z
UID:10000872-1778583600-1778598000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:[TRAINING] Engaging with Confidence: Essential Prep and Strategies for Successful Engagement
DESCRIPTION:Date:  Tuesday\, May 12\, 2026 \nTime:  11 AM – 3 PM Eastern Time / 8 AM – 12 PM Pacific Time \nLocation: Virtual \nThis session will qualify for 3.5 PDH credits for attendees. \nCommunity engagement can feel daunting. What if the public is not happy with your project? What if tough questions arise? Maybe you want to strengthen your public speaking or strategic thinking when facing a crowd\, or simply refresh your knowledge of best practices. If those goals resonate\, then this training is for you. \nDuring this training\, we will focus on best practices for preparing and presenting at community meetings\, tailored for transportation professionals at all levels and all sectors. By the end of the programme\, participants will have developed or reﬁned practical skills to effectively prepare and communicate transportation related materials with the public. \nThe session will guide attendees through structured exercises that promote collaboration and problem-solving in facilitated group discussions. Participants will work together to strengthen their skills in preparing for public engagements and navigate challenging discussions with confidence. \nIf you attend this training\, you can expect to learn about: \n\nHow to prepare for engagement and best approach public speaking\nHow to structure responses to questions from the public\nKey tips for navigating tough questions\nGroup exercises and sharing\n\n  \nLEARNING OUTCOMES\nAt the conclusion of the training programme\, attendees\, will leave having honed or developed their skills in order to: \n\nBuild confidence in public speaking and engagement\nLearn structured approaches to prepare for community engagements\nDevelop strategies for transportation experts to manage challenging questions about transportation projects and initiatives\nDiscuss best practices for engaging with the community as transportation experts\n\n  \nAUDIENCE\nThe sessions are designed to be inclusive for transportation professionals of all stages in their career\, as well as sectors of the industry. \nYoung Professionals \nThis session is designed to build critical skills and knowledge for effective communication and engagement with the public. It will foster an environment of learning through practical exercises that encourage critical thinking\, problem-solving\, and collaboration with industry peers. \nExperienced Professionals \nThis session is designed to hone communication skills and help build a practical toolkit for experienced professionals\, whether for their own work or to support the development of their team members. All materials will be created to be clear\, concise\, and easily transferable for use in other contexts. \n  \nFACILITATORS\nJocelyn Deeks\, MCIP\, RPP\nLead Trainer \nJocelyn Deeks is a Partner at Bousfields and founded the Community Engagement practice. Jocelyn is a Registered Professional Planner and brings decades of experience working at the intersection of urban and land-use planning\, development\, and community engagement in the public and private sectors. She has developed and executed stakeholder engagement strategies for some of the GTHA’s most complex and challenging projects. \nLewis Walker\nAssistant Trainer \nLewis has experience in community engagement within the private and non-profit sectors and is passionate about making city building processes accessible. He brings creative critical thinking and a commitment to excellence to all his work and projects. He develops effective and inclusive strategies across the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area\, working on complex projects ranging from large-scale institutional plans to site-specific developments. \n  \nREGISTRATION\nDeadline: Registration will close on Monday\, May 11\, 2026 at 12 noon ET \nNEW! Group Discount: Receive a 15% discount on 3 or more ITE Member ($275) and/or Non-Member ($400) registrations purchased in the same transaction. Discount will be automatically applied to the cart on the checkout/payment page if at least three eligible tickets are purchased together. \n\n\n\n\nCategory\nFee\nNotes\n\n\n\n\nITE Member*\n$275\nITE membership status must be valid at the time of registration with current dues paid. Eligible for 15% group discount.\n\n\nNon-Member\n$400\nAnyone who is not a current paid ITE member. Eligible for 15% group discount.\n\n\nITE Young Member*\n$200\nMust be an ITE Young Member (a non-student between the ages of 22 and 29) with current dues paid\n\n\nITE Student Member*\n$150\nMust be a current full-time post-secondary student and registered ITE member. ITE membership is free for full-time undergrad and graduate students. Become a Student ITE Member here.\n\n\n*ITE member number required to register for member rates. If you do not know your ITE member number\, you can retrieve it here on ite.org by clicking “Forgot Username”.\n\n\n\n\nMeeting Link: The virtual meeting join link will be emailed in your registration confirmation email.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/meet/24782672545649?p=j7RfAw6efMjzb8oPVa\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/training-engagement-may-2026/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Training,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Training-Engagement-May-2026.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada Training Committee":MAILTO:training@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/24782672545649?p=j7RfAw6efMjzb8oPVa">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Date:  Tuesday\, May 12\, 2026 \nTime:  11 AM – 3 PM Eastern Time / 8 AM – 12 PM Pacific Time \nLocation: Virtual \nThis session will qualify for 3.5 PDH credits for attendees. \nCommunity engagement can feel daunting. What if the public is not happy with your project? What if tough questions arise? Maybe you want to strengthen your public speaking or strategic thinking when facing a crowd\, or simply refresh your knowledge of best practices. If those goals resonate\, then this training is for you. \nDuring this training\, we will focus on best practices for preparing and presenting at community meetings\, tailored for transportation professionals at all levels and all sectors. By the end of the programme\, participants will have developed or reﬁned practical skills to effectively prepare and communicate transportation related materials with the public. \nThe session will guide attendees through structured exercises that promote collaboration and problem-solving in facilitated group discussions. Participants will work together to strengthen their skills in preparing for public engagements and navigate challenging discussions with confidence. \nIf you attend this training\, you can expect to learn about: \n\nHow to prepare for engagement and best approach public speaking\nHow to structure responses to questions from the public\nKey tips for navigating tough questions\nGroup exercises and sharing\n\n  \nLEARNING OUTCOMES\nAt the conclusion of the training programme\, attendees\, will leave having honed or developed their skills in order to: \n\nBuild confidence in public speaking and engagement\nLearn structured approaches to prepare for community engagements\nDevelop strategies for transportation experts to manage challenging questions about transportation projects and initiatives\nDiscuss best practices for engaging with the community as transportation experts\n\n  \nAUDIENCE\nThe sessions are designed to be inclusive for transportation professionals of all stages in their career\, as well as sectors of the industry. \nYoung Professionals \nThis session is designed to build critical skills and knowledge for effective communication and engagement with the public. It will foster an environment of learning through practical exercises that encourage critical thinking\, problem-solving\, and collaboration with industry peers. \nExperienced Professionals \nThis session is designed to hone communication skills and help build a practical toolkit for experienced professionals\, whether for their own work or to support the development of their team members. All materials will be created to be clear\, concise\, and easily transferable for use in other contexts. \n  \nFACILITATORS\nJocelyn Deeks\, MCIP\, RPP\nLead Trainer \nJocelyn Deeks is a Partner at Bousfields and founded the Community Engagement practice. Jocelyn is a Registered Professional Planner and brings decades of experience working at the intersection of urban and land-use planning\, development\, and community engagement in the public and private sectors. She has developed and executed stakeholder engagement strategies for some of the GTHA’s most complex and challenging projects. \nLewis Walker\nAssistant Trainer \nLewis has experience in community engagement within the private and non-profit sectors and is passionate about making city building processes accessible. He brings creative critical thinking and a commitment to excellence to all his work and projects. He develops effective and inclusive strategies across the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area\, working on complex projects ranging from large-scale institutional plans to site-specific developments. \n  \nREGISTRATION\nDeadline: Registration will close on Monday\, May 11\, 2026 at 12 noon ET \nNEW! Group Discount: Receive a 15% discount on 3 or more ITE Member ($275) and/or Non-Member ($400) registrations purchased in the same transaction. Discount will be automatically applied to the cart on the checkout/payment page if at least three eligible tickets are purchased together. \n\n\n\n\nCategory\nFee\nNotes\n\n\n\n\nITE Member*\n$275\nITE membership status must be valid at the time of registration with current dues paid. Eligible for 15% group discount.\n\n\nNon-Member\n$400\nAnyone who is not a current paid ITE member. Eligible for 15% group discount.\n\n\nITE Young Member*\n$200\nMust be an ITE Young Member (a non-student between the ages of 22 and 29) with current dues paid\n\n\nITE Student Member*\n$150\nMust be a current full-time post-secondary student and registered ITE member. ITE membership is free for full-time undergrad and graduate students. Become a Student ITE Member here.\n\n\n*ITE member number required to register for member rates. If you do not know your ITE member number\, you can retrieve it here on ite.org by clicking “Forgot Username”.\n\n\n\n\nMeeting Link: The virtual meeting join link will be emailed in your registration confirmation email.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260430T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260430T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20260423T164916Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260423T164916Z
UID:10000878-1777550400-1777554000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE National Capital Section: Webinar - Area X.O
DESCRIPTION:Join us April 30th for a webinar on Area X.O presented by Pavlo Serhiienko and Susanne Cork. The webinar will consist of: \n\nIntroducing Area X.O\, including their origin\, mandate\, and core facilities and assets.\nHighlighting a selection of Area X.O’s flagship projects\, particularly their work with Transport Canada and other key partners.\nProviding a forward-looking view of how the program is evolving and expanding\n\nPavlo Serhiienko\, PhD\, is the Lead Engineer at Area X.O responsible for our Communications and Smart Mobility Program. In this capacity\, he leads the design\, integration\, and execution of advanced testing and validation programs for connected and autonomous systems\, smart mobility\, and emerging transportation technologies. With a PhD in engineering and deep expertise spanning sensor integration\, perception systems\, robotics\, and real-world testbed deployment\, Pavlo plays a central role in bridging complex technical innovation with practical\, scalable applications. He has led and supported numerous multi-partner projects\, including collaborations with Transport Canada and industry stakeholders\, focused on advancing road safety\, V2X communications\, and autonomous system performance in controlled and real-world environments. Pavlo is recognized for his ability to translate sophisticated engineering concepts into actionable insights\, enabling innovators\, regulators\, and industry partners to accelerate the safe deployment of next-generation mobility solutions. \nSusanne Cork is Strategic Markets Director at Invest Ottawa’s Area X.O\, where she leads strategy\, program development\, and delivery for the Ottawa Innovation Farm and Smart Mobility programs. Area X.O is Canada’s all-weather R&D complex supporting next-generation mobility\, advanced robotics\, agricultural\, and defence innovation. Susanne builds and leads strategic collaborations across industry\, government\, and academia to accelerate commercialization\, advance regulatory readiness\, and enable real-world testing across integrated test environments\, including the Greenbelt Research Farm\, the Killaloe site\, and the Drone and Advanced Robotics Test and Training (DARTT) Zone. She supports entrepreneurs and scale-ups through end-to-end innovation pathways—from simulation and engineering advisory to field trials\, validation\, and market adoption—while helping shape national programs that advance road safety\, sustainable agriculture\, and Canadian technology leadership. \nWe look forward to seeing you there!\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/meet/292517417122447?p=8m3wH10fWgwhzOu2RZ\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/national-capital-section-webinar-area-x-o-april-2026/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE National Capital Section":MAILTO:nationalcapital@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/292517417122447?p=8m3wH10fWgwhzOu2RZ">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Join us April 30th for a webinar on Area X.O presented by Pavlo Serhiienko and Susanne Cork. The webinar will consist of: \n\nIntroducing Area X.O\, including their origin\, mandate\, and core facilities and assets.\nHighlighting a selection of Area X.O’s flagship projects\, particularly their work with Transport Canada and other key partners.\nProviding a forward-looking view of how the program is evolving and expanding\n\nPavlo Serhiienko\, PhD\, is the Lead Engineer at Area X.O responsible for our Communications and Smart Mobility Program. In this capacity\, he leads the design\, integration\, and execution of advanced testing and validation programs for connected and autonomous systems\, smart mobility\, and emerging transportation technologies. With a PhD in engineering and deep expertise spanning sensor integration\, perception systems\, robotics\, and real-world testbed deployment\, Pavlo plays a central role in bridging complex technical innovation with practical\, scalable applications. He has led and supported numerous multi-partner projects\, including collaborations with Transport Canada and industry stakeholders\, focused on advancing road safety\, V2X communications\, and autonomous system performance in controlled and real-world environments. Pavlo is recognized for his ability to translate sophisticated engineering concepts into actionable insights\, enabling innovators\, regulators\, and industry partners to accelerate the safe deployment of next-generation mobility solutions. \nSusanne Cork is Strategic Markets Director at Invest Ottawa’s Area X.O\, where she leads strategy\, program development\, and delivery for the Ottawa Innovation Farm and Smart Mobility programs. Area X.O is Canada’s all-weather R&D complex supporting next-generation mobility\, advanced robotics\, agricultural\, and defence innovation. Susanne builds and leads strategic collaborations across industry\, government\, and academia to accelerate commercialization\, advance regulatory readiness\, and enable real-world testing across integrated test environments\, including the Greenbelt Research Farm\, the Killaloe site\, and the Drone and Advanced Robotics Test and Training (DARTT) Zone. She supports entrepreneurs and scale-ups through end-to-end innovation pathways—from simulation and engineering advisory to field trials\, validation\, and market adoption—while helping shape national programs that advance road safety\, sustainable agriculture\, and Canadian technology leadership. \nWe look forward to seeing you there!
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260430T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260430T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20260410T130653Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260410T131821Z
UID:10000873-1777550400-1777554000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Toronto: Webinar - Integrating Traffic Engineering and Human Factors for Safer Transportation Systems - April 2026
DESCRIPTION:Human error contributes to most road collisions\, making human factors a critical element in transportation safety. Modern frameworks like Safe System and Vision Zero focus on designing roads that anticipate driver behaviour and minimize collision severity. While traditional traffic engineering emphasizes geometric design and compliance\, it often overlooks driver perception\, cognitive workload\, and decision-making. This presentation will demonstrate how integrating Traffic Engineering and Human Factors expertise creates solutions that anticipate human behavior and reduce collision risk. Through case studies and applied research\, we will explore how behavioral insights combined with engineering expertise can enhance safety outcomes by identifying latent risks\, optimizing intersection design\, and implementing cost-effective countermeasures. \nDate: Thursday\, April 30\, 2026 \nTime: 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM ET \nLocation: Online\, link to be shared with registered attendees \nCost: Free \nTickets: Available until 12:00PM on April 30\, 2026 \nPDH Credits: 1 PDH \nSPEAKERS \nMehemed Delibasic\, M.Sc.\, P.Eng. – Vice President\, Transportation & Safety \nMehemed Delibasic\, M.Sc.\, P.Eng. is Vice President of the Transportation & Safety Group at 30 Forensic Engineering and a licensed Professional Engineer in multiple provinces across Canada. He brings more than 27 years of progressive experience across multimodal transportation planning\, detailed design\, construction support\, traffic operations\, and road safety engineering. Throughout his career\, Mehemed has contributed to a wide range of municipal\, regional\, and national transportation projects\, progressing from early stage planning studies through detailed engineering and construction\, and ultimately into independent safety evaluation and forensic engineering. This end to end project experience has fostered a practical\, systems based understanding of how planning\, design\, and operational decisions influence real world safety performance. Mehemed serves as a Road Safety Auditor\, leading Road Safety Audits for major infrastructure projects as well as municipal and regional road safety assignments. His work involves complex\, multi stage assessments of existing and proposed roadways\, intersections\, and active transportation facilities\, often under high risk and operationally demanding conditions. In parallel\, he undertakes traffic safety and road safety forensic assignments\, applying his design and operational background to the evaluation of safety performance\, collision risk\, and contributing factors. Mehemed is actively involved with key industry organizations\, including TAC\, ITE Canada\, and the Ontario Traffic Council (OTC)\, supporting the advancement of industry best practices. \nJason Kumagai\, M.Sc.\, CCPE\, CHFP – Practice Lead\, Human Factors \nJason Kumagai is Practice Lead of the Human Factors group at 30 Forensic Engineering. During his career in Human Factors\, Jason has conducted and managed projects and research in Human Factors in a wide range of industries including energy\, health care\, transportation\, defence\, and mining. Specializing in fatigue risk management\, he has helped companies develop and implement fatigue risk management programs\, including investigations of major accidents. Jason is a certified Human Factors/ Ergonomics professional in both Canada and the U.S. and is nationally recognized for his leadership in Human Factors and Fatigue Management. Jason has served as a regional president of the Association of Canadian Ergonomists\, and president of the Canadian College for the Certification of Professional Ergonomists.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/meet/281297991242601?p=0dEYRPTIVcmaRTOVaL\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-toronto-webinar-april-2026/
LOCATION:Toronto Area (Virtual)\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Presentation,Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Toronto Section":MAILTO:activities@toronto.itecanada.org
GEO:43.725103;-79.369138
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/281297991242601?p=0dEYRPTIVcmaRTOVaL">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Human error contributes to most road collisions\, making human factors a critical element in transportation safety. Modern frameworks like Safe System and Vision Zero focus on designing roads that anticipate driver behaviour and minimize collision severity. While traditional traffic engineering emphasizes geometric design and compliance\, it often overlooks driver perception\, cognitive workload\, and decision-making. This presentation will demonstrate how integrating Traffic Engineering and Human Factors expertise creates solutions that anticipate human behavior and reduce collision risk. Through case studies and applied research\, we will explore how behavioral insights combined with engineering expertise can enhance safety outcomes by identifying latent risks\, optimizing intersection design\, and implementing cost-effective countermeasures. \nDate: Thursday\, April 30\, 2026 \nTime: 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM ET \nLocation: Online\, link to be shared with registered attendees \nCost: Free \nTickets: Available until 12:00PM on April 30\, 2026 \nPDH Credits: 1 PDH \nSPEAKERS \nMehemed Delibasic\, M.Sc.\, P.Eng. – Vice President\, Transportation & Safety \nMehemed Delibasic\, M.Sc.\, P.Eng. is Vice President of the Transportation & Safety Group at 30 Forensic Engineering and a licensed Professional Engineer in multiple provinces across Canada. He brings more than 27 years of progressive experience across multimodal transportation planning\, detailed design\, construction support\, traffic operations\, and road safety engineering. Throughout his career\, Mehemed has contributed to a wide range of municipal\, regional\, and national transportation projects\, progressing from early stage planning studies through detailed engineering and construction\, and ultimately into independent safety evaluation and forensic engineering. This end to end project experience has fostered a practical\, systems based understanding of how planning\, design\, and operational decisions influence real world safety performance. Mehemed serves as a Road Safety Auditor\, leading Road Safety Audits for major infrastructure projects as well as municipal and regional road safety assignments. His work involves complex\, multi stage assessments of existing and proposed roadways\, intersections\, and active transportation facilities\, often under high risk and operationally demanding conditions. In parallel\, he undertakes traffic safety and road safety forensic assignments\, applying his design and operational background to the evaluation of safety performance\, collision risk\, and contributing factors. Mehemed is actively involved with key industry organizations\, including TAC\, ITE Canada\, and the Ontario Traffic Council (OTC)\, supporting the advancement of industry best practices. \nJason Kumagai\, M.Sc.\, CCPE\, CHFP – Practice Lead\, Human Factors \nJason Kumagai is Practice Lead of the Human Factors group at 30 Forensic Engineering. During his career in Human Factors\, Jason has conducted and managed projects and research in Human Factors in a wide range of industries including energy\, health care\, transportation\, defence\, and mining. Specializing in fatigue risk management\, he has helped companies develop and implement fatigue risk management programs\, including investigations of major accidents. Jason is a certified Human Factors/ Ergonomics professional in both Canada and the U.S. and is nationally recognized for his leadership in Human Factors and Fatigue Management. Jason has served as a regional president of the Association of Canadian Ergonomists\, and president of the Canadian College for the Certification of Professional Ergonomists.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20260430T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20260430T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20260406T144603Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T133516Z
UID:10000851-1777550400-1777554000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Greater Vancouver and ITE BC Interior: Virtual Seminar - Kelowna Safe Mobility Action Plan – April 2026
DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver and ITE BC Interior are pleased to have the City of Kelowna\, Urban Systems\, and TranSafe Consulting present their work on the Kelowna Safe Mobility Action Plan at 12:00 pm PST\, April 30th\, 2026. The virtual seminar will be free and online. \nThe Safe Mobility Action Plan takes a strong\, evidence-based approach to eliminating serious injuries and fatalities\, combining collision data analysis\, community input\, and partnerships with health\, enforcement\, and education agencies. The Plan focuses on creating safe intersections and protecting vulnerable road users.\nBuilding on a strong foundation of existing City programs and policies that promote safer streets\, the Safe Mobility Action Plan is a comprehensive approach to road safety\, demonstrates the City’s long-standing commitment to creating a safer\, more livable community\, and sets the City in a direction to succeed in achieving Vision Zero. \nDate: April 30\, 2026 \nTime: 12:00 PM PST \nLocation: Virtual\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/meet/2687078710753?p=WX0Ry6ULMRchxmgtjy\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-greater-vancouver-virtual-seminar-april-2026/
LOCATION:Greater Vancouver (Virtual)\, Vancouver\, BC\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Greater Vancouver":MAILTO:vancouver@itecanada.org
GEO:49.282803889907;-123.12768196781
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/2687078710753?p=WX0Ry6ULMRchxmgtjy">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver and ITE BC Interior are pleased to have the City of Kelowna\, Urban Systems\, and TranSafe Consulting present their work on the Kelowna Safe Mobility Action Plan at 12:00 pm PST\, April 30th\, 2026. The virtual seminar will be free and online. \nThe Safe Mobility Action Plan takes a strong\, evidence-based approach to eliminating serious injuries and fatalities\, combining collision data analysis\, community input\, and partnerships with health\, enforcement\, and education agencies. The Plan focuses on creating safe intersections and protecting vulnerable road users.\nBuilding on a strong foundation of existing City programs and policies that promote safer streets\, the Safe Mobility Action Plan is a comprehensive approach to road safety\, demonstrates the City’s long-standing commitment to creating a safer\, more livable community\, and sets the City in a direction to succeed in achieving Vision Zero. \nDate: April 30\, 2026 \nTime: 12:00 PM PST \nLocation: Virtual
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260416T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260416T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20260402T175147Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260402T195258Z
UID:10000868-1776340800-1776344400@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Canada Executive Committee Town Hall 2026: Roles & Responsibilities of the Executive
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a virtual town hall on April 16\, 2026\, at 12:00 PM (Noon) Eastern Time to learn more about serving on the ITE Canada Executive Committee. This event will feature current Executive Committee members who will share their experiences and answer your questions about their roles and positions\, including the responsibilities\, time commitments and\, most of all\, the benefits of serving! \nWhether you are considering running for a position or just curious about the committee’s work\, this town hall is the perfect opportunity to gain insights and perspectives from those who have been in the role. \nLearn more in the Call for Nominations open here for the Secretary position.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/meet/26110395341976?p=pNP5T5pj25jIgxUx3m\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/executive-committee-town-hall-2026/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Panel,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Exec-2026-Town-Hall_web.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada":MAILTO:admin@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/26110395341976?p=pNP5T5pj25jIgxUx3m">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Join us for a virtual town hall on April 16\, 2026\, at 12:00 PM (Noon) Eastern Time to learn more about serving on the ITE Canada Executive Committee. This event will feature current Executive Committee members who will share their experiences and answer your questions about their roles and positions\, including the responsibilities\, time commitments and\, most of all\, the benefits of serving! \nWhether you are considering running for a position or just curious about the committee’s work\, this town hall is the perfect opportunity to gain insights and perspectives from those who have been in the role. \nLearn more in the Call for Nominations open here for the Secretary position.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260319T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260319T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20260227T164742Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260304T150346Z
UID:10000857-1773921600-1773925200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Section du Québec/Quebec Section - Webinaire/Webinar [VIRTUAL]- Aménagement d'arrêts d’autobus en bordure de voies cyclables - March 2026
DESCRIPTION:Participez à ce webinaire organisé par la section du Québec de l’ITE Canada sur “Aménagement d’arrêts d’autobus en bordure de voies cyclables”. \nCe webinaire est gratuit pour les membres et non-membres d’ITE Canada\, mais l’inscription est obligatoire. \nCe webinaire présentera les dernières évolutions en matière de conception d’arrêts d’autobus en bordure de voies cyclables (arrêts en îlot)\, en particulier les critères d’aménagement développés par la Ville de Montréal. \nDATE:  Jeudi\, 19 Mars 2026 \nTEMPS:  12:00 – 13:00pm EST \nDate limite d’inscription: 18 Mars 2026\, 23:30pm \n==Please note this webinar will be held in French. For similar content in English\, please refer to the webinar details jointly presented by ITE Canada and CARSP in September 2025.== \n  \nPrésentateur: Bartek Komorowski\, Conseiller en aménagement – Chef d’équipe – Ville de Montréal \nBartek Komorowski est urbaniste de formation et œuvre dans le domaine de la mobilité active depuis 19 ans. Il travaille au Service de l’urbanisme et de la mobilité de la Ville de Montréal en tant que Chef de l’équipe dans la Division des stratégies de mobilité durable. Son équipe est responsable du développement des pratiques d’aménagement de rue\, ce qui comprend la rédaction de lignes directrices\, le soutien à la conception et l’évaluation d’aménagements novateurs. Avant d’avoir rejoint la Ville\, Bartek a travaillé pendant 7 ans en tant que Chargé de projets au service-conseil de Vélo Québec. Il est coauteur du guide technique Aménager pour les piétons et les cyclistes\, publié en 2020. Bartek est membre du conseil d’administration de la Winter Cycling Federation\, qui organise un congrès annuel sur les pratiques hivernales du vélo ainsi que membre du Comité intégré des transports actifs de l’Association des transports du Canada. \nBartek Komorowski is an urban planner by training and has worked in the field of active mobility for 19 years. He holds degrees in Cognitive Science (B.Sc.) and Urban Planning (M.U.P.) from McGill University. Bartek is currently a team leader at the City of Montreal Urban Planning and Mobility Department. His team is responsible for developing and disseminating street design guidelines that embody the City’s policies with respect to sustainable mobility\, road safety\, universal accessibility\, and climate change adaptation. Previously\, he spent 7 years as a Project Leader in the research and consulting department at Vélo Québec\, Canada’s largest cycling advocacy organization. He is a coauthor of Vélo Québec’s 2020 design manual\, Aménager pour les piétons et les cyclistes (Planning and Designing for Pedestrians and Cyclists). Bartek is a member of the Active Transportation Integrated Committee (ATIC) of the Transportation Association of Canada (TAC) and a board member of the Winter Cycling Federation (WCF)\, which organizes the international Winter Cycling Congress.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/meet/32892166803449?p=WYXb7g6OunVDf01rB6\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-quebec-section-webinar-amenagement-darrets-dautobus-mar2026/
LOCATION:City of Montreal\, 801 Brennan\, Montreal\, Quebec\, H3C 0G4)\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Presentation,Virtual,Webinar
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Quebec Section":MAILTO:quebec@itecanada.org
GEO:45.496075;-73.553531
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=City of Montreal 801 Brennan Montreal Quebec H3C 0G4) Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=801 Brennan:geo:-73.553531,45.496075
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/32892166803449?p=WYXb7g6OunVDf01rB6">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Participez à ce webinaire organisé par la section du Québec de l’ITE Canada sur “Aménagement d’arrêts d’autobus en bordure de voies cyclables”. \nCe webinaire est gratuit pour les membres et non-membres d’ITE Canada\, mais l’inscription est obligatoire. \nCe webinaire présentera les dernières évolutions en matière de conception d’arrêts d’autobus en bordure de voies cyclables (arrêts en îlot)\, en particulier les critères d’aménagement développés par la Ville de Montréal. \nDATE:  Jeudi\, 19 Mars 2026 \nTEMPS:  12:00 – 13:00pm EST \nDate limite d’inscription: 18 Mars 2026\, 23:30pm \n==Please note this webinar will be held in French. For similar content in English\, please refer to the webinar details jointly presented by ITE Canada and CARSP in September 2025.== \n  \nPrésentateur: Bartek Komorowski\, Conseiller en aménagement – Chef d’équipe – Ville de Montréal \nBartek Komorowski est urbaniste de formation et œuvre dans le domaine de la mobilité active depuis 19 ans. Il travaille au Service de l’urbanisme et de la mobilité de la Ville de Montréal en tant que Chef de l’équipe dans la Division des stratégies de mobilité durable. Son équipe est responsable du développement des pratiques d’aménagement de rue\, ce qui comprend la rédaction de lignes directrices\, le soutien à la conception et l’évaluation d’aménagements novateurs. Avant d’avoir rejoint la Ville\, Bartek a travaillé pendant 7 ans en tant que Chargé de projets au service-conseil de Vélo Québec. Il est coauteur du guide technique Aménager pour les piétons et les cyclistes\, publié en 2020. Bartek est membre du conseil d’administration de la Winter Cycling Federation\, qui organise un congrès annuel sur les pratiques hivernales du vélo ainsi que membre du Comité intégré des transports actifs de l’Association des transports du Canada. \nBartek Komorowski is an urban planner by training and has worked in the field of active mobility for 19 years. He holds degrees in Cognitive Science (B.Sc.) and Urban Planning (M.U.P.) from McGill University. Bartek is currently a team leader at the City of Montreal Urban Planning and Mobility Department. His team is responsible for developing and disseminating street design guidelines that embody the City’s policies with respect to sustainable mobility\, road safety\, universal accessibility\, and climate change adaptation. Previously\, he spent 7 years as a Project Leader in the research and consulting department at Vélo Québec\, Canada’s largest cycling advocacy organization. He is a coauthor of Vélo Québec’s 2020 design manual\, Aménager pour les piétons et les cyclistes (Planning and Designing for Pedestrians and Cyclists). Bartek is a member of the Active Transportation Integrated Committee (ATIC) of the Transportation Association of Canada (TAC) and a board member of the Winter Cycling Federation (WCF)\, which organizes the international Winter Cycling Congress.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260225T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260225T160000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20260107T194355Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260120T191007Z
UID:10000843-1772020800-1772035200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:[TRAINING] Geometric Design: Fundamentals and Emerging Practices in Urban Street Design - Feb 2026
DESCRIPTION:Date:  Wednesday\, February 25\, 2026 \nTime:  12:00 – 4:00 pm ET / 9:00 am – 1:00 pm PT \nLocation: Virtual. \nThis session will qualify for PDH credits for attendees.\n \nUrban streets are more than conduits for traffic—they are complex environments that support movement and serve as vibrant places for community connection and economic activity. Designing these streets requires balancing safety\, mobility\, and livability while accommodating diverse users such as pedestrians\, cyclists\, transit riders\, and goods movement. \nIn the past decade\, there has been considerable evolution in design practices for Canadian urban streets by shifting away from minimum design standards towards a more nuanced\, context-specific “design domain” approach. This evolution requires practitioners to apply greater engineering judgment and consider a broader range of factors and user perspectives. \nThis training equips participants with the knowledge and tools to navigate this evolving landscape with live facilitators that offer a variety of experience in planning and designing for complex urban environments\, including complete streets and protected intersections. A mix of presentations\, case studies\, interactive exercises\, and question and answer periods will be incorporated to allow attendees to apply fundamental design principles for urban streets\, navigate design trade-offs\, and incorporate emerging solutions. \nThis training will be organized as follows: \n\nIntroduction to Urban Street Design: The session will begin by examining the functions of urban streets for varying users and their role in supporting access\, mobility\, and placemaking. We will introduce the design domain approach\, contrasting it with traditional minimum standards and emphasizing the role of engineering judgment. We will then shift to concepts related to design controls and emerging solutions for speed management\, including self-enforcing streets\, highlighting how geometric design influences user behaviour and safety through Exercise #1.\nUrban Street Cross-sections: Next\, we will examine key urban street elements and how to select appropriate widths within the design domain and make trade-offs for varying contexts and user needs. Participants will then apply these concepts in Exercise #2 using real-world case studies and interactive tools that will challenge them to redesign urban streets to meet specified priorities within constrained rights-of-way and understand the equity implications of design decisions. \nHorizontal and Vertical Alignment for Urban Streets: This part of the training will explore fundamental concepts on horizontal and vertical alignments of urban streets and strategies to incorporate considerations for drainage\, safety\, and sight distances. Real-world case studies will be used to illustrate the connections between design controls and speed management to horizontal and vertical alignment design choices.\nUrban Intersection Design: The final block will focus on key principles of urban intersection design\, including control types\, user safety considerations\, and design/control vehicle selection. We will also provide a high-level overview of emerging concepts like protected intersections and multimodal roundabouts. To reinforce learning\, Exercise #3 will be conducted\, each with a facilitator that will guide participants to sketch geometric features of different intersection types. We will wrap up with a summary of key takeaways and an opportunity for participants to reflect on how to apply these concepts in their own practice.\n\nLEARNING OUTCOMES\nAs a result of attending this training\, participants will be able to: \n\nDescribe the key functions and elements of urban streets\, including the roles of access\, mobility\, placemaking\, and the needs of multi-modal users\nDifferentiate between traditional minimum standards and the “design domain” approach in geometric design and explain the importance of engineering judgment in selecting design parameters\nUnderstand speed management\, self-enforcing roadway concepts\, and the relationship between design features and operating speeds\nAnalyze and conceptually design cross-sections for urban streets\, balancing competing demands within constrained rights-of-way\nEvaluate horizontal and vertical alignment elements for safety and operational effectiveness in urban contexts\nAssess intersection control types and geometric design considerations\, including impacts of design/control vehicle selection and corner radius\nCollaborate in group exercises to solve real-world design challenges\, using interactive tools to reinforce learning through practical application\nInterpret case studies to connect theoretical concepts with built examples\, strengthening the ability to apply best practice to local projects\n\nAUDIENCE\nTechnical guidance on designing urban streets is important to the day-to-day practice of a variety of professionals in transportation and related fields to ensure that their work reflects the changing needs of their local communities. Therefore\, this training program is valuable for a range of practitioners involved in the implementation and management of public streets\, including new road designers looking for a high-level overview of urban road geometric design\, experienced professionals looking to stay abreast of latest best practices\, and everyone in between. This may include transportation planners\, technologists\, engineers\, landscape architects\, and others involved in the planning\, design\, and operation of urban streets. \nFACILITATORS\nJames Schofield\, P.Eng.\, RPP\, RSP2I\nLead Trainer \nJames holds a Bachelor of Applied Science in Computer Engineering and a Master of Planning in Urban Development\, bringing over 18 years of engineering experience\, including 7 years in the transportation field. He specializes in active transportation\, complete streets\, and road safety projects ranging from developing design guidelines\, master planning\, feasibility studies\, environmental assessments\, and preliminary/detailed design. He led the development of award-winning design guidance\, including the Ontario Protected Intersection Guide and the Hamilton Complete Streets Design Manual. Also\, he was a lead trainer for numerous in-person and virtual training programs for the Ontario Traffic Council (OTM Book 18: Cycling Facilities and Ontario Protected Intersection Guide) and the City of Hamilton (Hamilton Complete Streets Design Manual). James sits on TAC’s Active Transportation Integrated Committee and is ITE Canada’s representative on the ITE Pedestrian and Bicycle Committee. \nSantiago Londono\, P.Eng.\, PMP\nLead Trainer \nSantiago holds an Ontario College Advanced Diploma and a Bachelor’s Degree in Civil Engineering\, bringing over 10 years of experience in construction and municipal infrastructure projects. He has led the preliminary and detailed design of local\, collector\, and arterial road reconstruction projects\, with expertise in road geometry\, widening and narrowing strategies\, and sightline analysis. Santiago’s work emphasizes delivering safe\, efficient\, and sustainable transportation solutions. \nBeverley Ng\, BASc.\, EIT\nAssistant Trainer \nBeverley holds a Bachelor of Applied Science in Civil Engineering\, bringing over 3 years of experience in transportation planning and engineering. She was a lead author on the TAC Lower Speeds on Collectors and Arterial Roads: Synthesis of Practice\, pulling together lessons learned from literature and from municipalities across Canada in various contexts. Beverley was also an onsite researcher for transit infrastructure for people with sight loss\, has collaborated on active mode and streetscaping projects\, and continues to work on traffic and transit operations. \nPavani Perera\, P.Eng.\nAssistant Trainer \nPavani holds a Bachelor of Applied Science in Civil Engineering\, bringing over 5 years of experience in transportation planning and engineering. She has contributed as a technical analyst and coordinator to various projects primarily focused on vulnerable road users\, including active transportation master plans\, active transportation preliminary designs\, complete street guidelines\, vulnerable road user safety assessments\, feasibility studies\, environmental assessments\, and transportation impact studies. Also\, she was an assistant trainer for numerous virtual training programs for the Ontario Traffic Council (OTM Book 18: Cycling Facilities and Ontario Protected Intersection Guide) over the past two years. \nREGISTRATION\nDeadline: Registration will close on Tuesday\, February 24\, 2026 at 12 noon ET \nNEW! Group Discount: Receive a 15% discount on 3 or more ITE Member ($275) and/or Non-Member ($400) registrations purchased in the same transaction. Discount will be automatically applied to the cart on the checkout/payment page if at least three eligible tickets are purchased together. \n\n\n\n\nCategory\nFee\nNotes\n\n\n\n\nITE Member*\n$275\nITE membership status must be valid at the time of registration with current dues paid. Eligible for 15% group discount.\n\n\nNon-Member\n$400\nAnyone who is not a current paid ITE member. Eligible for 15% group discount.\n\n\nITE Young Member*\n$200\nMust be an ITE Young Member (a non-student between the ages of 22 and 29) with current dues paid\n\n\nITE Student Member*\n$150\nMust be a current full-time post-secondary student and registered ITE member. ITE membership is free for full-time undergrad and graduate students. Become a Student ITE Member here.\n\n\n*ITE member number required to register for member rates. If you do not know your ITE member number\, you can retrieve it here on ite.org by clicking “Forgot Username”.\n\n\n\n\nMeeting Link: The virtual meeting join link will be emailed in your registration confirmation email.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZTU2ZjIwMjUtNGZiMi00YzNhLTk4NmItNGYwODIxMWU3MThh%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%223d234255-e20f-4205-88a5-9658a402999b%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%223ca89d70-f3d8-4841-a711-c9fbd0a48c57%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/training-geometric-design-feb-2026/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Training,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Training-Geometric-Design-Feb-2026_cover.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada Training Committee":MAILTO:training@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZTU2ZjIwMjUtNGZiMi00YzNhLTk4NmItNGYwODIxMWU3MThh%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%223d234255-e20f-4205-88a5-9658a402999b%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%223ca89d70-f3d8-4841-a711-c9fbd0a48c57%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Date:  Wednesday\, February 25\, 2026 \nTime:  12:00 – 4:00 pm ET / 9:00 am – 1:00 pm PT \nLocation: Virtual. \nThis session will qualify for PDH credits for attendees.\n \nUrban streets are more than conduits for traffic—they are complex environments that support movement and serve as vibrant places for community connection and economic activity. Designing these streets requires balancing safety\, mobility\, and livability while accommodating diverse users such as pedestrians\, cyclists\, transit riders\, and goods movement. \nIn the past decade\, there has been considerable evolution in design practices for Canadian urban streets by shifting away from minimum design standards towards a more nuanced\, context-specific “design domain” approach. This evolution requires practitioners to apply greater engineering judgment and consider a broader range of factors and user perspectives. \nThis training equips participants with the knowledge and tools to navigate this evolving landscape with live facilitators that offer a variety of experience in planning and designing for complex urban environments\, including complete streets and protected intersections. A mix of presentations\, case studies\, interactive exercises\, and question and answer periods will be incorporated to allow attendees to apply fundamental design principles for urban streets\, navigate design trade-offs\, and incorporate emerging solutions. \nThis training will be organized as follows: \n\nIntroduction to Urban Street Design: The session will begin by examining the functions of urban streets for varying users and their role in supporting access\, mobility\, and placemaking. We will introduce the design domain approach\, contrasting it with traditional minimum standards and emphasizing the role of engineering judgment. We will then shift to concepts related to design controls and emerging solutions for speed management\, including self-enforcing streets\, highlighting how geometric design influences user behaviour and safety through Exercise #1.\nUrban Street Cross-sections: Next\, we will examine key urban street elements and how to select appropriate widths within the design domain and make trade-offs for varying contexts and user needs. Participants will then apply these concepts in Exercise #2 using real-world case studies and interactive tools that will challenge them to redesign urban streets to meet specified priorities within constrained rights-of-way and understand the equity implications of design decisions. \nHorizontal and Vertical Alignment for Urban Streets: This part of the training will explore fundamental concepts on horizontal and vertical alignments of urban streets and strategies to incorporate considerations for drainage\, safety\, and sight distances. Real-world case studies will be used to illustrate the connections between design controls and speed management to horizontal and vertical alignment design choices.\nUrban Intersection Design: The final block will focus on key principles of urban intersection design\, including control types\, user safety considerations\, and design/control vehicle selection. We will also provide a high-level overview of emerging concepts like protected intersections and multimodal roundabouts. To reinforce learning\, Exercise #3 will be conducted\, each with a facilitator that will guide participants to sketch geometric features of different intersection types. We will wrap up with a summary of key takeaways and an opportunity for participants to reflect on how to apply these concepts in their own practice.\n\nLEARNING OUTCOMES\nAs a result of attending this training\, participants will be able to: \n\nDescribe the key functions and elements of urban streets\, including the roles of access\, mobility\, placemaking\, and the needs of multi-modal users\nDifferentiate between traditional minimum standards and the “design domain” approach in geometric design and explain the importance of engineering judgment in selecting design parameters\nUnderstand speed management\, self-enforcing roadway concepts\, and the relationship between design features and operating speeds\nAnalyze and conceptually design cross-sections for urban streets\, balancing competing demands within constrained rights-of-way\nEvaluate horizontal and vertical alignment elements for safety and operational effectiveness in urban contexts\nAssess intersection control types and geometric design considerations\, including impacts of design/control vehicle selection and corner radius\nCollaborate in group exercises to solve real-world design challenges\, using interactive tools to reinforce learning through practical application\nInterpret case studies to connect theoretical concepts with built examples\, strengthening the ability to apply best practice to local projects\n\nAUDIENCE\nTechnical guidance on designing urban streets is important to the day-to-day practice of a variety of professionals in transportation and related fields to ensure that their work reflects the changing needs of their local communities. Therefore\, this training program is valuable for a range of practitioners involved in the implementation and management of public streets\, including new road designers looking for a high-level overview of urban road geometric design\, experienced professionals looking to stay abreast of latest best practices\, and everyone in between. This may include transportation planners\, technologists\, engineers\, landscape architects\, and others involved in the planning\, design\, and operation of urban streets. \nFACILITATORS\nJames Schofield\, P.Eng.\, RPP\, RSP2I\nLead Trainer \nJames holds a Bachelor of Applied Science in Computer Engineering and a Master of Planning in Urban Development\, bringing over 18 years of engineering experience\, including 7 years in the transportation field. He specializes in active transportation\, complete streets\, and road safety projects ranging from developing design guidelines\, master planning\, feasibility studies\, environmental assessments\, and preliminary/detailed design. He led the development of award-winning design guidance\, including the Ontario Protected Intersection Guide and the Hamilton Complete Streets Design Manual. Also\, he was a lead trainer for numerous in-person and virtual training programs for the Ontario Traffic Council (OTM Book 18: Cycling Facilities and Ontario Protected Intersection Guide) and the City of Hamilton (Hamilton Complete Streets Design Manual). James sits on TAC’s Active Transportation Integrated Committee and is ITE Canada’s representative on the ITE Pedestrian and Bicycle Committee. \nSantiago Londono\, P.Eng.\, PMP\nLead Trainer \nSantiago holds an Ontario College Advanced Diploma and a Bachelor’s Degree in Civil Engineering\, bringing over 10 years of experience in construction and municipal infrastructure projects. He has led the preliminary and detailed design of local\, collector\, and arterial road reconstruction projects\, with expertise in road geometry\, widening and narrowing strategies\, and sightline analysis. Santiago’s work emphasizes delivering safe\, efficient\, and sustainable transportation solutions. \nBeverley Ng\, BASc.\, EIT\nAssistant Trainer \nBeverley holds a Bachelor of Applied Science in Civil Engineering\, bringing over 3 years of experience in transportation planning and engineering. She was a lead author on the TAC Lower Speeds on Collectors and Arterial Roads: Synthesis of Practice\, pulling together lessons learned from literature and from municipalities across Canada in various contexts. Beverley was also an onsite researcher for transit infrastructure for people with sight loss\, has collaborated on active mode and streetscaping projects\, and continues to work on traffic and transit operations. \nPavani Perera\, P.Eng.\nAssistant Trainer \nPavani holds a Bachelor of Applied Science in Civil Engineering\, bringing over 5 years of experience in transportation planning and engineering. She has contributed as a technical analyst and coordinator to various projects primarily focused on vulnerable road users\, including active transportation master plans\, active transportation preliminary designs\, complete street guidelines\, vulnerable road user safety assessments\, feasibility studies\, environmental assessments\, and transportation impact studies. Also\, she was an assistant trainer for numerous virtual training programs for the Ontario Traffic Council (OTM Book 18: Cycling Facilities and Ontario Protected Intersection Guide) over the past two years. \nREGISTRATION\nDeadline: Registration will close on Tuesday\, February 24\, 2026 at 12 noon ET \nNEW! Group Discount: Receive a 15% discount on 3 or more ITE Member ($275) and/or Non-Member ($400) registrations purchased in the same transaction. Discount will be automatically applied to the cart on the checkout/payment page if at least three eligible tickets are purchased together. \n\n\n\n\nCategory\nFee\nNotes\n\n\n\n\nITE Member*\n$275\nITE membership status must be valid at the time of registration with current dues paid. Eligible for 15% group discount.\n\n\nNon-Member\n$400\nAnyone who is not a current paid ITE member. Eligible for 15% group discount.\n\n\nITE Young Member*\n$200\nMust be an ITE Young Member (a non-student between the ages of 22 and 29) with current dues paid\n\n\nITE Student Member*\n$150\nMust be a current full-time post-secondary student and registered ITE member. ITE membership is free for full-time undergrad and graduate students. Become a Student ITE Member here.\n\n\n*ITE member number required to register for member rates. If you do not know your ITE member number\, you can retrieve it here on ite.org by clicking “Forgot Username”.\n\n\n\n\nMeeting Link: The virtual meeting join link will be emailed in your registration confirmation email.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20260225T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20260225T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20260126T192243Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260126T212716Z
UID:10000848-1772020800-1772024400@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Greater Vancouver: Long-Distance Transportation Systems and Climate Change Impacts (Virtual) - Feb 2026
DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver is pleased to have Dr. Amy Kim present a virtual seminar at 12:00 pm PT\, February 25th\, 2026. The virtual seminar will be free and online. \nDate: Wednesday\, February 25\, 2026 \nTime: 12pm – 1pm PT \nLocation: Virtual \nPresentation Title: Long-Distance Transportation Systems and Climate Change Impacts \n \nAmy Kim is a Professor of Civil Engineering at UBC Vancouver\, on Musqueam Traditional Territory. Her research interests mainly involve how multimodal transportation systems perform in connecting communities across large geographies\, particularly under disruptions caused by natural hazards and other climate-related events. She aims to support infrastructure and operational decision-making for adaptation\, emergency planning\, and community resilience\, and train values-driven engineering practitioners and researchers.  \nAmy was at the University of Alberta prior to joining UBC in 2021. Between her MS and PhD studies at the University of California\, Berkeley\, Amy worked in the transportation consulting practice in California and BC\, working on major projects such as the Gateway Program and Evergreen Line. She also serves as Associate Head EDII and Co-Director of the Master of Engineering Leadership Urban Systems program.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_MDYwOTc2MWYtMWFlMi00MTFmLTllNDctZmZlMjE4Yjk0MzUy%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22c8343742-1912-4dbb-b841-ea9c69e88452%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%228eeedf0b-dea2-4258-a286-6a273c2e1b5a%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-greater-vancouver-long-distance-transportation-systems-and-climate-change-impacts-virtual-feb-2026/
LOCATION:Greater Vancouver (Virtual)\, Vancouver\, BC\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Presentation,Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Greater Vancouver":MAILTO:vancouver@itecanada.org
GEO:49.282803889907;-123.12768196781
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_MDYwOTc2MWYtMWFlMi00MTFmLTllNDctZmZlMjE4Yjk0MzUy%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22c8343742-1912-4dbb-b841-ea9c69e88452%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%228eeedf0b-dea2-4258-a286-6a273c2e1b5a%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver is pleased to have Dr. Amy Kim present a virtual seminar at 12:00 pm PT\, February 25th\, 2026. The virtual seminar will be free and online. \nDate: Wednesday\, February 25\, 2026 \nTime: 12pm – 1pm PT \nLocation: Virtual \nPresentation Title: Long-Distance Transportation Systems and Climate Change Impacts \n \nAmy Kim is a Professor of Civil Engineering at UBC Vancouver\, on Musqueam Traditional Territory. Her research interests mainly involve how multimodal transportation systems perform in connecting communities across large geographies\, particularly under disruptions caused by natural hazards and other climate-related events. She aims to support infrastructure and operational decision-making for adaptation\, emergency planning\, and community resilience\, and train values-driven engineering practitioners and researchers.  \nAmy was at the University of Alberta prior to joining UBC in 2021. Between her MS and PhD studies at the University of California\, Berkeley\, Amy worked in the transportation consulting practice in California and BC\, working on major projects such as the Gateway Program and Evergreen Line. She also serves as Associate Head EDII and Co-Director of the Master of Engineering Leadership Urban Systems program.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20251211T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20251211T150000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20250911T203126Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251113T144558Z
UID:10000806-1765461600-1765465200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Canada District: 2025 Annual General Meeting (virtual)
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for ITE Canada District Annual General Meeting (AGM). This virtual meeting will take place Thursday\, December 11\, 2025. \nAll Canadian Members of ITE are welcome to attend. Note that only non-student members will be permitted to vote on motions at the meeting. \nPlease click the RSVP below to register. Your ITE membership number is required to register. \nThe agenda and associated materials as well as a proxy voting form will be available to download here. \n \n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NzM5MGYxMmItYTczYy00NjZiLThlMTctMTIyNDZhZmU1ZjAw%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-canada-2025-agm/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:AGM,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/AGM.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada":MAILTO:admin@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NzM5MGYxMmItYTczYy00NjZiLThlMTctMTIyNDZhZmU1ZjAw%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Please join us for ITE Canada District Annual General Meeting (AGM). This virtual meeting will take place Thursday\, December 11\, 2025. \nAll Canadian Members of ITE are welcome to attend. Note that only non-student members will be permitted to vote on motions at the meeting. \nPlease click the RSVP below to register. Your ITE membership number is required to register. \nThe agenda and associated materials as well as a proxy voting form will be available to download here. \n 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20251203T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20251203T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20250911T201309Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251203T191053Z
UID:10000804-1764748800-1764766800@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Canada Virtual Technical Symposium - December 2025
DESCRIPTION:This one-day event will feature four technical sessions covering topics like artificial intelligence (AI) in transportation\, parking and curbside management\, transit\, and electric vehicles. \nFind the full program\, registration\, and sponsorship information on the event website here. \nRegistration will close on Monday\, December 1. \nWithin one week of completing your registration\, you will receive an email with a link to the virtual event. You will not receive a meeting link in your registration confirmation email. If you have any questions about meeting access\, please contact info@itecanada.org. \nIf you do not know your ITE member number\, you can retrieve it here on ite.org using “Forgot Username”.
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-canada-virtual-technical-symposium-dec-2025/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Symposium,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Dec-2025-Virtual-Symposium_with-sponsors.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada":MAILTO:admin@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20251127T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20251127T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20251112T162430Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251113T142011Z
UID:10000835-1764244800-1764248400@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE National Capital Section: Guidance for Posted Speed Limit Reductions in Support of Vision Zero - Webinar (Virtual) - Nov 2025
DESCRIPTION:The ITE National Capital Section is hosting a FREE webinar on November 27\, 2025. \nReducing speed limits in urban areas is a commonly adopted strategy in recent years to reduce the incidence and severity of traffic collisions. Numerous Canadian cities have implemented speed limit reductions as part of their efforts to enhance road safety. \nUnder Transport Canada’s Enhanced Road Safety Transfer Payment Program (ERSTPP)\, SMATS Traffic Solutions (SMATS) and the Traffic Injury Research Foundation (TIRF) partnered to undertake a statistical study to investigate the impact of speed limit reduction as a road safety strategy. Join us for this valuable conversation. \nDATE: Thursday\, November 27\, 2025 \nTIME: 12:00pm – 1:00pm EST \n*The virtual webinar link details will be shared in your ticket confirmation email after you have registered.* \n==Registration ends on November 27 at 10am== \n  \nWebinar Details\nThe study is evaluating the impact of posted speed limit reductions on metrics like vehicle speeds\, harsh braking incidents\, and harsh acceleration events. This presentation of the interim study results will inform the audience on: \n\nThe impacts of posted speed limit reductions on vehicle speed.\nGuidance on conditions under which additional measures\, such as traffic calming\, should be considered.\nThe use of ‘Big Data’ to gain actionable insights to support data-driven policy and planning decisions\, ensuring impactful and sustainable safety interventions.\n\nPresenters\nThe Traffic Injury Research Foundation (TIRF) is an independent road safety research institute and registered Canadian charity. TIRF is a world leader in research\, program and policy development\, evaluation\, and knowledge transfer — preventing loss of life and injuries on the roads\, reducing social costs and safeguarding productivity. Our focus is on people and their behaviours on the road that create risk. \n \nCraig Lyon is the Director of Road Safety Engineering at the Traffic Injury Research Foundation. He has a Masters of Applied Science degree from the University of Toronto and a Bachelors of Engineering degree from Toronto Metropolitan University (previously Ryerson). Craig has over 25 years of experience in transportation engineering with a focus on the quantitative analysis of road safety\, including the development and evaluation of road safety improvement programs; investigating the safety effects of planning and design decisions; before-after crash investigation studies; and the investigation of vehicle-pedestrian crashes. \n  \nSMATS Traffic Solutions is an Ottawa-based technology company specializing in traffic data collection and analysis through advanced sensors and big data analytics. Its innovative solutions support a wide range of applications in traffic operations\, engineering\, safety\, and transportation planning. SMATS products have been successfully deployed and trusted by agencies and organizations across Canada and around the world. \n \nAmir Ghods is the CEO and founder of SMATS Traffic Solutions. Amir holds a PhD degree in Traffic Engineering from the University of Waterloo and has a long track record of academic research and solving industry challenges using technological innovations. He has over 15 years of experience in ITS\, transportation data analytics\, control\, optimization\, and simulation systems.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_OTRlNzAyYmEtNmZkNS00YzZhLWE2N2MtNGNmYmRiODY1MDc0%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22413c6f2c-219a-4692-97d3-f2b4d80281e7%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%22eff661b1-d75f-4659-9eb8-d953aad72e68%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-national-capital-section-guidance-for-posted-speed-limit-reductions-webinar-nov2025/
LOCATION:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-national-capital-section-guidance-for-posted-speed-limit-reductions-webinar-nov2025/
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE National Capital Section":MAILTO:nationalcapital@itecanada.org
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_OTRlNzAyYmEtNmZkNS00YzZhLWE2N2MtNGNmYmRiODY1MDc0%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22413c6f2c-219a-4692-97d3-f2b4d80281e7%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%22eff661b1-d75f-4659-9eb8-d953aad72e68%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:The ITE National Capital Section is hosting a FREE webinar on November 27\, 2025. \nReducing speed limits in urban areas is a commonly adopted strategy in recent years to reduce the incidence and severity of traffic collisions. Numerous Canadian cities have implemented speed limit reductions as part of their efforts to enhance road safety. \nUnder Transport Canada’s Enhanced Road Safety Transfer Payment Program (ERSTPP)\, SMATS Traffic Solutions (SMATS) and the Traffic Injury Research Foundation (TIRF) partnered to undertake a statistical study to investigate the impact of speed limit reduction as a road safety strategy. Join us for this valuable conversation. \nDATE: Thursday\, November 27\, 2025 \nTIME: 12:00pm – 1:00pm EST \n*The virtual webinar link details will be shared in your ticket confirmation email after you have registered.* \n==Registration ends on November 27 at 10am== \n  \nWebinar Details\nThe study is evaluating the impact of posted speed limit reductions on metrics like vehicle speeds\, harsh braking incidents\, and harsh acceleration events. This presentation of the interim study results will inform the audience on: \n\nThe impacts of posted speed limit reductions on vehicle speed.\nGuidance on conditions under which additional measures\, such as traffic calming\, should be considered.\nThe use of ‘Big Data’ to gain actionable insights to support data-driven policy and planning decisions\, ensuring impactful and sustainable safety interventions.\n\nPresenters\nThe Traffic Injury Research Foundation (TIRF) is an independent road safety research institute and registered Canadian charity. TIRF is a world leader in research\, program and policy development\, evaluation\, and knowledge transfer — preventing loss of life and injuries on the roads\, reducing social costs and safeguarding productivity. Our focus is on people and their behaviours on the road that create risk. \n \nCraig Lyon is the Director of Road Safety Engineering at the Traffic Injury Research Foundation. He has a Masters of Applied Science degree from the University of Toronto and a Bachelors of Engineering degree from Toronto Metropolitan University (previously Ryerson). Craig has over 25 years of experience in transportation engineering with a focus on the quantitative analysis of road safety\, including the development and evaluation of road safety improvement programs; investigating the safety effects of planning and design decisions; before-after crash investigation studies; and the investigation of vehicle-pedestrian crashes. \n  \nSMATS Traffic Solutions is an Ottawa-based technology company specializing in traffic data collection and analysis through advanced sensors and big data analytics. Its innovative solutions support a wide range of applications in traffic operations\, engineering\, safety\, and transportation planning. SMATS products have been successfully deployed and trusted by agencies and organizations across Canada and around the world. \n \nAmir Ghods is the CEO and founder of SMATS Traffic Solutions. Amir holds a PhD degree in Traffic Engineering from the University of Waterloo and has a long track record of academic research and solving industry challenges using technological innovations. He has over 15 years of experience in ITS\, transportation data analytics\, control\, optimization\, and simulation systems.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Edmonton:20251112T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Edmonton:20251112T124500
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20251024T165918Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251103T212411Z
UID:10000829-1762948800-1762951500@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Southern Alberta Section - Annual General Meeting\, Nov 2025 (virtual)
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for ITE Southern Alberta Section’s Annual General Meeting. This virtual meeting will take place on Wednesday\, November 12\, at 12pm MST. All ITE Southern Alberta Members are welcome to attend. \nNote that only non-student members are permitted to vote on motions at the meeting. At the AGM we will introduce the new Publicity Coordinator\, along with the remaining Executive Committee Members and their new roles. \nAll attendees will be entered into a draw to win a door prize! \nLocation: Virtual via MS Teams\nDate: November 12\, 2025\nTime: 12:00-12:45pm MST\nCost: Free \nThis is a virtual event. Please click the RSVP below to register. Your ITE membership number is required to register. Registration closes on November 11 at 5pm. \nNOTE: The virtual meeting link will be emailed to all registered attendees before the event. If you have not received the link by the morning of the meeting or have trouble accessing the call\, please email the section for assistance at southernalberta@itecanada.org . \n \n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_YzhiMjkwMzQtYjdlMC00Zjc5LTg2NGYtMzA0ZmM2YzU1NzQy%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%223d234255-e20f-4205-88a5-9658a402999b%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%226c977523-8144-40d5-abd2-759b161cc3bc%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-southern-alberta-section-agm-nov-2025/
LOCATION:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-southern-alberta-section-agm-nov-2025/
CATEGORIES:AGM,Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Southern Alberta Section":MAILTO:southernalberta@itecanada.org
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_YzhiMjkwMzQtYjdlMC00Zjc5LTg2NGYtMzA0ZmM2YzU1NzQy%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%223d234255-e20f-4205-88a5-9658a402999b%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%226c977523-8144-40d5-abd2-759b161cc3bc%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Please join us for ITE Southern Alberta Section’s Annual General Meeting. This virtual meeting will take place on Wednesday\, November 12\, at 12pm MST. All ITE Southern Alberta Members are welcome to attend. \nNote that only non-student members are permitted to vote on motions at the meeting. At the AGM we will introduce the new Publicity Coordinator\, along with the remaining Executive Committee Members and their new roles. \nAll attendees will be entered into a draw to win a door prize! \nLocation: Virtual via MS Teams\nDate: November 12\, 2025\nTime: 12:00-12:45pm MST\nCost: Free \nThis is a virtual event. Please click the RSVP below to register. Your ITE membership number is required to register. Registration closes on November 11 at 5pm. \nNOTE: The virtual meeting link will be emailed to all registered attendees before the event. If you have not received the link by the morning of the meeting or have trouble accessing the call\, please email the section for assistance at southernalberta@itecanada.org . \n 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20251104T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20251104T160000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20251015T213207Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251016T145834Z
UID:10000824-1762254000-1762272000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:[TRAINING] Transportation Equity: Developing Solutions for Social Inclusion - Nov 2025
DESCRIPTION:Date: Tuesday\, November 4\, 2025 \nTime: 11 am to 4 pm (Eastern Time) / 8 am to 1 pm (Pacific Time) \nLocation: Virtual workshop. Meeting link will be provided in registration confirmation email. \nThis session will qualify for PDH credits for attendees.\n \nWorkshop Description\nTransportation systems shape access to opportunities\, yet mobility inequalities persist. Social exclusion in mobility is not a new issue\, but systematic inclusion principles and processes remain limited\, and the knowledge in this area is yet to be fully developed. This training course seeks to help transportation professionals understand how changes to transportation systems can be more socially inclusive and address issues of inequality. \nSupported by internal research and developed by a diverse team of experts\, this workshop combines strong theoretical foundations with practical applications to offer a comprehensive approach to transportation equity. Participants will learn how transportation equity principles\, tools\, and solutions translate into real action and change the course of transportation infrastructure programs and delivery.  The goal is to equip transportation practitioners with the tools to create more inclusive\, resilient\, and just mobility systems. \nParticipants will gain practical strategies and real-world insights to apply transportation equity principles in their daily work. Through case studies and expert guidance\, they will learn how to turn equity concepts into actionable solutions that shape inclusive policies\, programs\, and infrastructure. This course will provide alternative perspectives to align transportation policies\, programs and implementation with the Canadian National Human Rights Charter\, treating equity as a fundamental right\, not just as an additional consideration. Training content highlights systemic exclusion\, its impact on marginalized communities\, and strategies to mitigate unintended consequences and address equity gaps. By integrating well-established and emerging transportation equity concepts into practical applications\, the course equips participants with the knowledge to embed equity into everyday transportation practices and decisions.  \nThe half-day course is divided into several sections: \n\nBasics of Transportation Equity: The workshop will start with fundamentals of transportation equity\, basic principles\, history\, theoretical foundations such as framework and types of transportation equity\, philosophical framework\, systematic causes of inequality\, spatial justice theories and other fundamentals. It will include participant interactions and quick surveys.\nEquity in Public Space: This topic will delve into spatial injustice\, recognize recurring inequality conditions\, and address them through an equitable approach to public street design and placemaking concepts\, using unused space identification\, redesign\, and implementation strategies. \nEquity and Mobility Resilience: Understand the resilience of transportation systems in the face of climate change disparities\, energy depletion\, and environmental viewpoints\, including new approaches to mobility energy planning and policy development. \nEquity in Emerging Mobility Modes and Technologies: Examine the promises and challenges of new mobility technologies and apply solutions to prevent emerging inequalities in digital and shared mobility platforms. \nEquity in Mobility Access Planning and Policy: Explore new concepts\, solutions\, and practical tools for multimodal planning and design\, including the creation of multimodal mobility hubs to improve access to diverse transportation modes. \nTransportation Disadvantage and Poverty: Discover strategies and tools to combat transportation poverty and mobility disadvantages and explore how overlooked indicators and data can contribute to systemic inequality.\nDesign Parameter and Equity Connections: This session will uncover hidden gender disparities in automobile design and their links to road safety inequalities and learn processes to reduce and eliminate these disparities. In addition\, participants will gain insights from real-life safety incidents and collisions and understand how transportation equity plays a crucial role in fostering inclusion\, upholding human rights\, and providing liability and judicial perspectives.\nIn Class Exercises: Through interactive exercises and digital tools\, participants will examine how shared mobility solutions can complement existing transportation policies to close equity gaps. These activities will highlight strategies for integrating equity considerations into planning and decision-making\, with a focus on systemic inclusion and spatial justice.\n\nTarget Audience\nTransportation engineers\, planners\, land use planners\, urban designers\, mobility technology service providers\, and other professionals involved in urban mobility system development\, who are focused on promoting equity within sustainable mobility solutions. \nLearning Outcomes\nAs a result of attending the training\, practitioners will be able to: \n\nEvaluate the processes used to implement equity policies and laws in contemporary transportation practice\nIdentify the equity concerns associated with various tools for evaluating travel patterns and behavior\nApply strategies and tools to increase the access to employment\, education\, affordable housing\, and transportation for under-served communities\nEvaluate various strategies designed to increase access to emerging modes for under-served populations\nIdentify the potential equity impacts of proposed transportation funding mechanisms\n\nTrainers\nInstructors: Julia de Lange\, PhD\, P.Eng.; Abdul Madani\, M.Eng\, EIT; and Mehemed Delibasic\, P.Eng. \nSupport: Abdul Razak Alozi\, PhD\, EIT; Maryam Hasanpour\, PhD\, EIT  \nJulia de Lange\, B.Eng.\, M.A.Sc.\, Ph.D.\, E.I.T.\nDr. Julia de Lange is an Associate with the Biomechanics and Personal Injury group at 30 Forensic Engineering. She earned her M.A.Sc. and Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering at McMaster University after completing her undergraduate degree in Biomedical Engineering at the University of Guelph. Her research focused on developing enhanced injury tolerance criteria for automotive and defense applications\, and appropriately translating these to crash test dummies. She has taught undergraduate courses in Biomedical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering at McMaster University. \nAbdul Madani\, BSCE\, M.Eng.\, E.I.T.\nMr. Abdul Madani is an Associate with the Transportation and Safety Group at 30 Forensic Engineering. He graduated from the University of Sharjah with Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering and a Master of Engineering in Civil Engineering from McMaster University\, with a specialization in geometric design risk and reliability assessment and highway safety. Prior to joining 30 Forensic Engineering\, Abdul worked for the Transportation sector in the Government of Dubai where he gained a range of skills in traffic safety\, work zone safety and traffic management\, road users’ safety\, policy updates\, and Vision Zero projects.c \nMehemed Delibasic\, B.Sc.\, M.Sc.\, P.Eng.\nMehemed is Vice President of the Transportation and Safety Group at 30 Forensic Engineering. With over 25 years of comprehensive professional experience\, Mehemed has been involved in and managed numerous multi-modal transportation planning studies\, transportation master plans\, and transportation planning/traffic engineering studies. His most recent experience applies an equitable approach for Transportation/Active Master Planning Studies\, including affordable and equitable accessible transportation options. Mehemed is a recognized subject matter expert on the latest multi-modal transportation master planning studies\, active transportation master plan studies\, parking\, and traffic safety\, and has delivered several presentations on these topics at industry events. \nRegistration deadline: Monday\, November 3\, 2025 at 12 noon ET\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZTUzZWIwMGMtM2QwMi00NzA2LTk4YWYtMzJiZTI5YWE1M2Ex%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%2222cba2b2-d788-4882-a6bf-5befc24c15f5%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a011654-14d8-4d52-aaab-baa0023f52a4%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/training-transportation-equity-developing-solutions-for-social-inclusion-nov2025/
LOCATION:https://www.itecanada.org/event/training-transportation-equity-developing-solutions-for-social-inclusion-nov2025/
CATEGORIES:Training,Virtual,Workshop
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/Training-Banner-Equity-Nov-2025.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada Training Committee":MAILTO:training@itecanada.org
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZTUzZWIwMGMtM2QwMi00NzA2LTk4YWYtMzJiZTI5YWE1M2Ex%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%2222cba2b2-d788-4882-a6bf-5befc24c15f5%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a011654-14d8-4d52-aaab-baa0023f52a4%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Date: Tuesday\, November 4\, 2025 \nTime: 11 am to 4 pm (Eastern Time) / 8 am to 1 pm (Pacific Time) \nLocation: Virtual workshop. Meeting link will be provided in registration confirmation email. \nThis session will qualify for PDH credits for attendees.\n \nWorkshop Description\nTransportation systems shape access to opportunities\, yet mobility inequalities persist. Social exclusion in mobility is not a new issue\, but systematic inclusion principles and processes remain limited\, and the knowledge in this area is yet to be fully developed. This training course seeks to help transportation professionals understand how changes to transportation systems can be more socially inclusive and address issues of inequality. \nSupported by internal research and developed by a diverse team of experts\, this workshop combines strong theoretical foundations with practical applications to offer a comprehensive approach to transportation equity. Participants will learn how transportation equity principles\, tools\, and solutions translate into real action and change the course of transportation infrastructure programs and delivery.  The goal is to equip transportation practitioners with the tools to create more inclusive\, resilient\, and just mobility systems. \nParticipants will gain practical strategies and real-world insights to apply transportation equity principles in their daily work. Through case studies and expert guidance\, they will learn how to turn equity concepts into actionable solutions that shape inclusive policies\, programs\, and infrastructure. This course will provide alternative perspectives to align transportation policies\, programs and implementation with the Canadian National Human Rights Charter\, treating equity as a fundamental right\, not just as an additional consideration. Training content highlights systemic exclusion\, its impact on marginalized communities\, and strategies to mitigate unintended consequences and address equity gaps. By integrating well-established and emerging transportation equity concepts into practical applications\, the course equips participants with the knowledge to embed equity into everyday transportation practices and decisions.  \nThe half-day course is divided into several sections: \n\nBasics of Transportation Equity: The workshop will start with fundamentals of transportation equity\, basic principles\, history\, theoretical foundations such as framework and types of transportation equity\, philosophical framework\, systematic causes of inequality\, spatial justice theories and other fundamentals. It will include participant interactions and quick surveys.\nEquity in Public Space: This topic will delve into spatial injustice\, recognize recurring inequality conditions\, and address them through an equitable approach to public street design and placemaking concepts\, using unused space identification\, redesign\, and implementation strategies. \nEquity and Mobility Resilience: Understand the resilience of transportation systems in the face of climate change disparities\, energy depletion\, and environmental viewpoints\, including new approaches to mobility energy planning and policy development. \nEquity in Emerging Mobility Modes and Technologies: Examine the promises and challenges of new mobility technologies and apply solutions to prevent emerging inequalities in digital and shared mobility platforms. \nEquity in Mobility Access Planning and Policy: Explore new concepts\, solutions\, and practical tools for multimodal planning and design\, including the creation of multimodal mobility hubs to improve access to diverse transportation modes. \nTransportation Disadvantage and Poverty: Discover strategies and tools to combat transportation poverty and mobility disadvantages and explore how overlooked indicators and data can contribute to systemic inequality.\nDesign Parameter and Equity Connections: This session will uncover hidden gender disparities in automobile design and their links to road safety inequalities and learn processes to reduce and eliminate these disparities. In addition\, participants will gain insights from real-life safety incidents and collisions and understand how transportation equity plays a crucial role in fostering inclusion\, upholding human rights\, and providing liability and judicial perspectives.\nIn Class Exercises: Through interactive exercises and digital tools\, participants will examine how shared mobility solutions can complement existing transportation policies to close equity gaps. These activities will highlight strategies for integrating equity considerations into planning and decision-making\, with a focus on systemic inclusion and spatial justice.\n\nTarget Audience\nTransportation engineers\, planners\, land use planners\, urban designers\, mobility technology service providers\, and other professionals involved in urban mobility system development\, who are focused on promoting equity within sustainable mobility solutions. \nLearning Outcomes\nAs a result of attending the training\, practitioners will be able to: \n\nEvaluate the processes used to implement equity policies and laws in contemporary transportation practice\nIdentify the equity concerns associated with various tools for evaluating travel patterns and behavior\nApply strategies and tools to increase the access to employment\, education\, affordable housing\, and transportation for under-served communities\nEvaluate various strategies designed to increase access to emerging modes for under-served populations\nIdentify the potential equity impacts of proposed transportation funding mechanisms\n\nTrainers\nInstructors: Julia de Lange\, PhD\, P.Eng.; Abdul Madani\, M.Eng\, EIT; and Mehemed Delibasic\, P.Eng. \nSupport: Abdul Razak Alozi\, PhD\, EIT; Maryam Hasanpour\, PhD\, EIT  \nJulia de Lange\, B.Eng.\, M.A.Sc.\, Ph.D.\, E.I.T.\nDr. Julia de Lange is an Associate with the Biomechanics and Personal Injury group at 30 Forensic Engineering. She earned her M.A.Sc. and Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering at McMaster University after completing her undergraduate degree in Biomedical Engineering at the University of Guelph. Her research focused on developing enhanced injury tolerance criteria for automotive and defense applications\, and appropriately translating these to crash test dummies. She has taught undergraduate courses in Biomedical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering at McMaster University. \nAbdul Madani\, BSCE\, M.Eng.\, E.I.T.\nMr. Abdul Madani is an Associate with the Transportation and Safety Group at 30 Forensic Engineering. He graduated from the University of Sharjah with Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering and a Master of Engineering in Civil Engineering from McMaster University\, with a specialization in geometric design risk and reliability assessment and highway safety. Prior to joining 30 Forensic Engineering\, Abdul worked for the Transportation sector in the Government of Dubai where he gained a range of skills in traffic safety\, work zone safety and traffic management\, road users’ safety\, policy updates\, and Vision Zero projects.c \nMehemed Delibasic\, B.Sc.\, M.Sc.\, P.Eng.\nMehemed is Vice President of the Transportation and Safety Group at 30 Forensic Engineering. With over 25 years of comprehensive professional experience\, Mehemed has been involved in and managed numerous multi-modal transportation planning studies\, transportation master plans\, and transportation planning/traffic engineering studies. His most recent experience applies an equitable approach for Transportation/Active Master Planning Studies\, including affordable and equitable accessible transportation options. Mehemed is a recognized subject matter expert on the latest multi-modal transportation master planning studies\, active transportation master plan studies\, parking\, and traffic safety\, and has delivered several presentations on these topics at industry events. \nRegistration deadline: Monday\, November 3\, 2025 at 12 noon ET
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20251022T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20251022T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20250904T141119Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250904T183037Z
UID:10000800-1761134400-1761138000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Greater Vancouver: Advanced Travel Information & Traffic Management Systems in BC and across Canada (Virtual Seminar)
DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver is pleased to have Yeatland Wong present his work at 12:00 pm\, October 22nd\, 2025. \nThe virtual seminar will be free and online. \nFrom BC to NWT: Scalable Traffic Management and Road Information Systems  This webinar explores three real-world case studies that highlight how municipalities are improving safety\, communication\, and efficiency through advanced travel and traffic systems: \n\nSmall Municipality Collaborative Travel Information – A shared system for Sanford\, Oak Bay\, Coquitlam\, and Langford\, BC\, helping small municipalities deliver a modern traveler information system.\nDriveNWT – A territory-wide platform in the Northwest Territories that enhances road safety and communication across remote and seasonal roadways.\nAutomation & Traffic Management Across Canada – ATMS and ITS deployments in Ontario and Halifax that reduce manual work\, improve response times\, and streamline operations.\n\nWhy attend?\nDiscover practical\, scalable solutions that can apply to your operations—whether you’re looking to modernize travel info\, automate traffic management\, or improve service delivery with limited resources. \nBio: Yeatland Wong\, P. Eng  \nYeatland Wong has over 20 years of experience in Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) and transportation engineering. His career spans provincial and municipal government\, as well as the private consulting sector\, with roles at the BC Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure (BCMoTI)\, the City of Calgary\, Stantec\, and Dillon Consulting. Yeatland led the deployment of countless ITS projects\, including lane reversal systems\, travel time systems\, traveler information platforms\, traffic management systems\, and other innovative technologies. He is currently the Director of Smart Mobility Projects at Transnomis Solutions and serves on the Executive Committee of the ITS Canada Board of Directors.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NGUzYTVjNmEtY2E4Yi00NzZmLWI2MmQtYzk5ZTYyZDNkMjg2%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-greater-vancouver-advanced-travel-information-traffic-management-systems-in-bc-and-across-canada-virtual-october-2025/
LOCATION:Greater Vancouver (Virtual)\, Vancouver\, BC\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Presentation,Virtual,Webinar
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Greater Vancouver":MAILTO:vancouver@itecanada.org
GEO:49.282803889907;-123.12768196781
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NGUzYTVjNmEtY2E4Yi00NzZmLWI2MmQtYzk5ZTYyZDNkMjg2%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver is pleased to have Yeatland Wong present his work at 12:00 pm\, October 22nd\, 2025. \nThe virtual seminar will be free and online. \nFrom BC to NWT: Scalable Traffic Management and Road Information Systems  This webinar explores three real-world case studies that highlight how municipalities are improving safety\, communication\, and efficiency through advanced travel and traffic systems: \n\nSmall Municipality Collaborative Travel Information – A shared system for Sanford\, Oak Bay\, Coquitlam\, and Langford\, BC\, helping small municipalities deliver a modern traveler information system.\nDriveNWT – A territory-wide platform in the Northwest Territories that enhances road safety and communication across remote and seasonal roadways.\nAutomation & Traffic Management Across Canada – ATMS and ITS deployments in Ontario and Halifax that reduce manual work\, improve response times\, and streamline operations.\n\nWhy attend?\nDiscover practical\, scalable solutions that can apply to your operations—whether you’re looking to modernize travel info\, automate traffic management\, or improve service delivery with limited resources. \nBio: Yeatland Wong\, P. Eng  \nYeatland Wong has over 20 years of experience in Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) and transportation engineering. His career spans provincial and municipal government\, as well as the private consulting sector\, with roles at the BC Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure (BCMoTI)\, the City of Calgary\, Stantec\, and Dillon Consulting. Yeatland led the deployment of countless ITS projects\, including lane reversal systems\, travel time systems\, traveler information platforms\, traffic management systems\, and other innovative technologies. He is currently the Director of Smart Mobility Projects at Transnomis Solutions and serves on the Executive Committee of the ITS Canada Board of Directors.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250925T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250925T133000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20250826T184417Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251021T122935Z
UID:10000798-1758801600-1758807000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:[ITE Canada & CARSP Joint Webinar] Island Platform Bus Stops - Emerging Trends\, Technologies & Lessons Learned
DESCRIPTION:Registration closes on Wednesday\, September 24. 1.5 Professional Development Hours/Credits (PDH) will be available for this webinar. \nIn 2024\, TransLink\, in partnership with the B.C. Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure (MoTT)\, developed the Design Guide for Bus Stops Adjacent to Cycling Infrastructure (download here\, PDF 14.8 MB) to provide province-wide design guidance for “island platform bus stops” or “floating bus stops” in British Columbia.  The award-winning Design Guide provides a comprehensive set of planning and engineering guidelines offering solutions for the planning\, design\, operation\, and maintenance of bus stops adjacent to protected cycling infrastructure in a range of contexts and applications throughout British Columbia\, along with guidance for education and engagement.  However\, the Design Guide was not able to address all of the issues identified by people with disabilities\, notably\, the ability to detect a person cycling approach and the ability to have confidence that a person cycling has stopped. \nSince the Design Guide was published in 2024\, the design of island platform bus stops has continued to evolve across Canada and internationally as practitioners advance their understanding of accessibility needs within a North American context\, with treatments such as on-board announcements\, Rectangular Rapid Flashing Beacons (RRFBs)\, bicycle signals\, tactile wayfinding\, and other technologies being explored in various jurisdictions.  This virtual session will provide an update on emerging trends and technologies for island platform bus stops along with lessons learned from Canada\, the United States\, and internationally. \nThe webinar will be led by Brian Patterson (Urban Systems) and Dylan Passmore (Street Matters) along with staff from the City of Montreal\, City of New Westminster\, District of Saanich\, and TransLink. Due to popular demand after the initial joint ITE Canada/CARSP webinar on this topic in 2024\, this follow-up webinar is an opportunity to hear from more speakers and delve into newer developments on the topic. \nRegistration for this webinar is FREE for current ITE and CARSP members. Non-members are welcome to purchase a ticket. \n\nPresenters\nBrian Patterson\, RPP\, MCIP\, PMP\, RSP1\, Senior Planner\, Urban Systems \nBrian is a senior transportation planner and brings over 20 years of experience in active transportation planning and design\, multi-modal transportation planning\, and safety and accessibility. Brian has developed over hundreds of plans\, designs\, and studies for communities of all sizes across Canada and has been recognized with numerous industry awards. Brian led the development of the Design Guide for Bus Stops Adajcent to Cycling Infrastructure and has led numerous other design guides\, including the BC Active Transportation Design Guide. \nDylan Passmore\, MScPl\, P.Eng.\, Owner & Principal Engineer\, Street Matters \nDylan is a Principal Engineer with experience in both the private and public sectors leading transportation projects across North America and internationally. He specializes in the engagement\, analysis\, design\, and implementation of complex and sensitive multimodal corridor projects\, particularly related to inclusive pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure design. His experience as Engineer of Record for several programs and signature corridor projects at the City of Vancouver\, as well as industry-leading design guides and standard details\, means he has an eye for detail and is intimately familiar with navigating complex tradeoffs. \nBartek Komorowski\, City of Montreal \nBartek Komorowski is an urban planner by training and has worked in the field of active mobility for 18 years. He holds degrees in Cognitive Science (B.Sc.) and Urban Planning (M.U.P.) from McGill University. Bartek is currently a team leader at the City of Montreal Urban Planning and Mobility Department. His team is responsible for developing and disseminating street design guidelines that embody the City’s policies with respect to sustainable mobility\, road safety\, universal accessibility\, and climate change adaptation. Previously\, he spent 7 years as a Project Leader in the research and consulting department at Vélo Québec\, Canada’s largest cycling advocacy organization. He is a coauthor of Vélo Québec’s 2020 design manual\, Aménager pour les piétons et les cyclistes (Planning and Designing for Pedestrians and Cyclists). Bartek is a member of the Active Transportation Integrated Committee (ATIC) of the Transportation Association of Canada (TAC) and a board member of the Winter Cycling Federation (WCF)\, which organizes the international Winter Cycling Congress. \nKatarina Stevovic\, TransLink \nWith over a decade of dedicated transportation experience in the public sector\, Katarina’s expertise spans capital programming\, project design\, strategic planning\, ensuring innovative infrastructure solutions that support both local and regional growth and mobility. Committed to ensuring safe\, connected\, and efficient multi-modal transportation facilities for both people and goods\, she currently manages the Major Road Network in the Metro-Vancouver Region. \nTroy McKay\, District of Saanich \nTroy McKay\, P.L.Eng. is the Senior Manager of Transportation and Development Services with the District of Saanich. With over 18 years in municipal engineering and leadership\, he has helped shape Saanich’s growth and mobility through initiatives like the Active Transportation Plan\, Road Safety Action Plan\, and delivery of 18 km of protected bike lanes in just 18 months. \nLacey Hirtle\, City of New Westminster \nLacey is passionate about helping Canadians choose safe and sustainable transportation for their day-to-day trips. Working in active transportation since 2009\, Lacey has developed transportation plans\, designed protected bicycle lanes\, and supported traffic safety initiatives. She is now overseeing the City of New Westminster’s passenger ferry service\, the Q to Q Ferry\, and build-out of the Active Transportation Network.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://youtu.be/hcTatsZnbQI\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-canada-carsp-joint-webinar-island-platform-bus-stops-2/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Presentation,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Webinar-Banner-Sept-25-2025-Floating-Bus-Stops.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada":MAILTO:admin@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://youtu.be/hcTatsZnbQI">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Registration closes on Wednesday\, September 24. 1.5 Professional Development Hours/Credits (PDH) will be available for this webinar. \nIn 2024\, TransLink\, in partnership with the B.C. Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure (MoTT)\, developed the Design Guide for Bus Stops Adjacent to Cycling Infrastructure (download here\, PDF 14.8 MB) to provide province-wide design guidance for “island platform bus stops” or “floating bus stops” in British Columbia.  The award-winning Design Guide provides a comprehensive set of planning and engineering guidelines offering solutions for the planning\, design\, operation\, and maintenance of bus stops adjacent to protected cycling infrastructure in a range of contexts and applications throughout British Columbia\, along with guidance for education and engagement.  However\, the Design Guide was not able to address all of the issues identified by people with disabilities\, notably\, the ability to detect a person cycling approach and the ability to have confidence that a person cycling has stopped. \nSince the Design Guide was published in 2024\, the design of island platform bus stops has continued to evolve across Canada and internationally as practitioners advance their understanding of accessibility needs within a North American context\, with treatments such as on-board announcements\, Rectangular Rapid Flashing Beacons (RRFBs)\, bicycle signals\, tactile wayfinding\, and other technologies being explored in various jurisdictions.  This virtual session will provide an update on emerging trends and technologies for island platform bus stops along with lessons learned from Canada\, the United States\, and internationally. \nThe webinar will be led by Brian Patterson (Urban Systems) and Dylan Passmore (Street Matters) along with staff from the City of Montreal\, City of New Westminster\, District of Saanich\, and TransLink. Due to popular demand after the initial joint ITE Canada/CARSP webinar on this topic in 2024\, this follow-up webinar is an opportunity to hear from more speakers and delve into newer developments on the topic. \nRegistration for this webinar is FREE for current ITE and CARSP members. Non-members are welcome to purchase a ticket. \n\nPresenters\nBrian Patterson\, RPP\, MCIP\, PMP\, RSP1\, Senior Planner\, Urban Systems \nBrian is a senior transportation planner and brings over 20 years of experience in active transportation planning and design\, multi-modal transportation planning\, and safety and accessibility. Brian has developed over hundreds of plans\, designs\, and studies for communities of all sizes across Canada and has been recognized with numerous industry awards. Brian led the development of the Design Guide for Bus Stops Adajcent to Cycling Infrastructure and has led numerous other design guides\, including the BC Active Transportation Design Guide. \nDylan Passmore\, MScPl\, P.Eng.\, Owner & Principal Engineer\, Street Matters \nDylan is a Principal Engineer with experience in both the private and public sectors leading transportation projects across North America and internationally. He specializes in the engagement\, analysis\, design\, and implementation of complex and sensitive multimodal corridor projects\, particularly related to inclusive pedestrian and bicycle infrastructure design. His experience as Engineer of Record for several programs and signature corridor projects at the City of Vancouver\, as well as industry-leading design guides and standard details\, means he has an eye for detail and is intimately familiar with navigating complex tradeoffs. \nBartek Komorowski\, City of Montreal \nBartek Komorowski is an urban planner by training and has worked in the field of active mobility for 18 years. He holds degrees in Cognitive Science (B.Sc.) and Urban Planning (M.U.P.) from McGill University. Bartek is currently a team leader at the City of Montreal Urban Planning and Mobility Department. His team is responsible for developing and disseminating street design guidelines that embody the City’s policies with respect to sustainable mobility\, road safety\, universal accessibility\, and climate change adaptation. Previously\, he spent 7 years as a Project Leader in the research and consulting department at Vélo Québec\, Canada’s largest cycling advocacy organization. He is a coauthor of Vélo Québec’s 2020 design manual\, Aménager pour les piétons et les cyclistes (Planning and Designing for Pedestrians and Cyclists). Bartek is a member of the Active Transportation Integrated Committee (ATIC) of the Transportation Association of Canada (TAC) and a board member of the Winter Cycling Federation (WCF)\, which organizes the international Winter Cycling Congress. \nKatarina Stevovic\, TransLink \nWith over a decade of dedicated transportation experience in the public sector\, Katarina’s expertise spans capital programming\, project design\, strategic planning\, ensuring innovative infrastructure solutions that support both local and regional growth and mobility. Committed to ensuring safe\, connected\, and efficient multi-modal transportation facilities for both people and goods\, she currently manages the Major Road Network in the Metro-Vancouver Region. \nTroy McKay\, District of Saanich \nTroy McKay\, P.L.Eng. is the Senior Manager of Transportation and Development Services with the District of Saanich. With over 18 years in municipal engineering and leadership\, he has helped shape Saanich’s growth and mobility through initiatives like the Active Transportation Plan\, Road Safety Action Plan\, and delivery of 18 km of protected bike lanes in just 18 months. \nLacey Hirtle\, City of New Westminster \nLacey is passionate about helping Canadians choose safe and sustainable transportation for their day-to-day trips. Working in active transportation since 2009\, Lacey has developed transportation plans\, designed protected bicycle lanes\, and supported traffic safety initiatives. She is now overseeing the City of New Westminster’s passenger ferry service\, the Q to Q Ferry\, and build-out of the Active Transportation Network.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250918T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250918T160000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20250716T151348Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250801T182150Z
UID:10000788-1758196800-1758211200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:[TRAINING] Transportation & Affordability: Planning Complete Networks to Reduce Auto-Dependence - September 2025
DESCRIPTION:Date:  Thursday\, September 18\, 2025 \nTime:  12:00 – 4:00 pm ET / 9:00 am – 1:00 pm PT \nLocation: Virtual. The virtual meeting details will be emailed to registered attendees the day before or on the morning of the training.  \nRegistration deadline: September 17\, 2025 at 12 noon ET \nThis session will qualify for PDH credits for attendees. \nWorkshop Description\nA community’s design plays a crucial role in shaping residents’ living costs\, particularly transportation expenses. One effective way to ease this financial burden is by creating “car-lite” communities where life without car ownership is convenient\, pleasant\, and sustainable. \nHowever\, designing or retrofitting such communities requires a collaborative\, thoughtful approach from land use planners\, transportation planners\, and engineers. The good news? Successful examples from around the world provide clear principles to guide the way. \nThe Half-Day Course is Divided into Four Modules: \n\nWhat Makes a Community Car-Lite and Why Does it Matter? The training will start by thoughtfully defining what it means for a community to be “car-lite”; that is\, for a resident of an area to have sufficient access to other modes of travel\, and car ownership is not required for convenient travel. We will link transportation affordability with overall affordability and discuss the opportunities for transport planners to make life more affordable for Canadians.\nExamining Car-Lite Communities in Canada and Elsewhere. We will discuss policy trends across Canada and review several master-planned communities. We’ll discuss the ambitions for each\, review the quality of the built infrastructure and mobility services provided\, and draw conclusions on the strengths and weaknesses of each development. Exercise #1: Participants will then be asked to complete their own network audit of an existing mixed-use community.\nDesigning Complete Networks. This part of the training explores how to design mobility networks for new or intensifying communities. We will discuss different types of urban traffic environments that prioritize different modes of traffic and how to lay these out at the network level using Safe Systems principles. Exercise #2: Participants will gain hands-on experience and design a transportation network for themselves in the breakout exercise.\nUnderstanding the Barriers to Implementation. The final block will discuss practical implications and challenges that an engineer or planner may encounter in trying to implement some of the concepts presented in the course. We will explore the shortcomings of the traditional process of laying out a street network solely based on auto-oriented functions (arterial\, collector\, local) as well as the alternatives (prioritizing corridors based on mode)\, and discuss how land use designations fit in.\n\nOverall\, the course will leave participants with a stronger understanding of the building blocks for car-lite communities and actionable takeaways for their work in producing transportation master plans\, secondary plans\, plans of subdivision\, and transportation impact assessments. \nLearning Outcomes\nAs a result of attending the training\, practitioners will be able to: \n\nDescribe the role of transportation practitioners in addressing Canada’s housing crisis\nExplain the concepts of being car-dependent\, car-free\, and car-less and its impacts on access to opportunity and mobility poverty\nUnderstand examples of various communities and neighbourhoods across Canada that have been designed to support car-lite living\nEvaluate a proposed or existing community layout for its likelihood of supporting multimodal travel by looking at its street design\, land uses\, and network structure\nDesign a multimodal street network for a new or retrofitted urban neighbourhood\n\nTarget Audience\nTransportation Planners\, Land Use Planners and Transportation Engineers who are interested designing more sustainable\, affordable and inclusive communities. \nTrainer bios\nMatt Pinder\, P.Eng.\, M.Eng.Lead Trainer \nMatt has a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in civil engineering and nine years of experience in transportation planning and engineering. Matt is an emerging expert in the planning and design of streets\, intersections\, and communities that address the needs of all road users. He has advised on and completed concept and detailed designs for dozens of complete streets and bikeway projects across Canada including the City of Toronto’s ITE-award-winning York University Cycling Connections project. He has contributed to award-winning design guidance documents including the Ottawa Protected Intersection Design Guide and the Ontario Protected Intersection Guide.His experience also includes leading trainings\, including for the Ontario Protected Intersection Guide\, as well as the updated OTM Book 18: Cycling Facilities which he has delivered to over 600 professionals. He was also a trainer for the April 2024 ITE Canada training session on multimodal traffic signal operations \n  \nNarayan Donaldson\, M.Sc.Assistant Trainer \nNarayan has a bachelor’s degree in urban planning and a master’s degree in civil engineering\, and seven years of planning and engineering experience in Canada and the Netherlands. He was the lead trainer for the 2023/24 ITE Canada training session on multimodal traffic signal operations and has co-led in-person workshops such as a network planning exercise at the 2024 Winter Cycling Congress in Edmonton. He has been applying Complete Networks principles in roles such as the Mobycon project leader for the Renfrew County transportation master plan\, and a planner implementing the Town of Canmore’s town centre streetscape plan based on the Complete Networks principles of the Integrated Master Plan \n  \nArianne Robillard\, M.Sc.Assistant Trainer \nArianne has a Master of Science in Civil Engineering specializing in Transportation Planning. Her experience includes transportation and mobility research\, active transportation\, transit-oriented development\, and accessibility. Her academic publications include cycling access to transit-oriented development nodes and measurement of access to parks and green spaces\, and has presented at conferences in Brussels\, Portland\, Quebec City\, and Montreal. She spent four months in the Netherlands studying at Utrecht University studying Human Geography and Spatial Planning\, contributing to the design of accessibility indicator tools. \n  \nThe registration deadline for this event is noon ET on September 17\, 2025. \nThe virtual meeting details will be emailed to registered attendees the day before or on the morning of the training.  \n  \n\n \n 
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/training-transportation-affordability-planning-complete-networks-to-reduce-auto-dependence-september-2025/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Training,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Training-Mobycon-Affordability-Sept-2025-headshots.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada Training Committee":MAILTO:training@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250502T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250502T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20250327T161925Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260402T175732Z
UID:10000755-1746187200-1746190800@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Canada Executive Committee Town Hall 2025: Roles & Responsibilities of the Executive
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a virtual town hall on May 2\, 2025\, at 12:00 PM (Noon) Eastern Time to learn more about serving on the ITE Canada Executive Committee. This event will feature a panel of current committee members who will share their experiences and answer your questions about their roles and positions\, including the responsibilities\, time commitments and\, most of all\, the benefits of serving! \nWhether you are considering running for a position or just curious about the committee’s work\, this town hall is the perfect opportunity to gain insights and perspectives from those who have been in the role. \nLearn more in the Call for Nominations open here for the Treasurer\, Vice-President\, and President positions.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://meet.google.com/kyh-nizj-bao\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-canada-executive-committee-town-hall-2025-roles-responsibilities-of-the-executive/
LOCATION:Toronto Area (Virtual)\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Panel,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/ITE-Canada-Executive-Committee-Town-Hall.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada":MAILTO:admin@itecanada.org
GEO:43.725103;-79.369138
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://meet.google.com/kyh-nizj-bao">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Join us for a virtual town hall on May 2\, 2025\, at 12:00 PM (Noon) Eastern Time to learn more about serving on the ITE Canada Executive Committee. This event will feature a panel of current committee members who will share their experiences and answer your questions about their roles and positions\, including the responsibilities\, time commitments and\, most of all\, the benefits of serving! \nWhether you are considering running for a position or just curious about the committee’s work\, this town hall is the perfect opportunity to gain insights and perspectives from those who have been in the role. \nLearn more in the Call for Nominations open here for the Treasurer\, Vice-President\, and President positions.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250429T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250429T160000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20250310T185318Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250801T174535Z
UID:10000752-1745928000-1745942400@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:[TRAINING] Transportation & Affordability: Planning Complete Networks to Reduce Auto-Dependence
DESCRIPTION:This session will qualify for PDH credits for attendees. The registration deadline for this event is noon ET on April 28\, 2025. \nWorkshop Description\nA community’s design plays a crucial role in shaping residents’ living costs\, particularly transportation expenses. One effective way to ease this financial burden is by creating “car-lite” communities where life without car ownership is convenient\, pleasant\, and sustainable. \nHowever\, designing or retrofitting such communities requires a collaborative\, thoughtful approach from land use planners\, transportation planners\, and engineers. The good news? Successful examples from around the world provide clear principles to guide the way. \nThe Half-Day Course is Divided into Four Modules: \n\nWhat Makes a Community Car-Lite and Why Does it Matter? The training will start by thoughtfully defining what it means for a community to be “car-lite”; that is\, for a resident of an area to have sufficient access to other modes of travel\, and car ownership is not required for convenient travel. We will link transportation affordability with overall affordability and discuss the opportunities for transport planners to make life more affordable for Canadians.\nExamining Car-Lite Communities in Canada and Elsewhere. We will discuss policy trends across Canada and review several master-planned communities. We’ll discuss the ambitions for each\, review the quality of the built infrastructure and mobility services provided\, and draw conclusions on the strengths and weaknesses of each development. Exercise #1: Participants will then be asked to complete their own network audit of an existing mixed-use community.\nDesigning Complete Networks. This part of the training explores how to design mobility networks for new or intensifying communities. We will discuss different types of urban traffic environments that prioritize different modes of traffic and how to lay these out at the network level using Safe Systems principles. Exercise #2: Participants will gain hands-on experience and design a transportation network for themselves in the breakout exercise.\nUnderstanding the Barriers to Implementation. The final block will discuss practical implications and challenges that an engineer or planner may encounter in trying to implement some of the concepts presented in the course. We will explore the shortcomings of the traditional process of laying out a street network solely based on auto-oriented functions (arterial\, collector\, local) as well as the alternatives (prioritizing corridors based on mode)\, and discuss how land use designations fit in.\n\nOverall\, the course will leave participants with a stronger understanding of the building blocks for car-lite communities and actionable takeaways for their work in producing transportation master plans\, secondary plans\, plans of subdivision\, and transportation impact assessments. \nLearning Outcomes\nAs a result of attending the training\, practitioners will be able to: \n\nDescribe the role of transportation practitioners in addressing Canada’s housing crisis\nExplain the concepts of being car-dependent\, car-free\, and car-less and its impacts on access to opportunity and mobility poverty\nUnderstand examples of various communities and neighbourhoods across Canada that have been designed to support car-lite living\nEvaluate a proposed or existing community layout for its likelihood of supporting multimodal travel by looking at its street design\, land uses\, and network structure\nDesign a multimodal street network for a new or retrofitted urban neighbourhood\n\nTarget Audience\nTransportation Planners\, Land Use Planners and Transportation Engineers who are interested designing more sustainable\, affordable and inclusive communities. \nTrainer bios\nMatt Pinder\, P.Eng.\, M.Eng.Lead Trainer \nMatt has a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in civil engineering and nine years of experience in transportation planning and engineering. Matt is an emerging expert in the planning and design of streets\, intersections\, and communities that address the needs of all road users. He has advised on and completed concept and detailed designs for dozens of complete streets and bikeway projects across Canada including the City of Toronto’s ITE-award-winning York University Cycling Connections project. He has contributed to award-winning design guidance documents including the Ottawa Protected Intersection Design Guide and the Ontario Protected Intersection Guide.His experience also includes leading trainings\, including for the Ontario Protected Intersection Guide\, as well as the updated OTM Book 18: Cycling Facilities which he has delivered to over 600 professionals. He was also a trainer for the April 2024 ITE Canada training session on multimodal traffic signal operations \n  \nNarayan Donaldson\, M.Sc.Assistant Trainer \nNarayan has a bachelor’s degree in urban planning and a master’s degree in civil engineering\, and seven years of planning and engineering experience in Canada and the Netherlands. He was the lead trainer for the 2023/24 ITE Canada training session on multimodal traffic signal operations and has co-led in-person workshops such as a network planning exercise at the 2024 Winter Cycling Congress in Edmonton. He has been applying Complete Networks principles in roles such as the Mobycon project leader for the Renfrew County transportation master plan\, and a planner implementing the Town of Canmore’s town centre streetscape plan based on the Complete Networks principles of the Integrated Master Plan \n  \nArianne Robillard\, M.Sc.Assistant Trainer \nArianne has a Master of Science in Civil Engineering specializing in Transportation Planning. Her experience includes transportation and mobility research\, active transportation\, transit-oriented development\, and accessibility. Her academic publications include cycling access to transit-oriented development nodes and measurement of access to parks and green spaces\, and has presented at conferences in Brussels\, Portland\, Quebec City\, and Montreal. She spent four months in the Netherlands studying at Utrecht University studying Human Geography and Spatial Planning\, contributing to the design of accessibility indicator tools. \nThe registration deadline for this event is noon ET on April 28\, 2025. \n\n \n \n \n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_Yzg3NTIzODItMGY2Yi00Y2IwLWJhNjEtZDdmMzk2YzQyMjkw%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22a028b933-6a31-40a7-b6bf-d952c478ad03%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%226a525872-42e7-419e-a53b-427486366ccb%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/training-transportation-affordability-2025apr/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Training,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Training_Affordability-Apr-2025-headshots.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada Training Committee":MAILTO:training@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_Yzg3NTIzODItMGY2Yi00Y2IwLWJhNjEtZDdmMzk2YzQyMjkw%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22a028b933-6a31-40a7-b6bf-d952c478ad03%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%226a525872-42e7-419e-a53b-427486366ccb%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:This session will qualify for PDH credits for attendees. The registration deadline for this event is noon ET on April 28\, 2025. \nWorkshop Description\nA community’s design plays a crucial role in shaping residents’ living costs\, particularly transportation expenses. One effective way to ease this financial burden is by creating “car-lite” communities where life without car ownership is convenient\, pleasant\, and sustainable. \nHowever\, designing or retrofitting such communities requires a collaborative\, thoughtful approach from land use planners\, transportation planners\, and engineers. The good news? Successful examples from around the world provide clear principles to guide the way. \nThe Half-Day Course is Divided into Four Modules: \n\nWhat Makes a Community Car-Lite and Why Does it Matter? The training will start by thoughtfully defining what it means for a community to be “car-lite”; that is\, for a resident of an area to have sufficient access to other modes of travel\, and car ownership is not required for convenient travel. We will link transportation affordability with overall affordability and discuss the opportunities for transport planners to make life more affordable for Canadians.\nExamining Car-Lite Communities in Canada and Elsewhere. We will discuss policy trends across Canada and review several master-planned communities. We’ll discuss the ambitions for each\, review the quality of the built infrastructure and mobility services provided\, and draw conclusions on the strengths and weaknesses of each development. Exercise #1: Participants will then be asked to complete their own network audit of an existing mixed-use community.\nDesigning Complete Networks. This part of the training explores how to design mobility networks for new or intensifying communities. We will discuss different types of urban traffic environments that prioritize different modes of traffic and how to lay these out at the network level using Safe Systems principles. Exercise #2: Participants will gain hands-on experience and design a transportation network for themselves in the breakout exercise.\nUnderstanding the Barriers to Implementation. The final block will discuss practical implications and challenges that an engineer or planner may encounter in trying to implement some of the concepts presented in the course. We will explore the shortcomings of the traditional process of laying out a street network solely based on auto-oriented functions (arterial\, collector\, local) as well as the alternatives (prioritizing corridors based on mode)\, and discuss how land use designations fit in.\n\nOverall\, the course will leave participants with a stronger understanding of the building blocks for car-lite communities and actionable takeaways for their work in producing transportation master plans\, secondary plans\, plans of subdivision\, and transportation impact assessments. \nLearning Outcomes\nAs a result of attending the training\, practitioners will be able to: \n\nDescribe the role of transportation practitioners in addressing Canada’s housing crisis\nExplain the concepts of being car-dependent\, car-free\, and car-less and its impacts on access to opportunity and mobility poverty\nUnderstand examples of various communities and neighbourhoods across Canada that have been designed to support car-lite living\nEvaluate a proposed or existing community layout for its likelihood of supporting multimodal travel by looking at its street design\, land uses\, and network structure\nDesign a multimodal street network for a new or retrofitted urban neighbourhood\n\nTarget Audience\nTransportation Planners\, Land Use Planners and Transportation Engineers who are interested designing more sustainable\, affordable and inclusive communities. \nTrainer bios\nMatt Pinder\, P.Eng.\, M.Eng.Lead Trainer \nMatt has a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in civil engineering and nine years of experience in transportation planning and engineering. Matt is an emerging expert in the planning and design of streets\, intersections\, and communities that address the needs of all road users. He has advised on and completed concept and detailed designs for dozens of complete streets and bikeway projects across Canada including the City of Toronto’s ITE-award-winning York University Cycling Connections project. He has contributed to award-winning design guidance documents including the Ottawa Protected Intersection Design Guide and the Ontario Protected Intersection Guide.His experience also includes leading trainings\, including for the Ontario Protected Intersection Guide\, as well as the updated OTM Book 18: Cycling Facilities which he has delivered to over 600 professionals. He was also a trainer for the April 2024 ITE Canada training session on multimodal traffic signal operations \n  \nNarayan Donaldson\, M.Sc.Assistant Trainer \nNarayan has a bachelor’s degree in urban planning and a master’s degree in civil engineering\, and seven years of planning and engineering experience in Canada and the Netherlands. He was the lead trainer for the 2023/24 ITE Canada training session on multimodal traffic signal operations and has co-led in-person workshops such as a network planning exercise at the 2024 Winter Cycling Congress in Edmonton. He has been applying Complete Networks principles in roles such as the Mobycon project leader for the Renfrew County transportation master plan\, and a planner implementing the Town of Canmore’s town centre streetscape plan based on the Complete Networks principles of the Integrated Master Plan \n  \nArianne Robillard\, M.Sc.Assistant Trainer \nArianne has a Master of Science in Civil Engineering specializing in Transportation Planning. Her experience includes transportation and mobility research\, active transportation\, transit-oriented development\, and accessibility. Her academic publications include cycling access to transit-oriented development nodes and measurement of access to parks and green spaces\, and has presented at conferences in Brussels\, Portland\, Quebec City\, and Montreal. She spent four months in the Netherlands studying at Utrecht University studying Human Geography and Spatial Planning\, contributing to the design of accessibility indicator tools. \nThe registration deadline for this event is noon ET on April 28\, 2025. \n\n \n \n 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250409T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250409T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20250305T013651Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T055306Z
UID:10000750-1744200000-1744203600@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Greater Vancouver: April Presentation: How MoTT Improves Safety and Efficiency in a Roundabout Way (Virtual)
DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver is pleased to have Trevor Demerse present on behalf of the BC Ministry of Transportation and Transit (MoTT) at 12:00 pm\, April 9th\, 2025. The virtual seminar will be free and online. \nDescription: This presentation will cover how a standard inter-department coordination meeting resulted in the full repainting of a decades-old roundabout at Highway 99 and 8 Avenue in Surrey to improve its safety and efficiency. In under two weeks\, a dedicated team of designers and decision-makers worked hard to turn opportunity into reality. \nTrevor Demerse\, P. Eng. is a Senior Traffic Operations Engineer for the Province of British Columbia with a Bachelor of Applied Science degree from UBC’s Okanagan Campus. He serves as Vice President of the ITE Greater Vancouver Section\, is an elected member of the Professional Employees Association Bargaining Committee\, and volunteers as the EGBC Registration Mentor for the BC Ministry of Transportation and Transit’s Accredited Employer program. It’s through these varied roles that Trevor works to advance both the Transportation Profession and its practitioners\, no matter what stage of their career they’re at. For his efforts\, he was named the 2024 Young Professional of the year by ITE Greater Vancouver.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NDUxYzI5NTMtMmE5MS00ZTEzLTkyMDQtYmI3YmRhMmUwZjdm%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-greater-vancouver-april-presentation-how-mott-improves-safety-and-efficiency-in-a-roundabout-way-virtual/
LOCATION:Greater Vancouver (Virtual)\, Vancouver\, BC\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Presentation,Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Greater Vancouver":MAILTO:vancouver@itecanada.org
GEO:49.282803889907;-123.12768196781
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NDUxYzI5NTMtMmE5MS00ZTEzLTkyMDQtYmI3YmRhMmUwZjdm%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver is pleased to have Trevor Demerse present on behalf of the BC Ministry of Transportation and Transit (MoTT) at 12:00 pm\, April 9th\, 2025. The virtual seminar will be free and online. \nDescription: This presentation will cover how a standard inter-department coordination meeting resulted in the full repainting of a decades-old roundabout at Highway 99 and 8 Avenue in Surrey to improve its safety and efficiency. In under two weeks\, a dedicated team of designers and decision-makers worked hard to turn opportunity into reality. \nTrevor Demerse\, P. Eng. is a Senior Traffic Operations Engineer for the Province of British Columbia with a Bachelor of Applied Science degree from UBC’s Okanagan Campus. He serves as Vice President of the ITE Greater Vancouver Section\, is an elected member of the Professional Employees Association Bargaining Committee\, and volunteers as the EGBC Registration Mentor for the BC Ministry of Transportation and Transit’s Accredited Employer program. It’s through these varied roles that Trevor works to advance both the Transportation Profession and its practitioners\, no matter what stage of their career they’re at. For his efforts\, he was named the 2024 Young Professional of the year by ITE Greater Vancouver.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250325T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250325T133000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20250313T144922Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250325T114636Z
UID:10000753-1742904000-1742909400@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:Joint ITE Toronto\, Hamilton\, SW Ontario Virtual Event - Connecting Communities: Exploring Transit Reach and Competitiveness
DESCRIPTION:Registrants will be eligible for 1.5 professional development credits/hours (PDH). \nJoin ITE Toronto\, Hamilton\, and Southwestern Sections for an engaging virtual event\, Connecting Communities: Exploring Transit Reach and Competitiveness. This insightful session will delve into the critical role of transit systems in fostering connectivity\, sustainability\, and economic growth across Ontario’s diverse landscapes. \nFrom large metropolitan to medium-sized cities and smaller communities\, this event will showcase innovative strategies\, challenges\, and success stories in enhancing transit reach and competitiveness. Hear from industry experts as they share their perspectives on how effective transit networks can bridge gaps\, improve accessibility\, drive community development and shapes the livability and competitiveness of cities of all sizes. \nSpeakers\nSusan Mills – Huron Shores Area Transit (HSAT) \nSusan Mills serves as the Transit Coordinator for Huron Shores Area Transit (HSAT)\, a small but thriving rural transit system managed by the Municipality of Lambton Shores in collaboration with South Huron\, Bluewater\, North Middlesex\, and Kettle & Stony Point First Nation. Before stepping into her role at HSAT in 2022\, Susan was the manager of the local chamber of commerce\, where she gained valuable insight into the needs of local communities\, businesses\, and resident travel patterns—expertise that now helps shape HSAT’s services. Launched in December 2020\, HSAT has become one of the most successful pilot transit projects funded by the Ontario Community Rural Transit Grant program\, achieving an impressive 1\,685% growth rate since its inception. \nNick Chaloux –Hamilton Street Railway (HSR) \nNick is a Registered Professional Planner (RPP) and transit planner with a background in transit equity\, long-range planning\, and transit business casing. Nick is leading HSR’s Strategy team\, working alongside passionate transit professionals to deliver major projects like Hamilton’s new bus garage\, integrating HSR service into the Hamilton LRT project\, and crafting a new framework for transit planning data and analytics. Since joining the City of Hamilton in 2024\, Nick led phasing and implementation planning for HSR’s next growth plan\, HSR Next\, which plans significant transit expansion in underserved areas of Hamilton. \nJessica Deslippe – Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) \nJessica Deslippe\, P.Eng\, is the Project Manager for the Bus Rapid Transit portfolio at the TTC. In collaboration with the City of Toronto\, Jessica is working to bring fast\, frequent\, and reliable bus service to neighborhoods across the city\, improving how people move through\, and interact with\, their communities.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_YjU0ZmQxN2EtYzU5My00ZWE5LTgwMDMtMjQ3MzkzMGZjYzdi%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22f0bc8ec6-9ed8-4d0c-9189-411ad949cc65%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%225f4861a1-afcd-4221-ab3e-19286725f253%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-toronto-hamilton-southwestontario-joint-connecting-communities-march-2025/
LOCATION:Toronto Area (Virtual)\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/SWOHamiltonToronto-Joint-Virtual-Event-March-25.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Toronto Section":MAILTO:activities@toronto.itecanada.org
GEO:43.725103;-79.369138
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_YjU0ZmQxN2EtYzU5My00ZWE5LTgwMDMtMjQ3MzkzMGZjYzdi%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22f0bc8ec6-9ed8-4d0c-9189-411ad949cc65%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%225f4861a1-afcd-4221-ab3e-19286725f253%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Registrants will be eligible for 1.5 professional development credits/hours (PDH). \nJoin ITE Toronto\, Hamilton\, and Southwestern Sections for an engaging virtual event\, Connecting Communities: Exploring Transit Reach and Competitiveness. This insightful session will delve into the critical role of transit systems in fostering connectivity\, sustainability\, and economic growth across Ontario’s diverse landscapes. \nFrom large metropolitan to medium-sized cities and smaller communities\, this event will showcase innovative strategies\, challenges\, and success stories in enhancing transit reach and competitiveness. Hear from industry experts as they share their perspectives on how effective transit networks can bridge gaps\, improve accessibility\, drive community development and shapes the livability and competitiveness of cities of all sizes. \nSpeakers\nSusan Mills – Huron Shores Area Transit (HSAT) \nSusan Mills serves as the Transit Coordinator for Huron Shores Area Transit (HSAT)\, a small but thriving rural transit system managed by the Municipality of Lambton Shores in collaboration with South Huron\, Bluewater\, North Middlesex\, and Kettle & Stony Point First Nation. Before stepping into her role at HSAT in 2022\, Susan was the manager of the local chamber of commerce\, where she gained valuable insight into the needs of local communities\, businesses\, and resident travel patterns—expertise that now helps shape HSAT’s services. Launched in December 2020\, HSAT has become one of the most successful pilot transit projects funded by the Ontario Community Rural Transit Grant program\, achieving an impressive 1\,685% growth rate since its inception. \nNick Chaloux –Hamilton Street Railway (HSR) \nNick is a Registered Professional Planner (RPP) and transit planner with a background in transit equity\, long-range planning\, and transit business casing. Nick is leading HSR’s Strategy team\, working alongside passionate transit professionals to deliver major projects like Hamilton’s new bus garage\, integrating HSR service into the Hamilton LRT project\, and crafting a new framework for transit planning data and analytics. Since joining the City of Hamilton in 2024\, Nick led phasing and implementation planning for HSR’s next growth plan\, HSR Next\, which plans significant transit expansion in underserved areas of Hamilton. \nJessica Deslippe – Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) \nJessica Deslippe\, P.Eng\, is the Project Manager for the Bus Rapid Transit portfolio at the TTC. In collaboration with the City of Toronto\, Jessica is working to bring fast\, frequent\, and reliable bus service to neighborhoods across the city\, improving how people move through\, and interact with\, their communities.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250320T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250320T160000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20250121T184501Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250801T174554Z
UID:10000739-1742468400-1742486400@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:[TRAINING] Transportation Equity: Developing Solutions for Social Inclusion
DESCRIPTION:This session will qualify for PDH credits for attendees. The registration deadline for this event is March 19\, 2025. \nNote: This event was previously scheduled for February 18\, 2025 \nWorkshop Description\nTransportation systems shape access to opportunities\, yet mobility inequalities persist. Social exclusion in mobility is not a new issue\, but systematic inclusion principles and processes remain limited\, and the knowledge in this area is yet to be fully developed. This training course seeks to help transportation professionals understand how changes to transportation systems can be more socially inclusive and address issues of inequality. \nSupported by internal research and developed by a diverse team of experts\, this workshop combines strong theoretical foundations with practical applications to offer a comprehensive approach to transportation equity. Participants will learn how transportation equity principles\, tools\, and solutions translate into real action and change the course of transportation infrastructure programs and delivery. The goal is to equip transportation practitioners with the tools to create more inclusive\, resilient\, and just mobility systems. \nParticipants will learn from real-life examples of safety incidents\, collisions and practice safety measures where transportation equity plays a significant role in fostering inclusion and upholding human rights\, informed by the instructor’s legal expertise. This course will provide alternative perspectives to align transportation policies\, programs and implementation with the Canadian National Human Rights Charter\, treating equity as a fundamental right\, not just as an additional consideration. Training content highlights systemic exclusion\, its impact on marginalized communities\, and strategies to mitigate unintended consequences and address equity gaps. By integrating well-established and emerging transportation equity concepts into practical applications\, the course equips participants with the knowledge to embed equity into everyday transportation practices and decisions. \nThe half-day course is divided into several sections: \n\nBasics of Transportation Equity: The workshop will start with fundamentals of transportation equity\, basic principles\, history\, theoretical foundations such as framework and types of transportation equity\, philosophical framework\, systematic causes of inequality\, spatial justice theories and other fundamentals. It will include participant interactions and quick surveys.\nEquity in Public Space: This topic will delve into spatial injustice\, recognize recurring inequality conditions\, and address them through an equitable approach to public street design and placemaking concepts\, using unused space identification\, redesign\, and implementation strategies. In the first exercise\, participants are engaged in practicing reclaiming traffic spaces and provided tools to convert these spaces through temporary and permanent redesign and intervention techniques.\nEquity and Mobility Resilience: Understand the resilience of transportation systems in the face of climate change disparities\, energy depletion\, and environmental viewpoints\, including new approaches to mobility energy planning and policy development.\nEquity in Emerging Mobility Modes and Technologies: Examine the promises and challenges of new mobility technologies and apply solutions to prevent emerging inequalities in digital and shared mobility platforms. In the second exercise\, participants are engaged with online tools demonstrating shared mobility benefits and transit quality to identify areas where shared mobility modes can effectively bridge gaps in mobility access.\nEquity in Mobility Access Planning and Policy: Explore new concepts\, solutions\, and practical tools for multimodal planning and design\, including the creation of “neighborhood multimodal mobility hubs” to improve access to diverse transportation modes.\nTransportation Disadvantage and Poverty: Discover strategies and tools to combat transportation poverty and mobility disadvantages and explore how overlooked indicators and data can contribute to systemic inequality. In the third exercise\, participants are engaged to practice transportation equity to gain skills and understanding of spatial justice.\nDesign Parameter and Equity Connections: This session will uncover hidden gender disparities in automobile design and their links to road safety inequalities and learn processes to reduce and eliminate these disparities. In addition\, participants will gain insights from real-life safety incidents and collisions\, and understand how transportation equity plays a crucial role in fostering inclusion\, upholding human rights\, and providing liability and judicial perspectives.\n\nTarget Audience\nTransportation engineers\, planners\, land use planners\, urban designers\, mobility technology service providers\, and other professionals involved in urban mobility system development\, who are focused on promoting equity within sustainable mobility solutions. \nLearning Outcomes\nAs a result of attending the training\, practitioners will be able to: \n\nEvaluate the processes used to implement equity policies and laws in contemporary transportation practice\nUnderstand vulnerability of energy\, resource\, climate impact on transportation systems and apply specific tools and develop policies\nIdentify the equity concerns associated with various tools for evaluating travel patterns and behavior\nApply strategies and tools to increase the access to employment\, education\, affordable housing\, and transportation for underserved communities\nEvaluate various strategies designed to increase access to emerging modes for underserved populations\nIdentify the potential equity impacts of proposed transportation funding mechanisms\n\nTrainers\nInstructors: Dewan Karim\, P.Eng.\, Abdulrahman Madani\, Dr. Julia de Lange\, and Mehemed Delibasic\, P.Eng. \nSupport: Abdul Razak Alozi\, Maryam Hasanpour  \nDewan Karim\, Mehemed Delibasic\, Abdul Madani\, and Julia de Lange are experts with 25+ years of combined experience in transportation safety\, engineering\, and biomechanics at 30 Forensic Engineering. Their work spans transportation planning\, traffic safety\, Vision Zero\, geometric design\, and injury biomechanics\, with academic and industry contributions in Canada\, Japan\, and Dubai. \nDewan Karim\, B.A.Sc.\, M. Eng.\, M.A.Sc.\, MITE\, P.Eng.\, PTOE\nMr. Dewan Karim is a Practice Lead of the Transportation and Safety Group at 30 Forensic Engineering. Dewan has worked in the public and private sectors in Japan and Canada for 25+ years of his career\, pioneering creative ideas in transportation engineering and planning. Dewan has investigated strategic safety and location-specific collisions from traffic engineering and safety regulations for all street users including motor vehicles\, cyclists\, pedestrians\, off-road and commercial vehicles\, trucks\, and motorcycles. \nMehemed Delibasic\, B.Sc.\, M.Sc.\, P.Eng.\nMehemed is Vice President of the Transportation and Safety Group at 30 Forensic Engineering. With over 25 years of comprehensive professional experience\, Mehemed has been involved in and managed numerous multi-modal transportation planning studies\, transportation master plans\, and transportation planning/traffic engineering studies. His most recent experience applies an equitable approach for Transportation/Active Master Planning Studies\, including affordable and equitable accessible transportation options. Mehemed is a recognized subject matter expert on the latest multi-modal transportation master planning studies\, active transportation master plan studies\, parking\, and traffic safety\, and has delivered several presentations on these topics at industry events. \nAbdul Madani\, BSCE\, M.Eng.\, E.I.T.\nMr. Abdul Madani is an Associate with the Transportation and Safety Group at 30 Forensic Engineering. He graduated from the University of Sharjah with Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering and a Master of Engineering in Civil Engineering from McMaster University\, with a specialization in geometric design risk and reliability assessment and highway safety. Prior to joining 30 Forensic Engineering\, Abdul worked for the Transportation sector in the Government of Dubai where he gained a range of skills in traffic safety\, work zone safety and traffic management\, road users’ safety\, policy updates\, and Vision Zero projects. \nJulia de Lange\, B.Eng.\, M.A.Sc.\, Ph.D.\, E.I.T.\nDr. Julia de Lange is an Associate with the Biomechanics and Personal Injury group at 30 Forensic Engineering. She earned her M.A.Sc. and Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering at McMaster University after completing her undergraduate degree in Biomedical Engineering at the University of Guelph. Her research focused on developing enhanced injury tolerance criteria for automotive and defense applications\, and appropriately translating these to crash test dummies. She has taught undergraduate courses in Biomedical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering at McMaster University. \nThe registration deadline for this event is March 19\, 2025.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_MzUxODExZWEtOTkzMi00MjE5LWI3ZjItNDg3NWMyMjYzMWUx%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%2222cba2b2-d788-4882-a6bf-5befc24c15f5%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%2206315c1a-801e-4a02-ac84-b734527a9fcd%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/training-transportation-equity-solutions-for-social-inclusion-1/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Training,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Training-Equity-Mar-2025.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada Training Committee":MAILTO:training@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_MzUxODExZWEtOTkzMi00MjE5LWI3ZjItNDg3NWMyMjYzMWUx%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%2222cba2b2-d788-4882-a6bf-5befc24c15f5%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%2206315c1a-801e-4a02-ac84-b734527a9fcd%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:This session will qualify for PDH credits for attendees. The registration deadline for this event is March 19\, 2025. \nNote: This event was previously scheduled for February 18\, 2025 \nWorkshop Description\nTransportation systems shape access to opportunities\, yet mobility inequalities persist. Social exclusion in mobility is not a new issue\, but systematic inclusion principles and processes remain limited\, and the knowledge in this area is yet to be fully developed. This training course seeks to help transportation professionals understand how changes to transportation systems can be more socially inclusive and address issues of inequality. \nSupported by internal research and developed by a diverse team of experts\, this workshop combines strong theoretical foundations with practical applications to offer a comprehensive approach to transportation equity. Participants will learn how transportation equity principles\, tools\, and solutions translate into real action and change the course of transportation infrastructure programs and delivery. The goal is to equip transportation practitioners with the tools to create more inclusive\, resilient\, and just mobility systems. \nParticipants will learn from real-life examples of safety incidents\, collisions and practice safety measures where transportation equity plays a significant role in fostering inclusion and upholding human rights\, informed by the instructor’s legal expertise. This course will provide alternative perspectives to align transportation policies\, programs and implementation with the Canadian National Human Rights Charter\, treating equity as a fundamental right\, not just as an additional consideration. Training content highlights systemic exclusion\, its impact on marginalized communities\, and strategies to mitigate unintended consequences and address equity gaps. By integrating well-established and emerging transportation equity concepts into practical applications\, the course equips participants with the knowledge to embed equity into everyday transportation practices and decisions. \nThe half-day course is divided into several sections: \n\nBasics of Transportation Equity: The workshop will start with fundamentals of transportation equity\, basic principles\, history\, theoretical foundations such as framework and types of transportation equity\, philosophical framework\, systematic causes of inequality\, spatial justice theories and other fundamentals. It will include participant interactions and quick surveys.\nEquity in Public Space: This topic will delve into spatial injustice\, recognize recurring inequality conditions\, and address them through an equitable approach to public street design and placemaking concepts\, using unused space identification\, redesign\, and implementation strategies. In the first exercise\, participants are engaged in practicing reclaiming traffic spaces and provided tools to convert these spaces through temporary and permanent redesign and intervention techniques.\nEquity and Mobility Resilience: Understand the resilience of transportation systems in the face of climate change disparities\, energy depletion\, and environmental viewpoints\, including new approaches to mobility energy planning and policy development.\nEquity in Emerging Mobility Modes and Technologies: Examine the promises and challenges of new mobility technologies and apply solutions to prevent emerging inequalities in digital and shared mobility platforms. In the second exercise\, participants are engaged with online tools demonstrating shared mobility benefits and transit quality to identify areas where shared mobility modes can effectively bridge gaps in mobility access.\nEquity in Mobility Access Planning and Policy: Explore new concepts\, solutions\, and practical tools for multimodal planning and design\, including the creation of “neighborhood multimodal mobility hubs” to improve access to diverse transportation modes.\nTransportation Disadvantage and Poverty: Discover strategies and tools to combat transportation poverty and mobility disadvantages and explore how overlooked indicators and data can contribute to systemic inequality. In the third exercise\, participants are engaged to practice transportation equity to gain skills and understanding of spatial justice.\nDesign Parameter and Equity Connections: This session will uncover hidden gender disparities in automobile design and their links to road safety inequalities and learn processes to reduce and eliminate these disparities. In addition\, participants will gain insights from real-life safety incidents and collisions\, and understand how transportation equity plays a crucial role in fostering inclusion\, upholding human rights\, and providing liability and judicial perspectives.\n\nTarget Audience\nTransportation engineers\, planners\, land use planners\, urban designers\, mobility technology service providers\, and other professionals involved in urban mobility system development\, who are focused on promoting equity within sustainable mobility solutions. \nLearning Outcomes\nAs a result of attending the training\, practitioners will be able to: \n\nEvaluate the processes used to implement equity policies and laws in contemporary transportation practice\nUnderstand vulnerability of energy\, resource\, climate impact on transportation systems and apply specific tools and develop policies\nIdentify the equity concerns associated with various tools for evaluating travel patterns and behavior\nApply strategies and tools to increase the access to employment\, education\, affordable housing\, and transportation for underserved communities\nEvaluate various strategies designed to increase access to emerging modes for underserved populations\nIdentify the potential equity impacts of proposed transportation funding mechanisms\n\nTrainers\nInstructors: Dewan Karim\, P.Eng.\, Abdulrahman Madani\, Dr. Julia de Lange\, and Mehemed Delibasic\, P.Eng. \nSupport: Abdul Razak Alozi\, Maryam Hasanpour  \nDewan Karim\, Mehemed Delibasic\, Abdul Madani\, and Julia de Lange are experts with 25+ years of combined experience in transportation safety\, engineering\, and biomechanics at 30 Forensic Engineering. Their work spans transportation planning\, traffic safety\, Vision Zero\, geometric design\, and injury biomechanics\, with academic and industry contributions in Canada\, Japan\, and Dubai. \nDewan Karim\, B.A.Sc.\, M. Eng.\, M.A.Sc.\, MITE\, P.Eng.\, PTOE\nMr. Dewan Karim is a Practice Lead of the Transportation and Safety Group at 30 Forensic Engineering. Dewan has worked in the public and private sectors in Japan and Canada for 25+ years of his career\, pioneering creative ideas in transportation engineering and planning. Dewan has investigated strategic safety and location-specific collisions from traffic engineering and safety regulations for all street users including motor vehicles\, cyclists\, pedestrians\, off-road and commercial vehicles\, trucks\, and motorcycles. \nMehemed Delibasic\, B.Sc.\, M.Sc.\, P.Eng.\nMehemed is Vice President of the Transportation and Safety Group at 30 Forensic Engineering. With over 25 years of comprehensive professional experience\, Mehemed has been involved in and managed numerous multi-modal transportation planning studies\, transportation master plans\, and transportation planning/traffic engineering studies. His most recent experience applies an equitable approach for Transportation/Active Master Planning Studies\, including affordable and equitable accessible transportation options. Mehemed is a recognized subject matter expert on the latest multi-modal transportation master planning studies\, active transportation master plan studies\, parking\, and traffic safety\, and has delivered several presentations on these topics at industry events. \nAbdul Madani\, BSCE\, M.Eng.\, E.I.T.\nMr. Abdul Madani is an Associate with the Transportation and Safety Group at 30 Forensic Engineering. He graduated from the University of Sharjah with Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering and a Master of Engineering in Civil Engineering from McMaster University\, with a specialization in geometric design risk and reliability assessment and highway safety. Prior to joining 30 Forensic Engineering\, Abdul worked for the Transportation sector in the Government of Dubai where he gained a range of skills in traffic safety\, work zone safety and traffic management\, road users’ safety\, policy updates\, and Vision Zero projects. \nJulia de Lange\, B.Eng.\, M.A.Sc.\, Ph.D.\, E.I.T.\nDr. Julia de Lange is an Associate with the Biomechanics and Personal Injury group at 30 Forensic Engineering. She earned her M.A.Sc. and Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering at McMaster University after completing her undergraduate degree in Biomedical Engineering at the University of Guelph. Her research focused on developing enhanced injury tolerance criteria for automotive and defense applications\, and appropriately translating these to crash test dummies. She has taught undergraduate courses in Biomedical Engineering and Mechanical Engineering at McMaster University. \nThe registration deadline for this event is March 19\, 2025.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250226T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250226T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20241210T194525Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241210T194525Z
UID:10000732-1740571200-1740574800@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Greater Vancouver: February Presentation: Integration of Resilience in Transportation: Research and Future Practice (Virtual)
DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver is pleased to have Dr. Stephen Wong present his research on the integration of resilience in transportation at 12:00 pm\, February 26th\, 2025. The virtual seminar will be free and online. \nDescription: Resilience is an increasingly important goal for transportation systems. As the climate changes and people continue to live in high risk areas\, resilient transportation that prepares for\, responds to\, and recovers from disruptions is expected to follow a similar integration pathway as sustainability. This presentation will discuss several key components of resilient transportation\, share current research in the North American context\, and discuss implications for applying the research in transportation practice. \nDr. Stephen Wong is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of Alberta and leads the Resilient and Sustainable Mobility and Evacuation (RESUME) Group. His research focuses on the intersection of disasters/emergencies\, decision-making\, and transportation and works to create more resilient\, environmentally friendly\, and equitable transportation systems. Dr. Wong is actively involved in multiple committees at the Transportation Research Board related to resilience\, strategic management\, and young professionals.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_Y2E4OTdmNzUtMWUwNy00YzQzLTkyMDktMTFmYTc2MTY1YWI5%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-greater-vancouver-february-presentation-integration-of-resilience-in-transportation-research-and-future-practice-virtual/
LOCATION:Greater Vancouver (Virtual)\, Vancouver\, BC\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Presentation,Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Greater Vancouver":MAILTO:vancouver@itecanada.org
GEO:49.282803889907;-123.12768196781
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_Y2E4OTdmNzUtMWUwNy00YzQzLTkyMDktMTFmYTc2MTY1YWI5%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver is pleased to have Dr. Stephen Wong present his research on the integration of resilience in transportation at 12:00 pm\, February 26th\, 2025. The virtual seminar will be free and online. \nDescription: Resilience is an increasingly important goal for transportation systems. As the climate changes and people continue to live in high risk areas\, resilient transportation that prepares for\, responds to\, and recovers from disruptions is expected to follow a similar integration pathway as sustainability. This presentation will discuss several key components of resilient transportation\, share current research in the North American context\, and discuss implications for applying the research in transportation practice. \nDr. Stephen Wong is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of Alberta and leads the Resilient and Sustainable Mobility and Evacuation (RESUME) Group. His research focuses on the intersection of disasters/emergencies\, decision-making\, and transportation and works to create more resilient\, environmentally friendly\, and equitable transportation systems. Dr. Wong is actively involved in multiple committees at the Transportation Research Board related to resilience\, strategic management\, and young professionals.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250205T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250206T113000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20241107T183846Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250205T231539Z
UID:10000728-1738742400-1738841400@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Canada: Virtual Technical Symposium
DESCRIPTION:ITE Canada invites you to join us for our first-ever Virtual Technical Symposium to be held on February 5 and 6\, 2025. This curated content will feature presenters from across Canada speaking on emergency planning\, functional planning design\, traffic and multimodal analysis\, and safety. \nSee the event webpage for more details.
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-canada-virtual-technical-symposium/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Symposium,Virtual,Webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Virtual-Symposium-169.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada":MAILTO:admin@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250123T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250123T160000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20241216T142743Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250801T174603Z
UID:10000734-1737633600-1737648000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:[TRAINING] Transportation & Affordability: Planning Complete Networks to Reduce Auto-Dependence
DESCRIPTION:This session will qualify for PDH credits for attendees. The registration deadline for this event is January 22\, 2025. \nWorkshop Description\nA community’s design plays a crucial role in shaping residents’ living costs\, particularly transportation expenses. One effective way to ease this financial burden is by creating “car-lite” communities where life without car ownership is convenient\, pleasant\, and sustainable. \nHowever\, designing or retrofitting such communities requires a collaborative\, thoughtful approach from land use planners\, transportation planners\, and engineers. The good news? Successful examples from around the world provide clear principles to guide the way. \nThe Half-Day Course is Divided into Four Modules: \n\nWhat Makes a Community Car-Lite and Why Does it Matter? The training will start by thoughtfully defining what it means for a community to be “car-lite”; that is\, for a resident of an area to have sufficient access to other modes of travel\, and car ownership is not required for convenient travel. We will link transportation affordability with overall affordability and discuss the opportunities for transport planners to make life more affordable for Canadians.\nExamining Car-Lite Communities in Canada and Elsewhere. We will discuss policy trends across Canada and review several master-planned communities. We’ll discuss the ambitions for each\, review the quality of the built infrastructure and mobility services provided\, and draw conclusions on the strengths and weaknesses of each development. Exercise #1: Participants will then be asked to complete their own network audit of an existing mixed-use community.\nDesigning Complete Networks. This part of the training explores how to design mobility networks for new or intensifying communities. We will discuss different types of urban traffic environments that prioritize different modes of traffic and how to lay these out at the network level using Safe Systems principles. Exercise #2: Participants will gain hands-on experience and design a transportation network for themselves in the breakout exercise.\nUnderstanding the Barriers to Implementation. The final block will discuss practical implications and challenges that an engineer or planner may encounter in trying to implement some of the concepts presented in the course. We will explore the shortcomings of the traditional process of laying out a street network solely based on auto-oriented functions (arterial\, collector\, local) as well as the alternatives (prioritizing corridors based on mode)\, and discuss how land use designations fit in.\n\nOverall\, the course will leave participants with a stronger understanding of the building blocks for car-lite communities and actionable takeaways for their work in producing transportation master plans\, secondary plans\, plans of subdivision\, and transportation impact assessments. \nLearning Outcomes\nAs a result of attending the training\, practitioners will be able to: \n\nDescribe the role of transportation practitioners in addressing Canada’s housing crisis\nExplain the concepts of being car-dependent\, car-free\, and car-less and its impacts on access to opportunity and mobility poverty\nUnderstand examples of various communities and neighbourhoods across Canada that have been designed to support car-lite living\nEvaluate a proposed or existing community layout for its likelihood of supporting multimodal travel by looking at its street design\, land uses\, and network structure\nDesign a multimodal street network for a new or retrofitted urban neighbourhood\n\nTarget Audience\nTransportation Planners\, Land Use Planners and Transportation Engineers who are interested designing more sustainable\, affordable and inclusive communities. \nTrainer bios\nMatt Pinder\, P.Eng.\, M.Eng.Lead Trainer \nMatt has a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in civil engineering and nine years of experience in transportation planning and engineering. Matt is an emerging expert in the planning and design of streets\, intersections\, and communities that address the needs of all road users. He has advised on and completed concept and detailed designs for dozens of complete streets and bikeway projects across Canada including the City of Toronto’s ITE-award-winning York University Cycling Connections project. He has contributed to award-winning design guidance documents including the Ottawa Protected Intersection Design Guide and the Ontario Protected Intersection Guide.His experience also includes leading trainings\, including for the Ontario Protected Intersection Guide\, as well as the updated OTM Book 18: Cycling Facilities which he has delivered to over 600 professionals. He was also a trainer for the April 2024 ITE Canada training session on multimodal traffic signal operations \n  \nNarayan Donaldson\, M.Sc.Assistant Trainer \nNarayan has a bachelor’s degree in urban planning and a master’s degree in civil engineering\, and seven years of planning and engineering experience in Canada and the Netherlands. He was the lead trainer for the 2023/24 ITE Canada training session on multimodal traffic signal operations and has co-led in-person workshops such as a network planning exercise at the 2024 Winter Cycling Congress in Edmonton. He has been applying Complete Networks principles in roles such as the Mobycon project leader for the Renfrew County transportation master plan\, and a planner implementing the Town of Canmore’s town centre streetscape plan based on the Complete Networks principles of the Integrated Master Plan \n  \nArianne Robillard\, M.Sc.Assistant Trainer \nArianne has a Master of Science in Civil Engineering specializing in Transportation Planning. Her experience includes transportation and mobility research\, active transportation\, transit-oriented development\, and accessibility. Her academic publications include cycling access to transit-oriented development nodes and measurement of access to parks and green spaces\, and has presented at conferences in Brussels\, Portland\, Quebec City\, and Montreal. She spent four months in the Netherlands studying at Utrecht University studying Human Geography and Spatial Planning\, contributing to the design of accessibility indicator tools. \nThe registration deadline for this event is January 22\, 2025. \n\n \n \n \n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NDgzZjllY2ItNmEwZS00YzQwLTliYzMtOGZlNjJkMWU3NjQ2%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22a028b933-6a31-40a7-b6bf-d952c478ad03%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%226a525872-42e7-419e-a53b-427486366ccb%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/training-transportation-affordability-2025jan/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Training,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/Training-Affordability-Mobycon-Jan-2025-1.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada Training Committee":MAILTO:training@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NDgzZjllY2ItNmEwZS00YzQwLTliYzMtOGZlNjJkMWU3NjQ2%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22a028b933-6a31-40a7-b6bf-d952c478ad03%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%226a525872-42e7-419e-a53b-427486366ccb%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:This session will qualify for PDH credits for attendees. The registration deadline for this event is January 22\, 2025. \nWorkshop Description\nA community’s design plays a crucial role in shaping residents’ living costs\, particularly transportation expenses. One effective way to ease this financial burden is by creating “car-lite” communities where life without car ownership is convenient\, pleasant\, and sustainable. \nHowever\, designing or retrofitting such communities requires a collaborative\, thoughtful approach from land use planners\, transportation planners\, and engineers. The good news? Successful examples from around the world provide clear principles to guide the way. \nThe Half-Day Course is Divided into Four Modules: \n\nWhat Makes a Community Car-Lite and Why Does it Matter? The training will start by thoughtfully defining what it means for a community to be “car-lite”; that is\, for a resident of an area to have sufficient access to other modes of travel\, and car ownership is not required for convenient travel. We will link transportation affordability with overall affordability and discuss the opportunities for transport planners to make life more affordable for Canadians.\nExamining Car-Lite Communities in Canada and Elsewhere. We will discuss policy trends across Canada and review several master-planned communities. We’ll discuss the ambitions for each\, review the quality of the built infrastructure and mobility services provided\, and draw conclusions on the strengths and weaknesses of each development. Exercise #1: Participants will then be asked to complete their own network audit of an existing mixed-use community.\nDesigning Complete Networks. This part of the training explores how to design mobility networks for new or intensifying communities. We will discuss different types of urban traffic environments that prioritize different modes of traffic and how to lay these out at the network level using Safe Systems principles. Exercise #2: Participants will gain hands-on experience and design a transportation network for themselves in the breakout exercise.\nUnderstanding the Barriers to Implementation. The final block will discuss practical implications and challenges that an engineer or planner may encounter in trying to implement some of the concepts presented in the course. We will explore the shortcomings of the traditional process of laying out a street network solely based on auto-oriented functions (arterial\, collector\, local) as well as the alternatives (prioritizing corridors based on mode)\, and discuss how land use designations fit in.\n\nOverall\, the course will leave participants with a stronger understanding of the building blocks for car-lite communities and actionable takeaways for their work in producing transportation master plans\, secondary plans\, plans of subdivision\, and transportation impact assessments. \nLearning Outcomes\nAs a result of attending the training\, practitioners will be able to: \n\nDescribe the role of transportation practitioners in addressing Canada’s housing crisis\nExplain the concepts of being car-dependent\, car-free\, and car-less and its impacts on access to opportunity and mobility poverty\nUnderstand examples of various communities and neighbourhoods across Canada that have been designed to support car-lite living\nEvaluate a proposed or existing community layout for its likelihood of supporting multimodal travel by looking at its street design\, land uses\, and network structure\nDesign a multimodal street network for a new or retrofitted urban neighbourhood\n\nTarget Audience\nTransportation Planners\, Land Use Planners and Transportation Engineers who are interested designing more sustainable\, affordable and inclusive communities. \nTrainer bios\nMatt Pinder\, P.Eng.\, M.Eng.Lead Trainer \nMatt has a bachelor’s and a master’s degree in civil engineering and nine years of experience in transportation planning and engineering. Matt is an emerging expert in the planning and design of streets\, intersections\, and communities that address the needs of all road users. He has advised on and completed concept and detailed designs for dozens of complete streets and bikeway projects across Canada including the City of Toronto’s ITE-award-winning York University Cycling Connections project. He has contributed to award-winning design guidance documents including the Ottawa Protected Intersection Design Guide and the Ontario Protected Intersection Guide.His experience also includes leading trainings\, including for the Ontario Protected Intersection Guide\, as well as the updated OTM Book 18: Cycling Facilities which he has delivered to over 600 professionals. He was also a trainer for the April 2024 ITE Canada training session on multimodal traffic signal operations \n  \nNarayan Donaldson\, M.Sc.Assistant Trainer \nNarayan has a bachelor’s degree in urban planning and a master’s degree in civil engineering\, and seven years of planning and engineering experience in Canada and the Netherlands. He was the lead trainer for the 2023/24 ITE Canada training session on multimodal traffic signal operations and has co-led in-person workshops such as a network planning exercise at the 2024 Winter Cycling Congress in Edmonton. He has been applying Complete Networks principles in roles such as the Mobycon project leader for the Renfrew County transportation master plan\, and a planner implementing the Town of Canmore’s town centre streetscape plan based on the Complete Networks principles of the Integrated Master Plan \n  \nArianne Robillard\, M.Sc.Assistant Trainer \nArianne has a Master of Science in Civil Engineering specializing in Transportation Planning. Her experience includes transportation and mobility research\, active transportation\, transit-oriented development\, and accessibility. Her academic publications include cycling access to transit-oriented development nodes and measurement of access to parks and green spaces\, and has presented at conferences in Brussels\, Portland\, Quebec City\, and Montreal. She spent four months in the Netherlands studying at Utrecht University studying Human Geography and Spatial Planning\, contributing to the design of accessibility indicator tools. \nThe registration deadline for this event is January 22\, 2025. \n\n \n \n 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241211T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241211T150000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20240912T163853Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241206T213156Z
UID:10000698-1733925600-1733929200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Canada: 2024 Annual General Meeting (virtual)
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for ITE Canada Annual General Meeting. This virtual meeting will take place Wednesday\, December 11\, 2024 at 2 pm Eastern / 11 am Pacific. All Canadian District Members of ITE are welcome to attend. Note that only non-student members are permitted to vote on motions at the meeting. \nThis is a virtual event. Please click the RSVP below to register. Your ITE membership number is required to register. \nThe agenda and associated materials\, including the 2024 Financial Statements and 2023-2024 Annual Report\, as well as a proxy voting form will be available to download here: \nAnnual General Meeting 2024 page.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_OWNhNjM4ODUtNWZjMC00NTY2LTlmNjktYjRjOGUzNjM3M2Iy%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-canada-annual-general-meeting-virtual-2/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:AGM,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Social-Post-Event-Banner-AGM.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada":MAILTO:admin@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_OWNhNjM4ODUtNWZjMC00NTY2LTlmNjktYjRjOGUzNjM3M2Iy%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Please join us for ITE Canada Annual General Meeting. This virtual meeting will take place Wednesday\, December 11\, 2024 at 2 pm Eastern / 11 am Pacific. All Canadian District Members of ITE are welcome to attend. Note that only non-student members are permitted to vote on motions at the meeting. \nThis is a virtual event. Please click the RSVP below to register. Your ITE membership number is required to register. \nThe agenda and associated materials\, including the 2024 Financial Statements and 2023-2024 Annual Report\, as well as a proxy voting form will be available to download here: \nAnnual General Meeting 2024 page.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20241204T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20241204T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20241104T161221Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241202T193018Z
UID:10000725-1733313600-1733317200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Greater Vancouver: December Presentation: 4-Year Trends of Personal Mobility Devices in Metropolitan Vancouver: The Evolution of Mode Shares\, Speeds\, and Comfort in Off-Street Paths (virtual)
DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver is pleased to have Amir Hassanpour present his research on 4-year trends of personal mobility devices in Metro Vancouver at 12:00 pm\, December 4th\, 2024. The virtual seminar will be free and online. \nAmir Hassanpour is a Ph.D. candidate in Civil Engineering at UBC\, working as a researcher and analyst at REACT Lab. His work focuses on emerging personal transportation technologies\, such as e-bikes and e-scooters. Amir has collaborated on projects with several municipalities in the region\, TransLink\, and the Province. Most recently\, he is working on evaluating the GHG impacts of BC’s e-bike incentive program. Amir also serves as a sessional lecturer at UBC\, teaching transportation engineering fundamentals to 4th-year civil engineering students. Additionally\, he is a scholar at UBC’s Climate Solutions Research Collective\, where he investigates the role of micromobility devices in climate mitigation.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://meet.google.com/bdz-irti-jto\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-greater-vancouver-december-presentation-4-year-trends-of-personal-mobility-devices-in-metropolitan-vancouver-the-evolution-of-mode-shares-speeds-and-comfort-in-off-street-paths-virtual/
LOCATION:Greater Vancouver (Virtual)\, Vancouver\, BC\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Presentation,Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Greater Vancouver":MAILTO:vancouver@itecanada.org
GEO:49.282803889907;-123.12768196781
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://meet.google.com/bdz-irti-jto">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver is pleased to have Amir Hassanpour present his research on 4-year trends of personal mobility devices in Metro Vancouver at 12:00 pm\, December 4th\, 2024. The virtual seminar will be free and online. \nAmir Hassanpour is a Ph.D. candidate in Civil Engineering at UBC\, working as a researcher and analyst at REACT Lab. His work focuses on emerging personal transportation technologies\, such as e-bikes and e-scooters. Amir has collaborated on projects with several municipalities in the region\, TransLink\, and the Province. Most recently\, he is working on evaluating the GHG impacts of BC’s e-bike incentive program. Amir also serves as a sessional lecturer at UBC\, teaching transportation engineering fundamentals to 4th-year civil engineering students. Additionally\, he is a scholar at UBC’s Climate Solutions Research Collective\, where he investigates the role of micromobility devices in climate mitigation.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241119T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241119T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20241025T180658Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241118T162821Z
UID:10000722-1732017600-1732021200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Toronto: Accessibility and Inclusion in the Built Environment (virtual)
DESCRIPTION:Through presentation and interactive discussions\, this webinar will address how we can create more accessible and inclusive built environments for all. This includes the interaction with transportation engineering and design. \nSpeaker\nHaley Rae Lawson (she/her) BDes\, RHFAC Professional\, is a Toronto-based Senior Accessibility Specialist at Human Space\, the inclusive design profession of BDP – a global architecture\, design and urbanism consultancy. She helps to create thoughtful and innovative solutions that promote equity\, wellbeing and participation in the built environment. Haley Rae helps to lead and develop inclusive design strategies and practices across multiple complex projects and various public forums. She primarily focuses on services such as consulting\, certification and benchmarking\, guidelines and standards\, building audits\, and training. Haley Rae contributes her technical expertise on international\, national\, provincial and municipal accessibility requirements and better practices. She actively practices allyship\, and draws on her lived\, professional and volunteer experiences to advocate for inclusion\, equity and accessibility. Haley Rae’s background in environmental design\, and experience as a design educator at OCAD University\, contribute to her unique perspective in accessibility consulting. She is committed to using an intersectional approach to design\, actively including and learning from people with a range of perspectives and educating others about the diversity of ways to create spaces for all. \n \n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZmQ0NmFkM2ItODM4My00MWYyLWJkMzktYmExNDFhMWZiZDQ0%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-toronto-accessibility-and-inclusion-in-the-built-environment-virtual/
LOCATION:Toronto Area (Virtual)\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Toronto Section":MAILTO:activities@toronto.itecanada.org
GEO:43.725103;-79.369138
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZmQ0NmFkM2ItODM4My00MWYyLWJkMzktYmExNDFhMWZiZDQ0%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Through presentation and interactive discussions\, this webinar will address how we can create more accessible and inclusive built environments for all. This includes the interaction with transportation engineering and design. \nSpeaker\nHaley Rae Lawson (she/her) BDes\, RHFAC Professional\, is a Toronto-based Senior Accessibility Specialist at Human Space\, the inclusive design profession of BDP – a global architecture\, design and urbanism consultancy. She helps to create thoughtful and innovative solutions that promote equity\, wellbeing and participation in the built environment. Haley Rae helps to lead and develop inclusive design strategies and practices across multiple complex projects and various public forums. She primarily focuses on services such as consulting\, certification and benchmarking\, guidelines and standards\, building audits\, and training. Haley Rae contributes her technical expertise on international\, national\, provincial and municipal accessibility requirements and better practices. She actively practices allyship\, and draws on her lived\, professional and volunteer experiences to advocate for inclusion\, equity and accessibility. Haley Rae’s background in environmental design\, and experience as a design educator at OCAD University\, contribute to her unique perspective in accessibility consulting. She is committed to using an intersectional approach to design\, actively including and learning from people with a range of perspectives and educating others about the diversity of ways to create spaces for all. \n 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Edmonton:20241105T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Edmonton:20241105T124500
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20241030T152118Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241031T173831Z
UID:10000723-1730808000-1730810700@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Southern Alberta: AGM
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for ITE Southern Alberta Section’s Annual General Meeting. This virtual meeting will take place on Wednesday November 5\, 12pm. All ITE Southern Alberta Members are welcome to attend. Note that only non-student members are permitted to vote on motions at the meeting. At the AGM we will introduce the new Publicity Coordinator along with the remaining Executive Committee Members and their new roles. \nDoor prizes will be provided! \nThis is a virtual event. Please click the RSVP below to register. Your ITE membership number is required to register. \n  \nLocation: MS Teams\nDate: November 5\, 2024\nTime: 12:00-12:45pm\nCost: Free \n \n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NjJhMDA0YTktMzcxZi00Zjk1LWFmMjQtNWNmZTc4MmI2MWJk%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-southern-alberta-agm-2/
LOCATION:Calgary Area (Virtual)\, Calgary\, Alberta\, Canada
CATEGORIES:AGM,Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Southern Alberta Section":MAILTO:southernalberta@itecanada.org
GEO:51.046004044031;-114.05744770361
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_NjJhMDA0YTktMzcxZi00Zjk1LWFmMjQtNWNmZTc4MmI2MWJk%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Please join us for ITE Southern Alberta Section’s Annual General Meeting. This virtual meeting will take place on Wednesday November 5\, 12pm. All ITE Southern Alberta Members are welcome to attend. Note that only non-student members are permitted to vote on motions at the meeting. At the AGM we will introduce the new Publicity Coordinator along with the remaining Executive Committee Members and their new roles. \nDoor prizes will be provided! \nThis is a virtual event. Please click the RSVP below to register. Your ITE membership number is required to register. \n  \nLocation: MS Teams\nDate: November 5\, 2024\nTime: 12:00-12:45pm\nCost: Free \n 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241028T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241028T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20241016T154538Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241127T141357Z
UID:10000719-1730116800-1730120400@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Toronto: Transit Priority Measures in the City of Toronto (virtual)
DESCRIPTION:To improve the speed and reliability of surface transit the TTC employs several Transit Priority Measures (TPMs). TPMs include policies\, technology\, and infrastructure projects that support the bus and streetcar network. This presentation gives information on the supporting policies that enable these measures and how they are implemented. The main TPMs that the TTC uses and will be covered include: Transit Signal Priority\, Queue Jump Lanes\, Bus Priority Lanes\, and Regulatory Changes. In addition\, several projects will be presented that demonstrate these TPMs in action. \nSpeakers \nMarc Tan\nMarc is the Manager of Transportation Engineering at TTC\, leading a team Transportation Engineers and Technicians for several years to help Toronto’s Streetcars and Buses move faster and more reliably. He is a Licensed Professional Engineer in Ontario with over 10 years of experience with skills in traffic operations\, TSP systems design\, Transit Priority Measures\, transit and traffic management plans and traffic modeling software. Throughout his career Marc has been working closely with different municipal and transit agencies\, as well as delivering several public transit P3 projects in the GTA. He is very passionate about the design and planning public transit systems through data driven approaches. \nJordan Hart-Bishop\nJordan is a Senior Transportation Engineer with the TTC in Operations Planning. His background includes work within the public\, private\, and academic sectors. Jordan has a passion for traffic operations with a focus on signalized control. He has completed numerous planning and operations studies with the use of Synchro. \n  \n \n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZWY2MjcyNGMtZjA5NS00Yzg5LTgzOTctMjEwNDMxMjk0YjM1%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-toronto-transit-priority-measures-in-the-city-of-toronto-virtual/
LOCATION:Toronto Area (Virtual)\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Virtual,Webinar
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Toronto Section":MAILTO:activities@toronto.itecanada.org
GEO:43.725103;-79.369138
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZWY2MjcyNGMtZjA5NS00Yzg5LTgzOTctMjEwNDMxMjk0YjM1%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:To improve the speed and reliability of surface transit the TTC employs several Transit Priority Measures (TPMs). TPMs include policies\, technology\, and infrastructure projects that support the bus and streetcar network. This presentation gives information on the supporting policies that enable these measures and how they are implemented. The main TPMs that the TTC uses and will be covered include: Transit Signal Priority\, Queue Jump Lanes\, Bus Priority Lanes\, and Regulatory Changes. In addition\, several projects will be presented that demonstrate these TPMs in action. \nSpeakers \nMarc Tan\nMarc is the Manager of Transportation Engineering at TTC\, leading a team Transportation Engineers and Technicians for several years to help Toronto’s Streetcars and Buses move faster and more reliably. He is a Licensed Professional Engineer in Ontario with over 10 years of experience with skills in traffic operations\, TSP systems design\, Transit Priority Measures\, transit and traffic management plans and traffic modeling software. Throughout his career Marc has been working closely with different municipal and transit agencies\, as well as delivering several public transit P3 projects in the GTA. He is very passionate about the design and planning public transit systems through data driven approaches. \nJordan Hart-Bishop\nJordan is a Senior Transportation Engineer with the TTC in Operations Planning. His background includes work within the public\, private\, and academic sectors. Jordan has a passion for traffic operations with a focus on signalized control. He has completed numerous planning and operations studies with the use of Synchro. \n  \n 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241008T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241008T130000
DTSTAMP:20260526T224052
CREATED:20240703T160149Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240923T150735Z
UID:10000681-1728388800-1728392400@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Canada & CARSP Joint Webinar: Design Guide for Bus Stops Adjacent to Cycling Infrastructure
DESCRIPTION:NOTE: This webinar is now at capacity.  \nTransLink\, in partnership with the B.C. Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure (MoTI)\, recently retained Urban Systems to create the Design Guide for Bus Stops Adjacent to Cycling Infrastructure (download here\, PDF 14.8 MB) to provide province-wide guidance to develop “island platform bus stops” or “floating bus stops” in British Columbia.  The Design Guide provides a comprehensive set of planning and engineering guidelines offering solutions for the planning\, design\, operation\, and maintenance of bus stops adjacent to protected cycling infrastructure in a range of contexts and applications throughout British Columbia\, along with guidance for education and engagement. This Design Guide is the first of its kind in North America and addresses a significant gap in knowledge on how to design bus stops to meet the needs of people with disabilities while also being comfortable for cyclists of all ages and abilities. The Design Guide was developed with extensive stakeholder engagement\, including pilot projects in five municipalities in British Columbia. The Design Guide was awarded both the ITE Canada Stan Teply Outstanding Technical Project Award and the ITE International Transportation Achievement Award – Planning Award in 2024. \nThis virtual session will provide an overview of the Design Guide as well as lessons learned from municipal staff from two case study communities. \nRegistration for this webinar is FREE for current ITE and CARSP members. Non-members are welcome to purchase a ticket. \nPresenters\nBrian Patterson\, RPP\, MCIP\, PMP\, RSP1 \nSenior Planner\, Urban Systems \n \nBrian is a senior transportation and brings over 20 years of experience in active transportation planning and design\, multi-modal transportation planning\, and safety and accessibility. Brian has developed over hundreds of plans\, designs\, and studies for communities of all sizes across Canada and has been recognized with numerous industry awards. Brian led the development of the Design Guide for Bus Stops Adajcent to Cycling Infrastructure and has led numerous other design guides\, including the BC Active Transportation Design Guide. \n  \nSuzanne Therrien\, MPH \nActive Transportation Planner\, City of Kelowna \n\nSuzanne is an Active Transportation Planner at the City of Kelowna. Her work focuses on programs\, resources and partnerships to promote more trips by active modes. She holds a Master degree in Public Health with specialty in population health and has over decade experience in active transportation research. \n  \n  \n  \nMo Bot\, RPP\, PMP \nProject Manager\, Public Realm Infrastructure\, City of North Vancouver \n\nMo is a collaboratively-minded project manager specializing in multimodal transportation policy development\, infrastructure design and construction. Mo has worked across Canada on everything from big city major transit projects to site specific high impact public realm and active mobility improvements. They are always keen to hear all perspectives and strive to support physical and social spaces where learning and justice are centred. Rather than give everyone a space at the table\, Mo invites you to smash the table to pieces and build something new that explores the collective experience together.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZTVlNjAwOWYtNjQ2MC00ZjY2LThlOWMtYzViNGY1ZjhhNzZi%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-canada-and-carsp-design-guide-for-bus-stops-adjacent-to-cycling-infrastructure/
LOCATION:Ottawa Area (Virtual)\, Ottawa\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Presentation,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Webinar-Header-Joint-CARSP-Oct-8-2024-Floating-Bus-Stops-min.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Canada":MAILTO:admin@itecanada.org
GEO:45.448628;-75.654714
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_ZTVlNjAwOWYtNjQ2MC00ZjY2LThlOWMtYzViNGY1ZjhhNzZi%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%22875688ea-8b21-4b98-b25b-4b81851ad72d%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%224a3ba1e2-3eaf-46fd-a2aa-5dc1b59160ca%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:NOTE: This webinar is now at capacity.  \nTransLink\, in partnership with the B.C. Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure (MoTI)\, recently retained Urban Systems to create the Design Guide for Bus Stops Adjacent to Cycling Infrastructure (download here\, PDF 14.8 MB) to provide province-wide guidance to develop “island platform bus stops” or “floating bus stops” in British Columbia.  The Design Guide provides a comprehensive set of planning and engineering guidelines offering solutions for the planning\, design\, operation\, and maintenance of bus stops adjacent to protected cycling infrastructure in a range of contexts and applications throughout British Columbia\, along with guidance for education and engagement. This Design Guide is the first of its kind in North America and addresses a significant gap in knowledge on how to design bus stops to meet the needs of people with disabilities while also being comfortable for cyclists of all ages and abilities. The Design Guide was developed with extensive stakeholder engagement\, including pilot projects in five municipalities in British Columbia. The Design Guide was awarded both the ITE Canada Stan Teply Outstanding Technical Project Award and the ITE International Transportation Achievement Award – Planning Award in 2024. \nThis virtual session will provide an overview of the Design Guide as well as lessons learned from municipal staff from two case study communities. \nRegistration for this webinar is FREE for current ITE and CARSP members. Non-members are welcome to purchase a ticket. \nPresenters\nBrian Patterson\, RPP\, MCIP\, PMP\, RSP1 \nSenior Planner\, Urban Systems \n \nBrian is a senior transportation and brings over 20 years of experience in active transportation planning and design\, multi-modal transportation planning\, and safety and accessibility. Brian has developed over hundreds of plans\, designs\, and studies for communities of all sizes across Canada and has been recognized with numerous industry awards. Brian led the development of the Design Guide for Bus Stops Adajcent to Cycling Infrastructure and has led numerous other design guides\, including the BC Active Transportation Design Guide. \n  \nSuzanne Therrien\, MPH \nActive Transportation Planner\, City of Kelowna \n\nSuzanne is an Active Transportation Planner at the City of Kelowna. Her work focuses on programs\, resources and partnerships to promote more trips by active modes. She holds a Master degree in Public Health with specialty in population health and has over decade experience in active transportation research. \n  \n  \n  \nMo Bot\, RPP\, PMP \nProject Manager\, Public Realm Infrastructure\, City of North Vancouver \n\nMo is a collaboratively-minded project manager specializing in multimodal transportation policy development\, infrastructure design and construction. Mo has worked across Canada on everything from big city major transit projects to site specific high impact public realm and active mobility improvements. They are always keen to hear all perspectives and strive to support physical and social spaces where learning and justice are centred. Rather than give everyone a space at the table\, Mo invites you to smash the table to pieces and build something new that explores the collective experience together.
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR