Connecticut Complete Streets Campaign
How Bike-Friendly and Walk-Friendly is Your Town? Click here to find out!
You spoke. We took notes. Check out our scorecard ranking Connecticut cities and towns on how bike- and walk-friendly they are.
Overview of the CT Complete Streets Project
Bike Walk Connecticut is making it safer and easier to walk and bike in CT by implementing “complete streets” in cities and towns across Connecticut. The project is funded through a federal grant administered by the Connecticut Department of Public Health (DPH) to promote statewide implementation of policies and actions to promote health and prevent and control chronic diseases.
The link between complete streets and health and disease prevention is physical activity. Complete streets make it easier and safer for people be more physically active by getting around on foot or by bike.
What are Complete Streets?
Complete Streets are streets that are designed to be safe for everyone to use. Complete Streets make it easier and safer to walk and bike to work, to school, to transit, for errands, or just for pleasure and exercise. Connecticut’s Complete Streets law (Conn. Gen. Stat. §13a-153f) requires pedestrians, cyclists, and transit users to be routinely considered in the planning, designing, construction and operation of all roads. This effort will help communities implement aspects of this law.
Complete Streets Resources
Visit out Complete Streets Resources page to get news, tips and information about Complete Streets progress in Connecticut. Want us to publicize progress in your community? Share your story by emailing bikewalkct@bikewalkct.org.
Public Opinion Survey and Scorecard
As part of this initiative, Bike Walk Connecticut is conducting a statewide public opinion survey of the bike- and walk-friendliness of Connecticut’s cities and towns, develop an inventory of towns that have bike/pedestrian task forces and plans, and assess the degree to which those plans are being implemented by their respective towns.
Municipal staff, such as land use planners, are urged to respond to the separate survey for municipal staff that we are sending to them directly. Planners should contact clayton@bikewalkct.org for that link.
Bike Walk Connecticut will publish a town-by-town scorecard early this summer, ranking cities and towns on their bike- and walk-friendliness. The survey and scorecard are expected to be conducted annually.
Complete Streets Leadership Forum
Implementing complete streets in Connecticut’s 169 towns will require citizen involvement, local leadership, and collaboration with town planners, engineers and public safety officials. To that end, Bike Walk Connecticut will also host an initial forum to bring together people from communities that are already working to implement complete streets with others who want to make their own towns better places to bike and walk. Click here for information from the June 2014 forum.
This initiative is made possible through the financial support of the DPH through Cooperative Agreement 1305 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Bike Walk Connecticut is making it safer and easier to walk and bike in CT by implementing “complete streets” in cities and towns across Connecticut. The project is funded through a federal grant administered by the Connecticut Department of Public Health (DPH) to promote statewide implementation of policies and actions to promote health and prevent and control chronic diseases.
The link between complete streets and health and disease prevention is physical activity. Complete streets make it easier and safer for people be more physically active by getting around on foot or by bike.
What are Complete Streets?
Complete Streets are streets that are designed to be safe for everyone to use. Complete Streets make it easier and safer to walk and bike to work, to school, to transit, for errands, or just for pleasure and exercise. Connecticut’s Complete Streets law (Conn. Gen. Stat. §13a-153f) requires pedestrians, cyclists, and transit users to be routinely considered in the planning, designing, construction and operation of all roads. This effort will help communities implement aspects of this law.
Complete Streets Resources
Visit out Complete Streets Resources page to get news, tips and information about Complete Streets progress in Connecticut. Want us to publicize progress in your community? Share your story by emailing bikewalkct@bikewalkct.org.
Public Opinion Survey and Scorecard
As part of this initiative, Bike Walk Connecticut is conducting a statewide public opinion survey of the bike- and walk-friendliness of Connecticut’s cities and towns, develop an inventory of towns that have bike/pedestrian task forces and plans, and assess the degree to which those plans are being implemented by their respective towns.
Municipal staff, such as land use planners, are urged to respond to the separate survey for municipal staff that we are sending to them directly. Planners should contact clayton@bikewalkct.org for that link.
Bike Walk Connecticut will publish a town-by-town scorecard early this summer, ranking cities and towns on their bike- and walk-friendliness. The survey and scorecard are expected to be conducted annually.
Complete Streets Leadership Forum
Implementing complete streets in Connecticut’s 169 towns will require citizen involvement, local leadership, and collaboration with town planners, engineers and public safety officials. To that end, Bike Walk Connecticut will also host an initial forum to bring together people from communities that are already working to implement complete streets with others who want to make their own towns better places to bike and walk. Click here for information from the June 2014 forum.
This initiative is made possible through the financial support of the DPH through Cooperative Agreement 1305 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).