Los Altos Town Crier VisitOwen Halliday's  website
Serving the Hometown of Silicon Valley Since 1947
Current Issue » News | Comment | Community | Schools | Sports | Business & Real Estate | Classified | More |
Find it Fast » Archives | Contact Us | Subscribe | Place an Ad |
Admin

Inside this week's
Town Crier


Visit Our Town

Los Altos Online

Find it Fast:

Browse or search full directory

Add Town Crier to
your webpage

2001 » Issue 35, Published on Wednesday, August 29, 2001 » News
By Town Crier Staff Report

Los Altos residents will have the opportunity to voice their traffic concerns next week during a four-day intensive transportation study of the city. The study is intended to serve as a blueprint for the city’s future transportation plan.

Traffic planner Dan Burden and a team from Walkable Communities Inc. are scheduled to lead the study.

The city plans to incorporate the study results into the circulation element of its updated General Plan.

The Los Altos City Council hired planning consultant Cotton Bridges Associates earlier this year to update the city’s General Plan for $224,869.

Bridges plans to complete the Circulation Element by early 2002.

The traffic study is open to all Los Altos business owners and residents. The four-day study is scheduled as follows: “Visual Priorities” workshop 7-9 p.m., Sept. 6, at Grant Park; “Issues” workshop 7-9 p.m., Sept. 7; “Walking Audit,” 8-10 a.m., Sept. 8, beginning at City Hall; “Design Training” and workshop, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sept. 8, Grant Park Multipurpose room; and “Final Presentation,” 7 p.m., Sept. 10, council chambers.

For more information, call the city’s planning department at 948-2790.


Share this article

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Our Sponsors Our Sponsors Our Sponsors Our Sponsors Our Sponsors www.alicenuzzo.com www.ViviChan.com


In Our Opinion

Editorial

We’ve recently covered the passing of two of this community’s most involved and committed volunteers, Lee Lynch and Billy Russell. They represented an era when people helped out, not so they could get their name on a building, but because it was simply the right thing to do.

There’s a new generation of volunteers hard at work right now in this community who are carrying on their legacy. The level of involvement in the recent Los Altos Relay For Life event bears this out.