TransPort Moody: updating our Master Transportation Plan
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Thank you to everyone who participated in engagement opportunities for TransPort Moody: updating our Master Transportation Plan. The final phase of engagement concluded July 14, 2024. City staff will present a report with public engagement results at an upcoming Council meeting.
Why are we updating the Master Transportation Plan?
The City of Port Moody endorsed TransPort Moody, our Master Transportation Plan (MTP), in March 2017. TransPort Moody set out a vision for the City’s transportation system and established key targets and actions to achieve the vision for the future of transportation in Port Moody by 2045. In 2020, the City adopted its Climate Action Plan, which pushed some targets in TransPort Moody to 2030.
Master Transportation Plan (2017) - Goals
Climate Action Plan (2020) - Goals
By 2045, the City will double the proportion of trips (from 20% to 40%) made by Port Moody residents via walking, cycling, and transit to accommodate new trips related to growth
By 2030, residents walk, cycle, or take transit for 40% of trips
By 2045, the City will reduce by 30% the average vehicle distance driven (from 10 kilometres per day per person to 7) by Port Moody residents
By 2030, 40% of passenger vehicles and 25% of commercial vehicles are electric
By 2045, the City will reduce traffic-related injuries and fatalities with the ultimate goal of eliminating all fatalities from the transportation system
As such, we are updating our Master Transportation Plan to include a core set of transportation-related actions that will help us achieve the new Climate Action Plan targets, as well as provincial greenhouse gas emission mitigation targets. These actions will be grouped under a few Big Moves that will address the gap between where we are and where we want to be.
The Big Moves are intended to manage demand for transportation, reduce vehicle travel, and help Port Moody make significant and measurable progress towards achieving the targets of our Climate Action Plan. For each Big Move we also explore how it can produce additional community benefits, such as less noise, more green space, and healthier lifestyles.
This project is funded in part by the Government of Canada.
Our proposed Big Moves
The feedback gathered in Phase 1 informed an initial list of 28 Big Move ideas, which were then evaluated to produce a shortlist of five proposed Big Moves. To learn more about the evaluation process, read the “Getting to Our Five Big Moves" section.
In no particular order, the five proposed Big Moves are:
Click on each Big Move link to learn what actions are included and how they can help to meet our climate goals.
Get involved!
Phase 2 engagement is now closed
In Phase 2, now closed, we asked for your feedback on the five proposed “Big Moves” to guide our Master Transportation Plan and help us meet our climate action goals.
Your feedback, along with technical information and advice provided by subject-matter experts, will inform the refinement of the proposed Big Moves before the recommended MTP Climate Action Update is presented to City Council for their review and endorsement in fall 2024.
Information Session: Thursday, June 27, 5-7pm
Join us in person at the Civic Centre (100 Newport Drive) for a brief presentation starting at 5:30pm in the Inlet Theatre. You can also review information boards in the Galleria, and ask questions to staff.
Have a question? Type your question below and we'll respond.
Past engagement opportunities In March and April of 2022, we asked you: what Big Moves can we make as a community to better adapt our transportation system to climate change and lessen future climate impacts? We received 164 community surveys and 44 submissions to our Ideas tool.
What we heard: read our Public and Stakeholder Engagement Summary (PDF) to find out what we heard from the community. Input from our initial phases of engagement has been shared with City Council for their consideration as we move toward updating the Master Transportation Plan. Thank you to everyone who participated. We value your input!
Big ideas: Thank you for contributing your bold and ambitious ideas to help us meet our Climate Action Plan goals! We've included ideas in our Public and Stakeholder Engagement Summary (PDF).
Thank you to everyone who participated in engagement opportunities for TransPort Moody: updating our Master Transportation Plan. The final phase of engagement concluded July 14, 2024. City staff will present a report with public engagement results at an upcoming Council meeting.
Why are we updating the Master Transportation Plan?
The City of Port Moody endorsed TransPort Moody, our Master Transportation Plan (MTP), in March 2017. TransPort Moody set out a vision for the City’s transportation system and established key targets and actions to achieve the vision for the future of transportation in Port Moody by 2045. In 2020, the City adopted its Climate Action Plan, which pushed some targets in TransPort Moody to 2030.
Master Transportation Plan (2017) - Goals
Climate Action Plan (2020) - Goals
By 2045, the City will double the proportion of trips (from 20% to 40%) made by Port Moody residents via walking, cycling, and transit to accommodate new trips related to growth
By 2030, residents walk, cycle, or take transit for 40% of trips
By 2045, the City will reduce by 30% the average vehicle distance driven (from 10 kilometres per day per person to 7) by Port Moody residents
By 2030, 40% of passenger vehicles and 25% of commercial vehicles are electric
By 2045, the City will reduce traffic-related injuries and fatalities with the ultimate goal of eliminating all fatalities from the transportation system
As such, we are updating our Master Transportation Plan to include a core set of transportation-related actions that will help us achieve the new Climate Action Plan targets, as well as provincial greenhouse gas emission mitigation targets. These actions will be grouped under a few Big Moves that will address the gap between where we are and where we want to be.
The Big Moves are intended to manage demand for transportation, reduce vehicle travel, and help Port Moody make significant and measurable progress towards achieving the targets of our Climate Action Plan. For each Big Move we also explore how it can produce additional community benefits, such as less noise, more green space, and healthier lifestyles.
This project is funded in part by the Government of Canada.
Our proposed Big Moves
The feedback gathered in Phase 1 informed an initial list of 28 Big Move ideas, which were then evaluated to produce a shortlist of five proposed Big Moves. To learn more about the evaluation process, read the “Getting to Our Five Big Moves" section.
In no particular order, the five proposed Big Moves are:
Click on each Big Move link to learn what actions are included and how they can help to meet our climate goals.
Get involved!
Phase 2 engagement is now closed
In Phase 2, now closed, we asked for your feedback on the five proposed “Big Moves” to guide our Master Transportation Plan and help us meet our climate action goals.
Your feedback, along with technical information and advice provided by subject-matter experts, will inform the refinement of the proposed Big Moves before the recommended MTP Climate Action Update is presented to City Council for their review and endorsement in fall 2024.
Information Session: Thursday, June 27, 5-7pm
Join us in person at the Civic Centre (100 Newport Drive) for a brief presentation starting at 5:30pm in the Inlet Theatre. You can also review information boards in the Galleria, and ask questions to staff.
Have a question? Type your question below and we'll respond.
Past engagement opportunities In March and April of 2022, we asked you: what Big Moves can we make as a community to better adapt our transportation system to climate change and lessen future climate impacts? We received 164 community surveys and 44 submissions to our Ideas tool.
What we heard: read our Public and Stakeholder Engagement Summary (PDF) to find out what we heard from the community. Input from our initial phases of engagement has been shared with City Council for their consideration as we move toward updating the Master Transportation Plan. Thank you to everyone who participated. We value your input!
Big ideas: Thank you for contributing your bold and ambitious ideas to help us meet our Climate Action Plan goals! We've included ideas in our Public and Stakeholder Engagement Summary (PDF).
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STEP 1 – IDEATION
The Big Moves that are being developed as part of the MTP Climate Action Update are not intended to set a new vision for the City’s transportation system. Instead, they are intended to achieve the existing vision sooner to align with the City’s 2030 climate targets.
The existing TransPort Moody vision themes are listed below:
A compact complete city
A walkable city
A bicycle-friendly city
A transit-oriented city
Move people and goods
Create a safe and liveable city
In Round 1 of public and stakeholder engagement, we asked participants about strategies to prioritize and ideas of actions we can take to meet Port Moody’s climate targets and transportation vision. We engaged with over 200 people through a Big Moves Webinar featuring guest speaker Chris Bruntlett (Marketing and Communication Manager at the Dutch Cycling Embassy), an online survey, a staff workshop, and a community group workshop.
The feedback gathered in round 1 informed an initial list of 28 Big Move ideas. The development of the Big Moves was guided by the Avoid-Shift-Improve (ASI) framework, which is used to develop sustainable urban mobility plans around the world and mirrors the Province’s CleanBC Roadmap to 2030 transportation framework. The ASI framework categorizes sustainability improvements as follows:
Avoid: Avoid or reduce travel or the need to travel;
Shift: Shift to more energy efficient modes; and
Improve: Improve efficiency of existing transport modes.
STEP 2 – EVALUATION
The 28 Big Move ideas were then evaluated using the following criteria:
Implementation – rated based on how feasible it is for a Big Move to be implemented given cost and jurisdictional challenges
Mode Shift – rated based on how much a Big Move is estimated to shift travel from vehicles to more sustainable modes
Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Reduction – rated based on the estimated reduction in vehicle-kilometres travelled that a Big Move could support
Traffic Safety – rated based on the potential for a Big Move to reduce traffic collisions and their associated impacts in Port Moody.
Co-Benefits – rated based on additional benefits a Big Move could provide, such as improved transportation equity, affordability, noise and traffic stress reduction, health benefits, etc.
Applicability/Specificity- rated based on the extent a Big Move can be implemented by 2030 to meet the City’s climate targets
Transportation equity means looking at how to design transportation systems that are fair and fit all lifestyles, financial situations, and abilities. This means considering not only what infrastructure and options exist, but who has access to them—and who may experience consequences such as air pollution, safety issues, congestions etc.
STEP 3 – REFINEMENT
Based on the results of the evaluation, five proposed Big Moves were shortlisted. At this stage of the process, we’re asking for your level of support or opposition to the following five proposed Big Moves. The results of this public feedback will be used to refine the draft Big Moves before the final MTP Climate Action Update is presented to City Council for their consideration. In no particular order, the Big Moves include:
Smarter Parking Initiative
City-wide Speed Limit Reductions
Reallocation of Road Space
Transit-Supportive Infrastructure
Promotion of Sustainable Transportation Options
STEP 4 – FINALIZE
The update to the Master Transportation Plan will outline how Big Move initiatives will be implemented and monitored, and provide recommendations for policies, programs, and projects to support Big Move implementation.
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Action
This proposed Big Move includes a combination of three specific parking initiatives:
Parking Maximums: convert the minimum parking requirements to maximums for new developments outside of the transit-oriented areas, eliminating or minimizing the requirement for additional parking (Note: the BC Government recently passed Bill 47 Housing Statutes (Transit-Oriented Areas) Amendment Act, which has already eliminated minimum and maximum parking requirements within the transit-oriented areas).
Paid On-Street Parking*: implement paid on-street parking at the areas that have high parking occupancy and limited parking availability. This achieving about an 85% parking occupancy rate, meaning that at any given time one out of seven parking spots on a street block remains available for someone wishing to park at that location.
Recreation Parking Demand Management*: better manage parking demand at busy park and recreational areas around the city. Similar to the Paid On-Street Parking idea, this approach would focus on achieving the desired parking occupancy rate and desired parking turnover in parking lots that support recreational areas.
* In summer 2024, pay parking will be implemented at five locations where parking is in high demand, including Rocky Point Park, Esplanade Avenue, Murray Street, commercial area of Suter Brook Village, and Ungless Way. The goal of this pay parking program is to improve turnover of parking to increase availability for incoming users, and to encourage a shift toward more sustainable modes of transportation that help reduce traffic and emissions.
Contribution to Climate Action Plan Targets
With parking maximums in place, new developments would have a limit on the amount of available parking they can include, providing more incentive to choose alternate forms of transportation.
Implementing paid on-street parking and managing parking demand in recreational areas would:
Reduce the circling of vehicles looking for parking.
Decrease the number of vehicle kilometers travelled.
Improve traffic flow.
Encourage a shift from vehicular trips to more sustainable travel modes.
Consideration and Challenges
Parking Maximums
This action would need to ensure or retain some level of accessibility parking requirements.
As converting parking minimums to maximums may not directly lead to reduced provision of parking, the maximum requirements may need to be reviewed periodically and reduced over time and/or based on information such as the regional review undertaken in Metro Vancouver’s regional parking study
Require a phased approach with ongoing monitoring and potential supportive policies to ensure the desired parking occupancy and turnover outcomes are achieved.
May have minimal impact or benefit if implemented in areas where there are significant off-street parking opportunities that remain unpriced.
Additional Benefits
Parking Maximums
Potentially supports housing affordability by reducing parking construction cost through implementing parking maximums.
Improves overall parking management, which would facilitate more parking turnover and local business activity.
Lowers stress for vehicle drivers looking for parking and can help manage visitation to uphold a quality experience for all visitors.
The pay parking system will operate under a user-pay cost recovery model. New infrastructure, maintenance, equipment, enforcement, upgrades, customer services, and ongoing support for pay parking will continue to be funded by the revenue it generates. Excess revenues will support the City’s operations and services that are being used by customers paying for parking.
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Action
Reduce posted speed limits* on all local residential streets in Port Moody to 30 kilometres per hour (km/h). On a case-by-case basis, consider reducing posted speed limits on busier collector and arterial roads to 40 km/h or lower.
Contribution to Climate Action Plan Targets
At slower driving speeds, urban traffic typically flows more smoothly, leading to lower emissions.
Streets with slower speeds enhance safety and comfort for pedestrians, cyclists, and other modes of travel.
The increased safety and comfort encourage the use of more sustainable travel alternatives, reducing the overall reliance on driving.
Consideration and Challenges
Modification of bylaws and installation of significant signage.
Implementation of traffic calming measures may be required on some streets to enhance effectiveness.
Requires further studies to assess the impacts on transit and emergency vehicles.
Close collaboration with municipal partners to ensure cohesive implementation.
Additional Benefits
Improve safety and comfort for all road users.
Reduce collisions and traffic noise.
Improve intersection signal operations for pedestrians.
*The City of Rossland B.C. lowered speed limits within the city to 30 km/h in 2015. A number of communities, particularly medium-sized cities in Alberta, have implemented city-wide speed limit reductions. Montreal sets residential street speed limits at 30 km/h with many arterials at 40 km/h.
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Action
Reallocate a minimum of 10% of road space from vehicles to sustainable modes of travel, green infrastructure, or public spaces.
Contribution to Climate Action Plan Targets
supports mode shift from vehicles and provides opportunities for non-motorized travel on roadways.
provides opportunity for climate adaptation strategies- including removal of pavement or hardscape to reduce runoff and lessen the urban heat island effect.
Consideration and Challenges
Involves reallocating road space on streets that offer direct routes for those taking transit or using active transportation modes, or in areas rich in destinations.
A 10% reallocation target is comparable to targets in other Metro Vancouver municipalities and is considered a minimum target. Further work may refine this target.
Many residents see the reduction of regional through-traffic as a priority. Road space reallocation done at strategic locations may contribute toward reducing these types of trips.
Considerable coordination challenges with TransLink may be experienced, and there may be financial implications in the form of reduced Operations, Maintenance, and Rehabilitation (OMR) funding received. TransLink approval is also required when making any changes to speed or capacity on Major Road Network.
Additional Benefits
Significant safety and comfort improvements for those using active transportation modes.
Improvements in bus reliability, and local economic vitality.
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Action
Provide additional overpasses across rail and Skytrain lines for walking and cycling near SkyTrain stations, and explore and implement transit priority measures along major road corridors like St. Johns Street.
Contribution to Climate Action Plan Targets
Provides active transportation connections and reliable public transit options to reduce vehicle dependency.
Adding overpasses would promote a shift in travel modes by decreasing the walking and cycling distances required to access transit.
Consideration and Challenges
Crossings are anticipated to have a relatively high cost, and additional funding streams or external partners including new developments may be required.
May require acquiring additional right-of-way to support implementation.
Connection could be enhanced with green infrastructure, and act as an extension into the park system along Burrard Inlet.
Additional Benefits
Increases connectivity across the rail corridor and could make Rocky Point Park more accessible for several neighbourhoods and new residents, supporting mental and physical health.
Improves walkability, which typically promotes local business activity.
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Action
This proposed Big Move includes a combination of several smaller initiatives to promote sustainable transportation options, including:
E-Bike Purchase Incentives: encourage e-bike ownership through financial support from the City.
Transit Promotional Activities: incorporate city-wide educational and promotional opportunities to encourage the use of transit as an alternative mode of transportation. This may include media campaign, event, workshop, and/or online public transit promotion.
School Travel Planning: work closely with schools in Port Moody to develop school-specific information and promotions packages that would encourage students, parents, and teachers to make school trips with sustainable transportation modes. This would also include identifying infrastructure and safety improvements around schools.
Micromobility Options*: support micromobility options through regulatory updates and seek the introduction of shared micromobility providers in Port Moody. This would also include electric bikes, electric scooters, and car-sharing providers.
*The City of Port Moody began participating in the provincially-led Electric Kick Scooter Pilot Project starting May 31, 2024.
Contribution to Climate Action Plan Targets
The trip range extension that e-bikes provide, particularly in combination with bus and SkyTrain, allows many residents and families to effectively reduce or forgo car ownership entirely, lowering emissions.
Reduces GHG emissions by shifting travel modes from single-occupancy vehicles to active transportation modes.
Reduces GHG emissions from vehicles by providing alternative micromobility options for residents and visitors, especially for short trips.
Consideration and Challenges
E-Bike Purchase Incentives
Requires large financial investment to encourage a significant proportion of the population to shift modes.
May require infrastructure enhancements to provide secure bike parking.
Transit Promotional Activities
Requires considerable coordination with TransLink.
May require various transit promotional initiatives to attract additional ridership.
School Travel Planning
Requires close collaboration with schools in Port Moody
Micromobility Options
Requires regulation of micromobility options to ensure that operations are safe.
Requires consideration for supporting those who may not be able to afford personal e-bikes or e-scooter.
Additional Benefits
Provides alternate ways to get around Port Moody without driving.
Helps to alleviate traffic congestion by providing alternatives to cars.
Provides greater mobility to residents that don’t have the ability to drive due to age or physical ability.
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Missed our webinar? Watch the recording below to learn more about the project, and hear from keynote speaker Chris Bruntlett, a Canadian mobility advocate who strives to communicate the benefits of sustainable transport and inspire happier, healthier, human-scale cities.
TransPort Moody: updating our Master Transportation Plan has finished this stage
March/April 2022 Public input will inform the drafting of our Big Moves
TransPort Moody Update: Advancing Climate Action in our Master Transportation Plan webinar
TransPort Moody: updating our Master Transportation Plan has finished this stage
April 2022 Webinar for public to learn more about the project
What we heard
TransPort Moody: updating our Master Transportation Plan has finished this stage
May 2023
We will share what we heard from the community in our initial phases of engagement.
Community survey #2
TransPort Moody: updating our Master Transportation Plan is currently at this stage
June 2024 We will seek public feedback on prioritization of Big Moves.
What we heard and final report to Council
this is an upcoming stage for TransPort Moody: updating our Master Transportation Plan
Fall 2024
We'll share what we heard from the Phase 2 survey on the five proposed Big Moves, and we'll report back to Council with the final proposed MTP – Climate Action Update.