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DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250115T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250115T203000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20241210T192830Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250117T234801Z
UID:10000731-1736962200-1736973000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Greater Vancouver - January Meeting - AGM
DESCRIPTION:The ITE Greater Vancouver Section is pleased to host our AGM on January 15\, 2025. During the event\, we will provide a summary of our 2024 events\, celebrate our award winners\, and welcome the new executive team. \nThe event will be held at Tap & Barrel – Convention Centre in Vancouver. Registration will close after Friday\, January 10th\, 2025. \n\n\n \n\n\n\n \n\n\n\n 
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-greater-vancouver-january-meeting-agm-2/
LOCATION:Tap & Barrel – Convention Centre | Vancouver\, 1055 Canada Pl #76\, Vancouver\, BC\, V6C 0C3\, Canada
CATEGORIES:AGM
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/AGM.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Greater Vancouver":MAILTO:vancouver@itecanada.org
GEO:49.288873;-123.11506
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Tap & Barrel – Convention Centre | Vancouver 1055 Canada Pl #76 Vancouver BC V6C 0C3 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1055 Canada Pl #76:geo:-123.11506,49.288873
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250117T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250117T133000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20241223T224644Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251030T141114Z
UID:10000735-1737113400-1737120600@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE National Capital: 2024 Annual General Meeting
DESCRIPTION:The ITE National Capital Section would like to invite you to our Annual General Meeting (AGM)! The AGM will close-out our activities for 2024 with a year-end review of the 2024 Annual Report and assignment of our 2025 Executive committee.
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-national-capital-2024-annual-general-meeting/
LOCATION:Milestones Grill – Ottawa\, 325 Marché Way\, Ottawa\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:AGM
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/2024-AGM-v2-e1734993976790.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE National Capital Section":MAILTO:nationalcapital@itecanada.org
GEO:45.400646;-75.683835
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Milestones Grill – Ottawa 325 Marché Way Ottawa Ontario Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=325 Marché Way:geo:-75.683835,45.400646
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250123T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250123T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250106T205456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250120T230346Z
UID:10000736-1737631800-1737637200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Southern Alberta January Luncheon
DESCRIPTION:About the Presentation\nLocated 486km northwest of Edmonton\, the Town of Peace River is the second largest centre in northwestern Alberta with a population of 6\,620 people. The recent construction of a new bridge across the Peace River with dedicated active transportation infrastructure spurred significant opportunity for active transportation connectivity through the Town. \nBunt & Associates\, together with the Town\, developed an Active Transportation Plan to provide infrastructure and policy recommendations to provide the Town of Peace River with critical initial steps towards continued active transportation growth. Bunt will present an overview of the Active Transportation Plan project including a look into Peace River’s current network\, a highlight of some of the geographical and climate challenges\, and the draft plan. \n  \nAbout the Presenter\n \nErin Tattrie\, RSE\, AScT\, joined Bunt & Associates in 2019 after graduating from BCIT. Since then\, she has obtained her AScT designation with ASTTBC and now works in Bunt’s Kelowna office. Erin has been involved in a range of transportation planning projects\, including transportation impact assessments\, active transportation plans\, transportation demand management plans\, parking and loading studies\, and GIS analysis. Erin has an interest in developing transportation networks that integrate all modes in a safe\, efficient\, and sustainable manner.\nOutside of work\, Erin enjoys curling\, archery\, volleyball\, soccer\, snowboarding and camping.
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-southern-alberta-january-luncheon/
LOCATION:Danish Canadian Club\, 727 11 Ave SW\, Calgary\, AB\, T2R 0E3\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Luncheon
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Southern Alberta Section":MAILTO:southernalberta@itecanada.org
GEO:51.0424442;-114.0780921
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Danish Canadian Club 727 11 Ave SW Calgary AB T2R 0E3 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=727 11 Ave SW:geo:-114.0780921,51.0424442
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250123T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250123T160000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
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/Edmonton:20250204T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250204T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250117T001059Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250203T165546Z
UID:10000738-1738690200-1738699200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE SA Industry-Student Mixer
DESCRIPTION:Time: 5:30pm to 8pm (doors open at 5:00pm) \nLocation: Last Defence Lounge\, University of Calgary Campus\, MacEwan Hall building\, upper floor. \nPrice: FREE for students and professionals \nSponsorship: $300 \nTransportation: C-Train station conveniently available from downtown\, busses 20\, 303\, 38\, 53\, 8. For parking\, lot 13 is closest lot but lot 11 is the largest and often available: https://www.ucalgary.ca/ancillary/parking/parking-permits/find-parking \nDescription: Interested in meeting the next generation of transportation professionals? Please join us at the University of Calgary campus for an Industry-Student Mixer with engineering\, transportation and planning students. This in-person event\, organized by the Civil Engineering Undergraduate Society and UofC Student Chapter of ITE\, will be a great opportunity to network with students\, and share your knowledge and experience in the transportation industry. For students\, this will be a fantastic opportunity to network and to learn from current professionals about what the field of transportation is all about. Buffet selection of the Last Defence Lounge will be provided and drinks will be available to purchase from private access to the venue bar. \nITE membership is free for full-time post-secondary students. To learn more about the ITE community and the benefits of becoming a student member\, please visit itecanada.org/students/resources. \n  \n 
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-sa-industry-student-mixer/
LOCATION:University of Calgary\, 2500 University Dr. NW\, Calgary\, Alberta\, T2N 1N4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Mixer
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Southern Alberta Section":MAILTO:southernalberta@itecanada.org
GEO:51.0763741;-114.1315479
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=University of Calgary 2500 University Dr. NW Calgary Alberta T2N 1N4 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=2500 University Dr. NW:geo:-114.1315479,51.0763741
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250205T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250206T113000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
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/Regina:20250212T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Regina:20250212T190000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250128T175418Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250130T205753Z
UID:10000740-1739379600-1739386800@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Saskatchewan: Pizza with Transportation Pros
DESCRIPTION:ITE Saskatchewan invites you to our Pizza with Transportation Pros on February 12\, 2025\, at Louis’ in Saskatoon. This event is a unique opportunity for our members to connect with university students who are interested in exploring a career in transportation. \nWe encourage our members to come out\, share their experiences\, and network with the next generation of transportation professionals. Your insights and guidance can make a lasting impact on these students as they explore potential career paths in our field. We look forward to seeing you there! \nWhat’s on Offer: Free pizza and a drink!
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-saskatchewan-pizza-with-transportation-pros/
LOCATION:Louis’ Pub\, 93 Campus Dr\, Saskatoon\, Saskatchewan\, S7N 5B2\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Dinner,Mixer
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Saskatchewan Section":MAILTO:saskatchewan@itecanada.org
GEO:52.129989;-106.635181
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Louis’ Pub 93 Campus Dr Saskatoon Saskatchewan S7N 5B2 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=93 Campus Dr:geo:-106.635181,52.129989
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250226T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250226T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
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/Toronto:20250227T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250227T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250109T222228Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250129T150054Z
UID:10000737-1740657600-1740661200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:Sustainable Safety and Vision Zero - Joint CARSP/ITE Canada Webinar
DESCRIPTION:This Joint CARSP& ITE Canada Webinar explores Sustainable Safety and Vision Zero\, examining their philosophies\, best practices\, and practical applications. Through a comparative analysis\, participants will gain insights into how these frameworks complement one another and the challenges inherent in integrating them. \nThe session includes case studies from Canada\, the United States\, and the Netherlands\, showcasing diverse contexts shaped by varying local needs\, cultural factors\, and community scales. These examples will illustrate how to adapt these frameworks effectively to specific road conditions\, traffic behaviours\, and societal norms. \nThe webinar will balance presentation and interaction\, with tools like Menti polls and a dedicated Q&A segment to foster engagement and practical takeaways. \nRegistration for this webinar is FREE for current CARSP and ITE members. Non-members are welcome to purchase a ticket. \nVisit the event website to register \nSpeakers\n\nAnna Luten\n\n\n\n\nLead Workshop Facilitator\nMobycon \nAnna is a communication specialist based on North America. Originally hailing from the Netherlands\, Anna was the first Bicycle Mayor of Amsterdam and is focussed on urban cycling safety and advocacy to foster sustainable transportation in North America. Anna brings a diverse experience which has seen her collaborate in various industries from fashion and e-commerce to bicycle manufacturers\, startups and urban mobility organisations. \nAnna is an excellent storyteller with a flair for developing implementable strategies\, working adeptly from strategy creation through to execution. With her expertise in mobility\, she is passionate about improving urban environments for the betterment of communities and cities. \n\n \n\n\n\n\n\n\nNarayan Donaldson \n\nTransportation Planner\nMobycon \nNarayan is a transportation planner with seven years of planning and engineering experience in Canada and the Netherlands. He is passionate about rebuilding streets and networks to allow people to move safely and efficiently using all modes of transport. He specializes in the design of intersections including physical design and traffic signal control\, with a particular focus on active transportation modes and public transit. Prior to working at Mobycon\, he worked as a traffic signal program developer in the Netherlands and in Ontario. He also has experience designing streets through his previous work as a transportation planner for the Toronto Transit Commission. His combination of Canadian and Dutch experience makes him well-suited for adapting European strategies for a North-American context.
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/sustainable-safety-and-vision-zero-joint-carsp-ite-canada-webinar/
LOCATION:Toronto Area (Virtual)\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Webinar-Banner-CARSP-ITE-Canada-Feb-27-2025-Mobycon-1.png
ORGANIZER;CN="CARSP":MAILTO:info@carsp.ca
GEO:43.725103;-79.369138
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250305T114500
DTEND;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250305T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250206T190107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250206T190107Z
UID:10000743-1741175100-1741179600@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Northern Alberta: March 2025 Luncheon
DESCRIPTION:Future Directions in Road Safety Research\nThe talk will highlight why this is a particularly thrilling time to be in the area of road safety and the array of opportunities it offers to academics\, practitioners\, and entrepreneurs. We’ll explore how technological advancements\, shifting transportation trends\, and increased public awareness are shaping road safety research. \n  \nAbout the Presenter:\nKarim El-Basyouny\, Ph.D.\, P.Eng.  (pronounced: Ka-Reem Ehl Bas-yoo-nee) \nDr. Karim El-Basyouny is a #KillamLaureate Professor and holds an endowed chair position in urban traffic safety at the University of Alberta. He is a licensed Professional Engineer in the province of Alberta and holds MASc and PhD degrees in Transportation Engineering from the University of British Columbia. Karim is passionate about all things safety and has dedicated his research and professional career to furthering our understanding of increasing safety and improving mobility for all road users. For the past decade\, Karim’s research on speed and safety management has informed public policy and practice. To him\, safety is a product just like any other good or service\, and through his research\, he advocates for the creation of a management framework that produces a safe system. His goal is to agitate the discussion on important and often neglected issues to achieve a system that is free of death and disability. Karim is an active member of multiple (inter)national safety committees and serves on the editorial boards of several prominent journals. He is a co-founder of the Centre of Smart Transportation and serves as the Associate Dean for Research in the Faculty of Engineering. \n  \n\nLunch will be served at 11:45 am and the presentations will start at 12:00 pm. \nRegular pricing is active until March 4th. Late registration charges will apply at 11:00 AM\n\nParking Changes Starting Fall 2024!!!\nGuest Parking at the University Club has changed starting August 2024. The University Club lot will only be accessible for assigned permit holders and club members. If you are not personally a member of The University Club or do not have a UofA parking permit\, you are directed to use the Windsor Car Park. For additional details\, visit the University Club and UofA Parking Services websites. \nParking Rates are subject to change by the University Parking Services: \n\nHourly: $4.50\nDaily Maximum: $15.00
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-northern-alberta-march-2025-luncheon/
LOCATION:University Club at the University of Alberta\, 11435 Saskatchewan Dr NW\, Edmonton\, Alberta\, T6G 2G9\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Luncheon,Presentation
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Northern Alberta Section":MAILTO:northernalberta@itecanada.org.
GEO:53.5299954;-113.5283923
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=University Club at the University of Alberta 11435 Saskatchewan Dr NW Edmonton Alberta T6G 2G9 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=11435 Saskatchewan Dr NW:geo:-113.5283923,53.5299954
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250306T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250306T200000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250221T174003Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250221T183412Z
UID:10000747-1741282200-1741291200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:Joint ITE Canada Section Student Presentation
DESCRIPTION:The Toronto\, Hamilton\, and Southwest Ontario sections’ Joint Technical Presentation Competition for Students is a unique event organized annually by the Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) Canada to help foster interest in the field of transportation. The Toronto and Hamilton sections have jointly held the event since 1996 and were joined by the Southwest Ontario section in 2009. The completion offers students an opportunity to present a topic of interest in transportation before their peers and practicing transportation professionals. While technical competence is an important element\, the primary focus of the competition is on the ability to present effectively to one’s peers and the public. This year\, the competition will be held in Hamilton\, ON. \nInterested students are invited to submit a one-page abstract of not more than 400 words on any topic related to transportation. A shortlist of three (3) graduate students and three (3) undergraduate students will be selected and invited to give a 10–15-minute presentation on the afternoon of Thursday\, March 6th\, 2025. A short question and answer period will follow after each presentation. \nSubmission of Abstracts: Tuesday\, February 25\, 2025\nNotice of Acceptance: Thursday\, February 27\, 2025 \nPresentation Competition: March 6\, 2025\nLocation:\nMcMaster Innovation Park\, Boardroom 1B\n175 Longwood Road South\nHamilton\, Ontario L8P 0A1 \nInvited Schools:\nLakehead University\, McMaster University\, Mohawk College\, Toronto Metropolitan University\, University of Toronto\, University of Waterloo\, University of Windsor\, Western University and York University \nInterested students should submit abstracts to either: \nStephanie D. Pham – M.Eng.\, P.Eng.\nPresident\nITE Toronto Section pham@bagroup.com \nOmar Shams – B-Tech\, C.E.T. President\nITE Hamilton Section Omar.shams@toronto.ca \nTim Kooistra\, C.E.T. President\nITE Southwestern Ontario\nSection Tim.Kooistra@exp.com \nNote: Abstracts in Microsoft Word format will be accepted by email. \nPlease include your address and telephone number with all communication.
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/joint-ite-canada-section-student-presentation/
LOCATION:McMaster Innovation Park\, 175 Longwood Road South\, Hamilton\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Competition,Presentation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/Technical-Presentation-Flyer_2025-e1740159871120.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Hamilton Section":MAILTO:hamilton@itecanada.org
GEO:43.2568062;-79.900641
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=McMaster Innovation Park 175 Longwood Road South Hamilton ON Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=175 Longwood Road South:geo:-79.900641,43.2568062
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250306T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250306T210000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250203T185116Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250305T123518Z
UID:10000741-1741284000-1741294800@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Greater Vancouver and PIBC Present: Joint Mixer + Trivia Night\, Sponsored by B&A
DESCRIPTION:You are invited to a joint social event between the ITE Greater Vancouver (Institute of Transportation Engineers) and the Planning Institute of BC (PIBC). Join us at the Pint in Gastown for a casual night of networking and fun with your fellow transportation and planning professionals! Trivia will begin at 6:30 pm. \nTickets are $20 for all guests and will cover food and prizes. Beverages (alcoholic and non-alcoholic) will be available for purchase. \nIf you have any questions or would like to sign up for our monthly newsletter\, please reach out to vancouver@itecanada.org. \n 
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-greater-vancouver-pibc-joint-mixer-trivia-night/
LOCATION:The Pint Public House\, Vancouver\, 455 Abbott St\, Vancouver\, British Columbia\, V6B2L2\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Mixer,Social
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Greater Vancouver":MAILTO:vancouver@itecanada.org
GEO:49.2814134;-123.1077119
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=The Pint Public House Vancouver 455 Abbott St Vancouver British Columbia V6B2L2 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=455 Abbott St:geo:-123.1077119,49.2814134
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250319T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250319T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250306T174615Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250312T210348Z
UID:10000751-1742383800-1742389200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE SA Student Presentation Competition Event
DESCRIPTION:Join us at the University of Calgary Downtown Campus for an engaging student project presentation event\, hosted by ITE Southern Alberta in partnership with the University of Calgary Student Chapter of ITE. \nThe winner of this competition will advance to the next round\, where ITE Canada will select the recipient of the Student Presentation Competition Award. The winner will receive complimentary registration for the annual ITE Canada conference (in the year of the award)\, travel reimbursement (up to $1\,000 for those outside the conference region or up to $100 for those within)\, and recognition at the Annual Awards Luncheon. \nWe also invite industry professionals to participate in voting for the best student poster from the ITE Southern Alberta Section.
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-sa-student-presentation-competition-event/
LOCATION:Trolley 5 Brewpub\, 728 17 Ave SW\, Calgary\, Alberta\, T2S 0B7\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Competition,Luncheon
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Southern Alberta Section":MAILTO:southernalberta@itecanada.org
GEO:51.0463832;-114.0820407
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Trolley 5 Brewpub 728 17 Ave SW Calgary Alberta T2S 0B7 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=728 17 Ave SW:geo:-114.0820407,51.0463832
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250320T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250320T160000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
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/Toronto:20250325T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250325T133000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
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/Winnipeg:20250326T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Winnipeg:20250326T180000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250228T172216Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250228T172913Z
UID:10000749-1743004800-1743012000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Manitoba: Student Presentation Competition
DESCRIPTION:ITE Manitoba is hosting our annual Kean Lew Memorial Student Presentation Competition on Wednesday\, March 26\, from 4 to 6 pm at the University of Manitoba! \n  \nIn an effort to encourage more student participation we’ve made some exciting changes to the competition this year: \n\nWe’re switching to a presentation-only format competition (in previous years\, the competition included both a paper and a presentation)\nWe’re opening up the competition event to other students and professionals\, giving participants the opportunity to showcase their transportation projects and shine bright among peers and transportation professionals\n\nCompetition Details\nThe competition is designed to spark interest in the field of transportation and give students the opportunity to deliver a presentation on a transportation project to both their peers and industry professionals. The event will feature up to five 15-minute presentations\, each followed by a short question period\, and some time to network following the presentations. \nPresentations will be evaluated by volunteer judges at the competition. Prizes will be awarded to the presenters of the three top presentations based on the presentation evaluation criteria. The prizes are: \n\nFirst prize: $300 (plus entry to ITE Canada Student Presentation Competition)\nSecond prize: $150\nThird prize: $75\n\nIf you are interested in presenting or judging the competition\, or have any questions please reach out to Karalee Bloch at Karalee.L.Townsend@gmail.com for more information (including eligibility and evaluation criteria). The deadline to express interest is March 18. Students will be notified by March 19 if their presentation has been selected for the competition. \nWe look forward to your involvement and to witnessing the innovative projects our student community has to share! \nEvent Details\nDate: Wednesday March 26\, 2025 \nTime: 4 to 6 p.m. \nLocation: University of Manitoba Engineering and Information Technology Complex (EITC)\, 75 Chancellors Circle\, Room E2-330 \nPresentation Topic: Transportation projects (engineering or planning) \nCost: $0 for ITE members\, non-members\, and students \n 
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-manitoba-student-presentation-competition/
LOCATION:Engineering and Information Technology Complex\, University of Manitoba\, Room E2-330\, 75 Chancellors Cir\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\, R3T 5V6\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Competition,Presentation,Student
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Manitoba Section":MAILTO:secretary@manitoba.itecanada.org
GEO:49.808832;-97.133757
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Engineering and Information Technology Complex University of Manitoba Room E2-330 75 Chancellors Cir Winnipeg Manitoba R3T 5V6 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=Room E2-330\, 75 Chancellors Cir:geo:-97.133757,49.808832
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250407T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250407T180000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250311T160034Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250403T122258Z
UID:10000748-1744034400-1744048800@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:Downtown Infrastructure Renewal Program Tour in Guelph
DESCRIPTION:UPDATE – April 3\, 2025: this event has officially sold out and tickets are no longer available.\nJoin us for the Downtown Infrastructure Renewal Program Tour in Guelph on April 7!\nThe Southwestern Ontario Section of ITE Canada would like to invite you to the Guelph’s Downtown Infrastructure Renewal Program Tour happening on Monday\, April 7\, 2025\, in Guelph\, Ontario.  \nThe City of Guelph is planning to transform and revitalize how Downtown Guelph looks\, feels and functions while still preserving its unique cultural heritage\, making it future-ready to support growth to 2051 and beyond. A key part of the transformation is the Downtown Infrastructure Renewal Program (DTIRP) to improve and upgrade roads\, sewers\, watermains\, sidewalks\, cycling facilities\, and the streetscape. The overall design and construction process for DTIRP is likely to last over the next few decades. \nThis event will present the plans for the Infrastructure Renewal Program\, including a walking tour of Downtown Guelph to discuss key design considerations including pedestrian and cycling facilities\, transit connections\, parking and curbside activity\, and construction phasing. \nThe technical tour will be led by: \n\nKate Berry\, EIT: Project Manager\, Transportation Planning Engineering and Transportation Services\, City of Guelph\nBenita van Miltenburg: Project Manager\, Transportation Planning\, Infrastructure\, Development\, and Environment\, City of Guelph\nHelya Oghabi: Parking and Transportation Policy Advisor\, City of Guelph\nAndrew Miller\, P.Eng\, PMP: Project Engineer\, Design and Construction Department\, City of Guelph\n\n \n2.5 PDH credits will be provided to all those who attend the technical tour. \nFollowing the technical tour\, take the opportunity to connect with fellow professionals\, students\, and faculty from across Southwestern Ontario at the Royal Electric Bar & Public Eatery.  Share insights\, exchange ideas\, and build valuable connections over light refreshments (additional food/beverages will be available for purchase). \nThis is a fantastic opportunity to: \n\nNetwork with public and private sector professionals in the transportation industry; and\nEngage with students and faculty from local student chapters.\n\nEvent Details: \n\nDate: Monday\, April 7\, 2025\nArrival Time: 1:45 PM\nWalking Tour Start Time: 2:00 PM sharp\nWalking Tour End Time: 4:30 PM (approximate)\nNetworking/Socializing: 4:30 – 6:00 PM (approximate)\nLocation: Throughout Downtown Guelph\, Ontario\nStarting Point for Tour: Flagpoles in Market Square\, Southeast corner of Wilson Street and Carden Street\, outside of Guelph City Hall (map)\nPost Tour Networking/Socializing Location: Royal Electric Bar & Public Eatery (map)\n\n Schedule: \n\n2:00 PM – 4:30 PM: Technical Walking Tour\n4:30 PM – 6:00 PM: Networking and Socializing (light refreshments provided; additional food/beverages available for purchase)\n\nComfortable shoes are encouraged as this walking tour will be approximately 2.6 kilometres in length. \nSpace is limited\, so be sure to secure your spot early. We can’t wait to see you there! \nFor questions or more information\, please contact ITE Southwestern Ontario at southwestontario@itecanada.org.
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/downtown-infrastructure-renewal-program-tour-in-guelph/
LOCATION:Guelph\, On
CATEGORIES:Dinner,Social,Tour
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Awards-3-1.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Southwestern Ontario":MAILTO:southwesternontario@itecanada.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250408T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250408T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250328T190627Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250403T152817Z
UID:10000757-1744111800-1744117200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Southern Alberta April Luncheon
DESCRIPTION:About the Presentation\n“The History of LRT Project Delivery in Calgary 2005 – 2014” \nShakti (Shak) Sarai will be presenting on the general scope and procurement models used to deliver LRT Extensions in Calgary from 2005-2014 and providing an overview of the CAF Urbos 100x Light Rail Vehicles (LRVs) being procured for the Green Line.  The presentation will provide an overview of design and construction scope splits for the NE LRT Extension to McKnight Westwinds\, Oliver Bowen Maintenance Facility\, NE Extension to Saddletowne\, NW LRT Extension to Crowfoot\, NW LRT Extension to Tuscany and West LRT.  As a special extra an overview of the CAF Urbos 100x LRV for the Green Line will be provided. \nAbout the Presenter\nShakti (Shak) Sarai P. Eng is a seasoned rail transit systems professional with nearly 20 years of extensive rail transit experience encompassing operations and maintenance\, LRT Extension projects and critical upgrades and refurbishments alike.  Shak has been part of the delivery teams for the 1st Street SW station refurbishment\, NE Extension to McKnight Westwinds\, Oliver Bowen Maintenance Facility\, West LRT\, Westbrook Operations Control Centre\, NW LRT Extension to Crowfoot\, 4 Car Traction Power Upgrades\, 7th Avenue Refurbishment.  During his time in the private sector Shak has had the priviledge of working on the preliminary engineering of Edmonton’s Valley Line SE as well as testing and commissioning efforts on the Canada Line.  Shak has also spent time on the operations and maintenance side of things with Calgary Transit providing stewardship over CT’s traction power assets for five years before moving on to Green Line.  Shak has dedicated six plus years to the Green Line program development including the technical development and procurement of the new low floor Light Rail Vehicle.  Shak is currently part of the Green Line Corporate Liaison Team and in his role\, he is leading the technical interface and operational readiness activities to help Calgary Transit into operating and maintaining the Green Line.    \n 
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-southern-alberta-april-luncheon-2/
LOCATION:Danish Canadian Club\, 727 11 Ave SW\, Calgary\, AB\, T2R 0E3\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Luncheon
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Southern Alberta Section":MAILTO:southernalberta@itecanada.org
GEO:51.0424442;-114.0780921
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Danish Canadian Club 727 11 Ave SW Calgary AB T2R 0E3 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=727 11 Ave SW:geo:-114.0780921,51.0424442
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250408T114500
DTEND;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250408T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250317T201456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250317T201456Z
UID:10000754-1744112700-1744117200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Northern Alberta & APPI: April 2025 Joint Luncheon
DESCRIPTION:The Edmonton Regional Household Travel Survey\nThe Edmonton Regional Household Travel Survey (HTS) is the largest source of personal travel data to understand how\, where\, why\, and when people travel within the region. The NEW Continuous HTS Program will be launched later this year. This presentation will provide insights about the new program and the data it will collect on travel patterns\, mobility choices\, and emerging trends for residents within Edmonton and surrounding region. Join us to discover how the HTS will support sustainable\, efficient\, and people-centered mobility planning practice and inform our future mobility system investments. \nAbout the Presenter:\nLena Salami\, P.Eng.\, MEng   \n \nLena Salami\, P.Eng.\, MEng\, is a Household Travel Survey Project Manager with the City of Edmonton. She holds a Master’s degree in Transportation Engineering from the University of Alberta and is a licensed Professional Engineer in the province of Alberta. With 5 years of experience in the civil engineering and project management industry\, Lena brings a strong foundation in transportation planning and execution.  She is passionate about understanding travel behavior and contributing to the development of a sustainable and efficient transportation system for Edmonton. Lena is committed to applying her expertise to ensure the successful completion of the Household Travel Survey and its valuable contribution to the City’s transportation goals. \n\nLunch will be served at 11:45 am and the presentations will start at 12:00 pm. \nRegular pricing is active until April 7th. Late registration charges will apply at 11:00 AM\nPlease note that photos/videos may be taken during the event and may be used internally or for promotional purposes by the ITE Northern Alberta Section. If you do not wish to be photographed\, please contact northernalberta@itecanada.org. \n\nParking Changes Starting Fall 2024!!!\nGuest Parking at the University Club has changed starting August 2024. The University Club lot will only be accessible for assigned permit holders and club members. If you are not personally a member of The University Club or do not have a UofA parking permit\, you are directed to use the Windsor Car Park. For additional details\, visit the University Club and UofA Parking Services websites. \nParking Rates are subject to change by the University Parking Services: \n\nHourly: $4.50\nDaily Maximum: $15.00
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-northern-alberta-appi-april-2025-joint-luncheon/
LOCATION:University Club at the University of Alberta\, 11435 Saskatchewan Dr NW\, Edmonton\, Alberta\, T6G 2G9\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Luncheon,Presentation
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Northern Alberta Section":MAILTO:northernalberta@itecanada.org.
GEO:53.5299954;-113.5283923
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=University Club at the University of Alberta 11435 Saskatchewan Dr NW Edmonton Alberta T6G 2G9 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=11435 Saskatchewan Dr NW:geo:-113.5283923,53.5299954
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250409T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250409T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
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/Winnipeg:20250425T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Winnipeg:20250425T133000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250411T235941Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250423T153756Z
UID:10000762-1745582400-1745587800@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Manitoba: April Luncheon
DESCRIPTION:ITE Manitoba will be hosting a Luncheon on April 25 in a new place (at The Forks) \nEvent Details \nDate: Friday\, April 25th\, 2025\nTime: 12:00 noon to 1:30 pm\nLocation: **NEW** The Event Space @ The Forks\, 1 Forks Market Road (2nd Floor Main Terminal)\nCost: $25 for non-ITE members\, $20 for ITE members\, and $15 for students \nFood: Catering will be provided by Nuburger. Please select one burger option when purchasing ticket (choices include Cheddar\, Unburger\, Bacon Cheddar\, The Mack\, and Average Joseph). More info is available by clicking the menu link. \nPlease note\, to register for the reduced ITE member rate\, your ITE membership should be valid for 2025. \nPresentation Information: \nTitle: Transportation Master Plan:2050 \nSpeakers: \nDavid Patman\, P.Eng\, is currently the Manager of Transportation in the Public Works Department at the City of Winnipeg\, where he oversees a young\, dynamic team of engineers\, planners\, and highly-skilled tradespeople. David graduated from the University of Toronto with a degree in Civil Engineering in 2001\, and has worked for the City of Calgary and the City of Winnipeg in various aspects of transportation planning since then\, including forecasting\, transit-oriented development\, and transit planning.  He likes working on small teams with both engineers and planners as well as other disciplines to generate a wide variety of ideas to incorporate into the finished project. His technical interests include microsimulation\, road safety and sustainable modes. \nAlex Regiec was the Operations Planner at Winnipeg Transit for 29 years and recently lead the City of Winnipeg’s Transportation Master Plan. He has been a session speaker at various conferences including the Lanny Remis Lecture Series 2022 Winnipeg\, Transportation Association of Canada (TAC) Conference & Exhibition 2013 Winnipeg and CUTA Annual Conference 2003 Winnipeg. He has been a guest lecturer at the University of Manitoba and is a published author having written the book “Dusty Trails to Divided Highways” 2022. He has also written for Plan Canada. \nOnline registration has closed early. All available tickets were sold. 
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-manitoba-april-luncheon/
LOCATION:The Forks\, 1 Forks Market Road\, Winnipeg\, Manitoba\, R3C 4L9\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Luncheon
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Manitoba Section":MAILTO:secretary@manitoba.itecanada.org
GEO:49.8870659;-97.1314518
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=The Forks 1 Forks Market Road Winnipeg Manitoba R3C 4L9 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=1 Forks Market Road:geo:-97.1314518,49.8870659
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250429T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250429T160000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
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/Toronto:20250430T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250430T103000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250422T164207Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250425T200035Z
UID:10000764-1746000000-1746009000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Canada-Hamilton Section - 2025 Spring Speaker\, Breakfast and Networking Event
DESCRIPTION:Join us for ITE Canada Hamilton Section’s Spring Speaker\, Breakfast & Networking Event!\nDate:      Wednesday\, April 30\, 2025 \nTime:      08:00am – 10:30am \nVenue:   Waterfront Banquet & Conference Centre\, 555 Bay St. North\, Hamilton\, ON \nThis is a Paid event. Pre-registration and online payment required via ITE Canada – please see details below. \n  \nEvent Details:\nActive travel presents an opportunity to tackle societal challenges from physical inactivity to traffic safety and air pollution. Yet\, the benefits of interventions like infrastructure improvements\, policy changes\, and cycling programs are not equally shared. This session will explore the health equity dimensions of active travel in Hamilton\, focusing on chronic disease and injury prevention. Join us to discuss how inclusive strategies can ensure fair access to the benefits of walking\, cycling\, and other active modes for all community members. \nOur Speakers:\nKrystn Orr\, PhD (she/her)\n \nPhysical Activity Specialist\nChronic Disease Prevention\, Healthy Environments\nPublic Health Services\, Healthy and Safe Communities Department\, City of Hamilton \nKrystn is passionate about creating an equitable\, inclusive\, and accessible community. She has more than a decade’s experience in research and works with individuals who identify with a disability across the lifespan. Krystn holds a PhD in Exercise and Sport Psychology from the University of Toronto. She specializes in qualitative and mixed methodologies\, using participatory and arts-based approaches to working with marginalized populations. She is currently a Physical Activity Specialist for Hamilton Public Health Services focused on Active and Sustainable School Travel through evidence-informed practices\, community engagement\, and policy review. \n  \nVanessa Rachiotis\, BSc (she/her)\n \nHealth Promotion Specialist\nChronic Disease Prevention\, Healthy Environments\nPublic Health Services\, Healthy and Safe Communities Department\, City of Hamilton \nVanessa is a Health Promotion Specialist with over 15 years of experience working for Hamilton Public Health Services. She has experience with managing projects\, including planning\, implementing\, and evaluating health promotion programs\, policies and campaigns and enjoys collaborative work with internal and external community partners. She has worked in many topic areas including reproductive and child health\, substance misuse prevention\, tobacco use prevention\, vaccine confidence\, and mental health. Vanessa is currently working on Injury Prevention with a focus on embedding equity into injury prevention for active travel users. In her free time\, she enjoys hiking\, biking\, and skating with her family and being in nature. \n  \nAyomikun Fasan (Student – McMaster University) \nAyomikun Fasan is a final-year Civil Engineering student at McMaster University\, set to graduate this spring\, with a specialization in transportation engineering. She recently completed an independent study under the supervision of Dr. Moataz Mohamed\, titled Electric Bus Transit in Canada: Rollout Strategy\, Cost\, and Emission Outlook. Her interests lie in sustainable mobility\, transit electrification\, and data-driven planning. Ayomikun also served as the Assistant Vice President of Graphics for the ITE McMaster Student Chapter. \n  \n  \n  \nPre-registration and online payment required via ITE Canada. Pay at the door option to pay cash or by e-transfer at the event to Hamilton@itecanada.org \nMembers: C$40  | Non-Members: C$50 |  Students:  C$20 \n 
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-canada-hamilton-section-spring-speaker-breakfast-and-networking-event-2025/
LOCATION:Waterfront Banquet and Conference Centre\, 555 Bay Street North\, Hamilton\, Ontario\, L8L1H1\, Canada
CATEGORIES:AGM,Breakfast,Presentation
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Hamilton Section":MAILTO:hamilton@itecanada.org
GEO:43.2741708;-79.8641879
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Waterfront Banquet and Conference Centre 555 Bay Street North Hamilton Ontario L8L1H1 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=555 Bay Street North:geo:-79.8641879,43.2741708
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250430T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250430T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250404T213642Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250407T175742Z
UID:10000758-1746014400-1746018000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Interior BC/PIBC - 2025 April Webinar
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for our first event of the year with a technical webinar presented by Sophie Renard\, P.Eng.\, Transportation Analyst at Bunt & Associates Engineering Ltd.! \n“Prioritizing Public Cycling Amenities: An Automated GIS Tool”\nWebinar Description:\nAs cities strive to create complete communities\, equitable and effective access to supportive cycling amenities is vital for promoting sustainable transportation and enhancing urban mobility. Increasing resources are being allocated to provide public bicycle parking facilities; however\, while bicycle end-of-trip (EOT) facilities have become more common in private developments\, there is still a gap in best practice research for implementing EOT facilities in the public realm. \nBunt\, together with the City of Nanaimo\, developed a Bicycle End-of-Trip Facility Priority Index tool to identify\, and prioritize locations for public bike parking and EOT facilities. The Priority Index is a GIS-based tool that utilizes an automated spatial analysis process to score potential bike parking sites across the City.  The tool considers a variety of factors relating to accessibility\, land use\, equity\, and social well-being. Users can adjust the weighting of these criteria to reflect local priorities\, resulting in a tailored approach that meets the specific needs of the community. Bunt will present an overview of the Priority Index tool\, including a highlight of the challenges faced and lessons learns. \nBunt aims to inspire cities to adopt similar tools that support active transportation. Ultimately\, the Priority Index serves as a vital resource in creating healthier\, more connected\, and equitable communities that promote cycling as a sustainable mode of transport. \n \nPresenter – Sophie Renard:\n‘Sophie is a transportation engineer at Bunt & Associates\, bringing several years of experience in transportation planning and engineering. She has collaborated with communities of all sizes across British Columbia and Western Canada to activate pedestrian\, cycling\, and rolling facilities for people of all ages and abilities. Her work encompasses a wide range of projects that enhance urban mobility\, developing her diverse technical skillset and allowing her to stay at the forefront of best practices in active transportation planning and engineering. By supporting sustainable modes and enhancing urban mobility\, Sophie strives to create complete\, connected\, and vibrant communities where everyone can thrive.’ \nThe webinar will be held over Microsoft Teams on April 30\, 2025 at 12:00 p.m. Please RSVP by April 29 to receive the webinar link to attend.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_MGJmMThiOWYtN2YxMi00OTJjLWE2Y2MtMzAxY2VmY2NmNmNk%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%224637223a-1556-44a8-8243-cf9ef66f6f62%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%22ac1aa780-eff7-45e4-b4d0-c652a45283b6%22%7d\n
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-interior-bc-pibc-2025-april-webinar/
LOCATION:Kelowna Area\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Webinar
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE BC Interior Section":MAILTO:bcinterior@itecanada.org
GEO:49.882798;-119.454785
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_MGJmMThiOWYtN2YxMi00OTJjLWE2Y2MtMzAxY2VmY2NmNmNk%40thread.v2/0?context=%7b%22Tid%22%3a%224637223a-1556-44a8-8243-cf9ef66f6f62%22%2c%22Oid%22%3a%22ac1aa780-eff7-45e4-b4d0-c652a45283b6%22%7d">Join Virtual Event</a></b><br/><br/><div>DESCRIPTION:Please join us for our first event of the year with a technical webinar presented by Sophie Renard\, P.Eng.\, Transportation Analyst at Bunt & Associates Engineering Ltd.! \n“Prioritizing Public Cycling Amenities: An Automated GIS Tool”\nWebinar Description:\nAs cities strive to create complete communities\, equitable and effective access to supportive cycling amenities is vital for promoting sustainable transportation and enhancing urban mobility. Increasing resources are being allocated to provide public bicycle parking facilities; however\, while bicycle end-of-trip (EOT) facilities have become more common in private developments\, there is still a gap in best practice research for implementing EOT facilities in the public realm. \nBunt\, together with the City of Nanaimo\, developed a Bicycle End-of-Trip Facility Priority Index tool to identify\, and prioritize locations for public bike parking and EOT facilities. The Priority Index is a GIS-based tool that utilizes an automated spatial analysis process to score potential bike parking sites across the City.  The tool considers a variety of factors relating to accessibility\, land use\, equity\, and social well-being. Users can adjust the weighting of these criteria to reflect local priorities\, resulting in a tailored approach that meets the specific needs of the community. Bunt will present an overview of the Priority Index tool\, including a highlight of the challenges faced and lessons learns. \nBunt aims to inspire cities to adopt similar tools that support active transportation. Ultimately\, the Priority Index serves as a vital resource in creating healthier\, more connected\, and equitable communities that promote cycling as a sustainable mode of transport. \n \nPresenter – Sophie Renard:\n‘Sophie is a transportation engineer at Bunt & Associates\, bringing several years of experience in transportation planning and engineering. She has collaborated with communities of all sizes across British Columbia and Western Canada to activate pedestrian\, cycling\, and rolling facilities for people of all ages and abilities. Her work encompasses a wide range of projects that enhance urban mobility\, developing her diverse technical skillset and allowing her to stay at the forefront of best practices in active transportation planning and engineering. By supporting sustainable modes and enhancing urban mobility\, Sophie strives to create complete\, connected\, and vibrant communities where everyone can thrive.’ \nThe webinar will be held over Microsoft Teams on April 30\, 2025 at 12:00 p.m. Please RSVP by April 29 to receive the webinar link to attend.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250501T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250501T110000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250402T190855Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250408T202936Z
UID:10000759-1746090000-1746097200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE National Capital Section: 2025 Lifetime Achievement Award Breakfast
DESCRIPTION:Ata M. Khan Award 2025 Recipient \nGeoff Noxon \n \nGeoff Noxon has dedicated over 35 years to advancing the field of transportation engineering and planning in Canada\, with a particular emphasis on sustainable transportation and Transportation Demand Management (TDM). He has demonstrated exceptional leadership and impact across the public\, private\, and non-profit sectors\, as well as academia\, showcasing his broad expertise and leadership in the National Capital Region and beyond. \nProject of the Year Award 2025 \nChief William Commanda Bridge Multi-Use Pathway \n \nIn summer 2023\, the City of Ottawa completed Phase 1 construction of the Chief William Commanda Bridge Multi-Use Pathway\, part of a larger bridge rehabilitation project with a cost of approximately $23.7M. Phase 2 involved substructure rehabilitation and was completed in fall 2024. The project consists of the construction of a MUP on the inactive railway Chief William Commanda Bridge without removal of the existing track infrastructure. The new MUP links the City of Ottawa’s Trillium Pathway and the National Capital Commission (NCC) Ottawa River Pathway to the NCC Voyageurs’ Pathway in Gatineau. \nPresenter: Chris Redden \nChris Redden is a senior active transportation design engineer with Parsons. He has worked on many projects in the Ottawa area over the past 17 years\, with experience in all stages of design\, from feasibility studies and functional designs through to detailed design and engineering services during construction. Chris is involved with the Transportation Association of Canada’s Active Transportation Integrated Committee\, which works on advancing active transportation design best practices across Canada. \nNote: Ticket sales for this event close on Thursday\, April 24\, 2025.
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-national-capital-section-2025-lifetime-achievement-award-breakfast/
LOCATION:The Metcalf Hotel (The Edwards Room)\, 123 Metcalfe Street\, Ottawa\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Breakfast
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Award-Breakfast-Event-2025_revised.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE National Capital Section":MAILTO:nationalcapital@itecanada.org
GEO:45.4204519;-75.6951741
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=The Metcalf Hotel (The Edwards Room) 123 Metcalfe Street Ottawa Ontario Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=123 Metcalfe Street:geo:-75.6951741,45.4204519
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250502T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250502T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
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/Edmonton:20250507T114500
DTEND;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250507T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250425T171415Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250502T165730Z
UID:10000765-1746618300-1746622800@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Northern Alberta: May 2025 Luncheon
DESCRIPTION:45-Minute Queues? Assessing Travel Benefits and Drawbacks of a New Business Access in Brooks\, Alberta\nA major employer in Newell County\, located outside of Brooks\, Alberta\, generates a daily shift changeover of over 700 employees\, which results in vehicle queues lasting up to 45 minutes as they attempt to exit the facility parking lots. To alleviate this congestion\, an alternative access route has been proposed. \nUsing PTV Vissim\, a detailed traffic simulation was conducted to evaluate the impact of this new route on travel patterns and congestion. The simulation incorporated dynamic traffic assignment (DTA) to model how drivers might alter their route choices in response to different road layouts. This approach allowed for a comprehensive analysis of potential benefits\, such as improved traffic flow\, as well as drawbacks\, such as queue spillback on other parts of the road network. \nJoin us at the luncheon to delve into the findings of this study\, explore the intricacies of using traffic simulations\, and discuss how alternative analysis methods can be used to answer specific and unique traffic questions. \nAbout the Presenter:\nDavid Mason\, P.Eng.\, M.Eng. \n \n  \nDavid Mason is a Transportation Engineer with ISL Engineering and Land Development for 2 years. Originally from Ottawa\, Ontario\, David has worked across different engineering disciplines and has recently completed his master’s degree in civil engineering from the University of Alberta. At ISL\, David tackles unique traffic and transportation-related projects\, within the topics of traffic operational analysis\, traffic safety\, transportation master planning and multi-modal infrastructure. \n  \n\nLunch will be served at 11:45 am and the presentations will start at 12:00 pm. \nRegular pricing is active until Monday May 5th. Late registration charges will apply beginning at 11:00 AM May 5.\nPlease note that photos/videos may be taken during the event and may be used internally or for promotional purposes by the ITE Northern Alberta Section. If you do not wish to be photographed\, please contact northernalberta@itecanada.org. \n\nParking Changes Starting Fall 2024!!!\nGuest Parking at the University Club has changed starting August 2024. The University Club lot will only be accessible for assigned permit holders and club members. If you are not personally a member of The University Club or do not have a UofA parking permit\, you are directed to use the Windsor Car Park. For additional details\, visit the University Club and UofA Parking Services websites. \nParking Rates are subject to change by the University Parking Services: \n\nHourly: $4.50\nDaily Maximum: $15.00
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-northern-alberta-may-2025-luncheon/
LOCATION:University Club at the University of Alberta\, 11435 Saskatchewan Dr NW\, Edmonton\, Alberta\, T6G 2G9\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Luncheon,Presentation
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Northern Alberta Section":MAILTO:northernalberta@itecanada.org.
GEO:53.5299954;-113.5283923
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=University Club at the University of Alberta 11435 Saskatchewan Dr NW Edmonton Alberta T6G 2G9 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=11435 Saskatchewan Dr NW:geo:-113.5283923,53.5299954
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250507T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250507T163000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250407T175428Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250409T180240Z
UID:10000760-1746630000-1746635400@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE Greater Vancouver: Broadway Subway Project Tour
DESCRIPTION:ITE Greater Vancouver is delighted to announce an upcoming in-person tour featuring the Broadway Subway Project at the Broadway-City Hall site. \nAbout Broadway Subway Project: \nThe Broadway Subway Project is a 5.7 km extension of the Millennium Line\, from VCC-Clark Station to Broadway and Arbutus. It will provide fast\, frequent and convenient SkyTrain service to B.C.’s second largest jobs centre\, world-class health services\, an emerging innovation and research hub\, and growing residential communities. Visit https://www.broadwaysubway.ca/ to learn more! \nTour Details: \n\nDate: May 7th\, 2025\nTime: Arrive at 2:50 pm\, Tour starts at 3:00 pm\nLocation: South of Broadway-City Hall Station on Cambie Street – Public Art ‘Legs’\nDuration: Approximately 1.5 hours\nNotes: No PPE will be required\n\nAgenda: \n\nQuick introductions and project overview.\nDivide into two groups.\n70-minute walking tour of the Broadway-City Hall site.\n\nThis tour will cover topics such as: \n\nConstruction phasing;\nPassenger circulation shaft\, station and crossover box construction;\nIntegration into existing station and active rail line – new line and passenger connections tunneled underneath;\nRelocation and upgrade of major regional utility;\nTraffic deck and pedestrian bridges to provide access to businesses and keep people moving above station construction;\nBusiness wayfinding and murals during construction;\nTunnel fit-out.\n\nThere is a 20 person limit for this tour; individuals are welcome to waitlist if tickets are unavailable.
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-greater-vancouver-broadway-subway-project-tour/
LOCATION:Broadway City Hall\, 496 W Broadway\, Vancouver\, BC\, V5Y 1R4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Tour
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Greater Vancouver":MAILTO:vancouver@itecanada.org
GEO:49.2628475;-123.1145174
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Broadway City Hall 496 W Broadway Vancouver BC V5Y 1R4 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=496 W Broadway:geo:-123.1145174,49.2628475
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250510T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250510T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250417T201443Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250425T141830Z
UID:10000763-1746871200-1746882000@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE National Capital Section: 2025 Cleaning the Capital
DESCRIPTION:The Cleaning the Capital campaign is a citywide cleanup that occurs in the spring and fall of every year. Residents come together as a community and combine efforts to make our city clean and green. The year 2025 marks the 32nd year of the Cleaning the Capital Program! Cleaning the Capital is an exciting way for residents to foster community pride by cleaning up their parks\, bus stops\, woodlots\, ravines\, shorelines and pathways\, while enjoying the outdoors and ensuring that Ottawa stays clean\, green\, and litter-free. \n  \nITE National Capital Section invites you to join us to clean up a local park. Come for the cleanup\, the post-event snack and social time\, or both! Gloves and garbage bags will be provided. \nWhen: Saturday\, May 10\, 2025 (Rain date: Saturday\, May 24\, 2025) \n\n10 AM – 12 PM:  Cleanup\n12 PM – 1 PM:    Snack & Social (SuzyQ Doughnuts)\n\nWhere: Meet at Laroche Park (near Bayview Station) – baseball diamond at southwest side of park\, off Stonehurst Ave \nTickets: Free \n  \nFor more information on the campaign visit: Cleaning the Capital Program
URL:https://www.itecanada.org/event/ite-national-capital-cleaning-the-capital-2025/
LOCATION:Laroche Park\, 52 Bayview Rd\, Ottawa\, Ontario\, K1y 4l6
CATEGORIES:Activity,Social
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.itecanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/unnamed.png
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE National Capital Section":MAILTO:nationalcapital@itecanada.org
GEO:45.408668;-75.727391
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Laroche Park 52 Bayview Rd Ottawa Ontario K1y 4l6;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=52 Bayview Rd:geo:-75.727391,45.408668
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250513T113000
DTEND;TZID=America/Edmonton:20250513T130000
DTSTAMP:20260404T015414
CREATED:20250429T182233Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250507T174231Z
UID:10000769-1747135800-1747141200@www.itecanada.org
SUMMARY:ITE SA - May Luncheon
DESCRIPTION:Lessons from the Dutch by Roy Symons and Andrew Monson \nThis presentation will explore innovative Dutch street design principles that are either emerging in Canada or have potential. Drawing from the success of continuous sidewalks and protected bike paths implemented in Nanaimo—an initiative led by Roy Symons—this session will delve into what’s next. \nIntrigued by what more could be learned from the Netherlands\, Roy has undertaken several extended research trips to the country\, cycling extensively to understand firsthand what makes it the global leader in cycling infrastructure and mode share. His observations and insights from the first of those trips are captured in his book Fietspad\, and he will share many of the lessons learned during this session. \nWhile Nanaimo helped advance continuous sidewalks in British Columbia\, it was not the first in Canada to implement them. That distinction may belong to the Town of Canmore\, where Dutch-inspired street design has been quietly but meaningfully taking hold. Andrew Monson will present to highlight the ongoing transformation in Canmore\, showcasing recent projects that reflect a growing embrace of Dutch design thinking. \nRoy Symons P.Eng. is a Sustainable Transportation Specialist for ISL based in Burnaby\, BC but supporting ISL projects across Western Canada. He is passionate about Dutch design and its potential in Canada and is actively pursuing many such innovations on his projects today as well as trying to spread this knowledge in the industry through his Lessons from the Dutch. \nAndrew Monson\, P.Eng. is a transportation engineer with over a decade of experience designing safe\, efficient\, and comfortable streets and active transportation facilities. Since his move from Calgary to Canmore five years ago\, he’s acquired several bikes and a deeper appreciation for the perks of mountain town living. His favorite projects are the ones that see goat trail desire lines replaced with comfortable facilities and have a meaningful impact on his community.\n\nJoin Virtual Event:\nhttps://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_M2QzYjNhMWMtZDRlYi00OGQ0LTg1OTgtM2IyN2Q5NWMxNWQ3%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-sa-may-luncheon/
LOCATION:Danish Canadian Club\, 727 11 Ave SW\, Calgary\, AB\, T2R 0E3\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Luncheon
ORGANIZER;CN="ITE Southern Alberta Section":MAILTO:southernalberta@itecanada.org
GEO:51.0424442;-114.0780921
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Danish Canadian Club 727 11 Ave SW Calgary AB T2R 0E3 Canada;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=727 11 Ave SW:geo:-114.0780921,51.0424442
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: <b><a href="https://teams.microsoft.com/l/meetup-join/19%3ameeting_M2QzYjNhMWMtZDRlYi00OGQ0LTg1OTgtM2IyN2Q5NWMxNWQ3%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:Lessons from the Dutch by Roy Symons and Andrew Monson \nThis presentation will explore innovative Dutch street design principles that are either emerging in Canada or have potential. Drawing from the success of continuous sidewalks and protected bike paths implemented in Nanaimo—an initiative led by Roy Symons—this session will delve into what’s next. \nIntrigued by what more could be learned from the Netherlands\, Roy has undertaken several extended research trips to the country\, cycling extensively to understand firsthand what makes it the global leader in cycling infrastructure and mode share. His observations and insights from the first of those trips are captured in his book Fietspad\, and he will share many of the lessons learned during this session. \nWhile Nanaimo helped advance continuous sidewalks in British Columbia\, it was not the first in Canada to implement them. That distinction may belong to the Town of Canmore\, where Dutch-inspired street design has been quietly but meaningfully taking hold. Andrew Monson will present to highlight the ongoing transformation in Canmore\, showcasing recent projects that reflect a growing embrace of Dutch design thinking. \nRoy Symons P.Eng. is a Sustainable Transportation Specialist for ISL based in Burnaby\, BC but supporting ISL projects across Western Canada. He is passionate about Dutch design and its potential in Canada and is actively pursuing many such innovations on his projects today as well as trying to spread this knowledge in the industry through his Lessons from the Dutch. \nAndrew Monson\, P.Eng. is a transportation engineer with over a decade of experience designing safe\, efficient\, and comfortable streets and active transportation facilities. Since his move from Calgary to Canmore five years ago\, he’s acquired several bikes and a deeper appreciation for the perks of mountain town living. His favorite projects are the ones that see goat trail desire lines replaced with comfortable facilities and have a meaningful impact on his community.
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END:VCALENDAR