CITY OF VANCOUVER M E M O R A N D U M From: CITY CLERK'S OFFICE Date: May 19, 1995 Refer File: 5340-2/3201-6 To: Vancouver City Council Subject: CityPlan: Directions for Vancouver & City of Vancouver Response to GVRD Livable Region Strategic Plan Dr. Ann McAfee, Associate Director of Planning - City Plans, will provide a report reference. The attached Policy Report dated May 16, 1995, is submitted to Council for information for the report reference on May 30th. Council has scheduled a special meeting on June 1st to hear delegations on CityPlan. Assuming all delegations are heard that date, it is anticipated Council will consider the recommendations of the Policy Report at its meeting on June 6th. Council has deferred a City response to the GVRD Livable Region Strategy until the report on CityPlan is addressed. As this issue will be considered as part of the report reference on May 30th, the Policy Report dated May 16, 1995 is also circulated (RR1[i] refers) for information at this time, with action also being taken on June 6th. CITY CLERK MCross:dmy Att. POLICY REPORT URBAN STRUCTURE Date: May 16, 1995 Dept. File No. RH TO: Vancouver City Council FROM: CityPlan Department Heads Steering Committee including Associate Director of Planning - City Plans, General Managers of Engineering Services, Corporate Services, Community Services, and Parks and Recreation, and Manager of Housing Centre SUBJECT: CityPlan: Directions for Vancouver RECOMMENDATIONS PLAN ADOPTION A. THAT Council adopt the draft CityPlan: Directions for Vancouver, (February 1995), with the additions and amendments noted in Appendix B, as a broad vision for the city. B. THAT the Associate Director of Planning - City Plans, prepare and distribute the adopted CityPlan document. PLAN IMPLEMENTATION C. THAT Council and Departments use CityPlan to guide policy decisions, corporate work priorities, budgets, and capital plans. D. THAT future Council reports make reference, where appropriate, to the CityPlan vision, directions, and next steps, noting how proposals relate to CityPlan. E. THAT CityPlan provide a context for developing partnership agreements between the City of Vancouver and the Greater Vancouver Regional District with respect to the Livable Region Strategic Plan. F. THAT the City continue work on new initiatives contained in CityPlan and already under way, as described in Section 4.2. G. THAT, to apply CityPlan directions in neighbourhoods, the Planning Department, in cooperation with appropriate departments: i. Report back by July 1995 on a program to consult with the public on an approach to neighbourhood planning that addresses CityPlan directions, as described in Section 4.3 of this report; and ii. Report back by the end of 1995 on a process to deal with rezoning applications submitted while neighbourhood planning is under way; and, until a process is approved by Council, applications for rezoning should not justify the rezoning on the grounds that it "supports CityPlan neighbourhood centres." H. THAT CityPlan provide a context for developing and selecting proposals for inclusion in the 1997-99 Capital Plan, as described in Section 4.4 of this report. I. THAT, to implement other next steps identified in CityPlan, the Planning Department, in consultation with appropriate departments, report to Council by the end of 1995 on the following: i. Review the "next steps" in each section of the Plan and identify further initiatives to implement CityPlan as part of 1996 work programs. ii. Propose a process to provide annual status reports on Plan implementation. J. THAT funds remaining in the CityPlan Program budget ($70,000) be allocated to printing and distribution of the final Plan and a newsletter, as noted in Appendix C; with a report back as part of Recommendation G, on using remaining funds for public consultation on an approach to neighbourhood planning. CITY MANAGER'S COMMENTS The City Manager RECOMMENDS approval of A to J. COUNCIL POLICY On May 26, 1992, Council approved: A. That a City Plan reflecting a shared vision of the future of Vancouver be prepared; B. That the CityPlan Program inform citizens about the issues facing the City and present Council policies, and create, from their advice, a shared sense of direction for the City and its place in the Region; and C. That the process for developing a plan actively seek the involvement of a broad range of individuals and groups, including those who do not normally participate in City activities. SUMMARY Council requested that CityPlan propose directions for Vancouver and its place in the region based on the advice of citizens. After an extensive three-year public process, a draft CityPlan is ready for approval and implementation of the Plan can begin. This report is divided into five discussion sections, each of which is summarized here. Section 1.0, CityPlan, describes CityPlan as a broad vision to guide the city over the next 30 years. CityPlan started with people's ideas and led to a selection of alternative futures, culminating in the draft Plan released in February 1995. The directions in the Plan reflect difficult choices people made during the process about issues such as population growth, transportation priorities, and the role of government. Key initiatives in CityPlan include: ˜ neighbourhood centres to provide each neighbourhood with more choice of shops, services, and amenities; ˜ increased housing variety as part of neighbourhood centres, to give people the opportunity to stay in their neighbourhood as their needs change; ˜ resident input about how neighbourhoods look; ˜ community policing and integrated services teams to bring City services closer to people who use them; ˜ greenways and new and diverse public places; ˜ industrial areas maintained for city-serving jobs and new jobs located in neighbourhood centres; ˜ public processes to involve citizens in city-wide and neighbourhood planning to implement CityPlan; ˜ user charges for activities that affect the environment, like garbage removal, water, and auto use; and ˜ more transit, walking, and biking, as ways to make moving people, not cars, the priority. Section 2.0, Public Review of the Draft CityPlan, describes the review of the draft Plan released in February 1995. There were many ways to find out about the draft Plan, including through a newspaper insert delivered to all households, at Fire Hall Drop-Ins, staff presentations, and on the Internet. The Plan summary was available in six languages. The Youthview program also continued. Comments could be sent by mail, voice mail, e-mail, or delivered in person. The number of comments (54) in this final phase of CityPlan was small compared to earlier phases. The responses were consistent in their general support for the Plan. Those who do not support the Plan (8) are either concerned about growth or about the lack of details on improving housing affordability. Some groups who generally supported the Plan asked for specific changes, a number of which staff support. Appendix A contains all the comments received and, as a context, outlines the public process throughout CityPlan (limited distribution - on file in the City Clerk's Office). Section 3.0, Proposed Changes to the Draft CityPlan, describes revisions staff are proposing, based on the public review. These changes do not alter the basic vision and directions. Changes are detailed in Appendix B. This section concludes by recommending that City Council adopt the revised CityPlan. Section 4.0, Plan Implementation, explains how the Plan will begin to be implemented. The recommendations include: ˜ using CityPlan as an ongoing framework for decisions and budgets; ˜ continuing recent initiatives which have already started to implement CityPlan directions, such as greenways, community policing, and integrated services teams; ˜ consulting with the public to agree on a program for implementing the full range of CityPlan directions in neighbourhoods; ˜ using CityPlan to influence the next Capital Plan; and ˜ reporting back on how to incorporate other next steps described in the Plan into the City's work, and on a process for Plan status reports. Section 5.0, CityPlan Budget, identifies $70,000 remaining in the CityPlan budget. This report proposes that approximately $20,000 be used to print and distribute the final Plan and a newsletter inviting public participation in implementing the Plan. The remaining funds will be available to be applied to public consultation on an approach to implementing CityPlan in neighbourhoods. Appendix C contains budget figures. PURPOSE This report seeks adoption of CityPlan and identifies actions to begin implementing the Plan. BACKGROUND During the past three years the City has undertaken an extensive public consultation process to develop a city plan. In February 1995, Council received a draft CityPlan and a Council report outlining the process through which the Plan was developed. In summary, 20,000 people participated in the CityPlan process by joining City Circles, suggesting ideas for the Plan, visiting the Ideas Fair, making choices in the Choices Workbook, and visiting and commenting on the Futures Displays. In a sample survey of all city residents, 20 percent of the respondents felt they had participated in the CityPlan process. Further information about the process is attached as Appendix A. DISCUSSION 1.0 CITYPLAN 1.1 CityPlan describes a future for Vancouver for the next 30 years Council requested that CityPlan propose directions for Vancouver and its place in the region based on the advice of citizens. CityPlan provides broad directions for the city over the next 30 years. The directions reflect difficult choices people made during the process about issues such as population growth, transportation priorities, and the role of government. CityPlan describes a distinct direction, resulting in a different city than exists today or than would exist if we did nothing. However, the Plan does not provide detailed maps showing the location of neighbourhood centres or new transit lines. The Plan goes as far as the public process took it. Details will be filled in by working with the public to implement the Plan and in response to changing conditions over time. CityPlan Directions are described in four sections: City of Neighbourhoods: CityPlan participants said they want to strengthen and stabilize their neighbourhoods, and they also want more jobs close to home and housing and services to meet changing needs. Key initiatives in CityPlan include: ˜ Neighbourhood centres to create a village heart in each neighbourhood with more choice of shops, services, and amenities. ˜ Increased housing variety--such as townhouses, rowhouses, apartments--as part of neighbourhood centres, to give people the opportunity to stay in their neighbourhood as their needs change. ˜ Resident input about how neighbourhoods look. Sense of Community: CityPlan participants said they want to make services and amenities more accessible, diverse, and tailored to neighbourhoods. Key initiatives in CityPlan include: ˜ Community policing and integrated services teams to bring City services closer to people who use them. ˜ Greenways and new and more diverse public places. Healthy Economy - Healthy Environment: CityPlan participants said they want job diversity, alternatives to the car, and clean air and water. Key initiatives in CityPlan include: ˜ Industrial areas maintained for city-serving jobs and new jobs in neighbourhood centres. ˜ More transit, walking, and biking, as ways to make moving people, not cars, the priority. Making CityPlan Happen: CityPlan participants want to be involved in decisions about how their neighbourhoods develop and how services are delivered. They want City financial management to be used to help achieve CityPlan directions. Key CityPlan initiatives include: ˜ Public processes to involve citizens in city-wide and neighbourhood planning to implement CityPlan. ˜ More user charges for activities that affect the environment, like garbage removal, water, and auto use. As a result of support through CityPlan and other task forces and studies, some of these initiatives, such as greenways and community policing, have recently received Council approval to begin. Others will start with approval of CityPlan. 1.2 CityPlan supports the Livable Region Strategic Plan In January 1995, the GVRD distributed the Livable Region Strategic Plan for municipal approval. The Livable Region Strategic Plan has four components: to create a green zone and set limits on urban development; to create more complete communities; to reduce single-occupant car travel; and to create a compact metropolitan region to minimize sprawl up the Fraser Valley. While CityPlan reflects the needs and values of Vancouver, it is also consistent with the Livable Region Strategic Plan. CityPlan seeks to accommodate a share of the region's growth and emphasizes alternatives to the car. Throughout the CityPlan process, regional population targets were used to illustrate choices and futures. These targets showed 160,000 more people in Vancouver -- 60,000 more than the current zoning would allow. When people voted on the choices and futures, those that included the region's targets were overwhelmingly selected each time. In the final phase of CityPlan, the future which showed the lower growth option received only eight percent of the vote. More housing in neighbourhoods was accepted by over 80 percent of respondents. Participants in CityPlan were interested in providing more housing to meet people's needs in their own neighbourhoods, as well as to help slow sprawl in the region. The final CityPlan document now provides a basis for the City to respond to the Livable Region Strategic Plan. A separate Council Report provides more details. 2.0 PUBLIC REVIEW OF THE DRAFT CITYPLAN 2.1 The draft CityPlan evolved from an extensive public process 20,000 people participated at various times in a variety of events and surveys during the CityPlan process. At each phase of the program, several options were provided from which people could select. Throughout there was a consistency of responses, culminating in the draft CityPlan which was released for public review in February 1995. Appendix A provides more details about the public process leading to the draft Plan. 2.2 There were many opportunities to find out about and provide comments on the draft CityPlan Once the draft Plan was released in February 1995, we provided a number of ways to find out about it: ˜ The draft Plan was sent to people on the CityPlan mailing list (5300) and a summary newspaper insert was delivered to every Vancouver household, with copies available in six languages. ˜ CityPlan staff were available to make presentations on the Plan. Presentations were made to 29 groups involving just under 1000 people, including 13 multicultural groups. ˜ The Plan summary was available in libraries and community centres. The full Plan, as well as the summary, were on the Internet. ˜ Five Fire Hall drop-ins, in different parts of the city, and a week-long City Hall Open House, provided opportunities to see displays, to obtain copies of the Plan, and to talk to Councillors and staff. 400 people attended the Drop-Ins. Over 1400 came to the Open House, many of whom were school classes and multicultural groups. ˜ Information on the Plan was provided on cable TV and in the community and ethnic media. ˜ The Youthview program continued, with discussion in schools, as 1500 students participated in 53 classrooms. There were also a variety of ways to provide comments on the Plan: ˜ comment forms at drop-ins and at the Open House, and an opportunity to talk to City Councillors and CityPlan staff at these events; and ˜ comments by mail, by fax, by e-mail, by phone-in lines (six languages), or by drop off at City Hall. 2.3 Comments received on the draft CityPlan continue to be supportive All the comments received on the February 1995 draft CityPlan and a summary of comments are contained in Appendix A. This final phase of CityPlan received the fewest submissions of any phase of the CityPlan process. However, the comments continue to be consistent with earlier input received throughout the public process. Fifty-four comments were received. Of those that stated support or non-support, 75 percent supported the Plan. Most who wrote a letter expressed an overall opinion on the Plan. However, many who filled out comment sheets at the Fire Hall drop-ins listed specific ideas, without stating their opinion on the Plan. Frequently, these ideas were consistent with the Plan. Those (eight of 54) who did not support the Plan expressed the following concerns: concern about growth; plan not specific enough about addressing housing costs; and the plan and process were not the type of plan or process desired. The first two of these are direct comments on the content of the Plan and are discussed below: ˜ Concern about growth: Three of those who said they did not support the Plan indicated they do not want growth. During the CityPlan process, in both the Choices Workbook and at the Futures Display, people were given the opportunity to vote for lower growth options. However, very few did. In the final Futures Display, only eight percent voted for the lower growth option. ˜ Plan not specific enough about how to address housing costs: Two of the letters that did not support the Plan expressed concern about the lack of specifics in the Plan to address housing costs. Throughout the process the topic of housing costs was of key interest to participants. The Plan's section on "Addressing Housing Costs" affirms the importance of using a variety of approaches to this issue and of exploring new approaches. Staff are also proposing an addition to this section, as noted below in parts 3.0 and 4.4 of this report. Within the overall support for the Plan, six letters contained specific suggestions for the Plan: ˜ The Downtown Vancouver Association requests a section on the downtown be added to the Plan. This is proposed below in Section 3.0. ˜ The Airport Authority requests that the Plan recognize the importance of the airport as a way of being supportive of, for example, transportation improvements between the port and airport for cruise ship passengers. We are not proposing a change in the Plan to include this because this topic was not addressed in the CityPlan process. However, the involvement of the Airport Authority in the transportation planning process will provide an opportunity to address this issue. ˜ B.C. Transit requests that the Plan be more specific about the relationship of neighbourhood centres to proposed major transit routes. The Plan states that the location and size of centres will be determined in consultation with neighbourhoods. The purpose of centres is to provide all areas of the city with a centre to meet the needs of the neighbourhood. This means that, while some centres may be on rapid transit lines, others will not be, although all should be well served and linked by transit. B.C. Transit's participation in the City's transportation planning process will ensure these issues are addressed. ˜ The Bicycling Association requests we use safer bicycle photos. This is proposed below in Section 3.0. ˜ A submission expressed concern about noise in the city. "Sound" was not an issue addressed during the CityPlan process. It may emerge at the neighbourhood level during Plan implementation. ˜ One submission asked that we ensure that public processes are not controlled by a few people. The issue of how to create a meaningful public process to implement CityPlan is described in Section 4.3 below. 3.0 PROPOSED CHANGES TO THE DRAFT PLAN Based on comments on the draft Plan, this report suggests several changes to the Plan. Proposed changes are detailed in Appendix B and summarized as follows: ˜ Add a section on the Central Area: In response to requests from downtown groups, a new section would be added to the Plan, in the same format as the other two-page sections. The purpose of this section is to bring together, in one place, material on the Central Area that is already in other sections of the Plan. ˜ Clarify relationship of CityPlan and Livable Region Strategic Plan: Sometimes people have misunderstood one of the sentences in this section as saying that CityPlan is not consistent with the regional strategy, when the opposite is true. ˜ Add Capital Plan as another tool in the section on Addressing Housing Costs. Throughout the process there has been a lot of interest in addressing housing costs in the city. Two letters opposing the Plan do so because of concerns that the Plan is not specific enough about delivering more affordable housing. The Housing Costs section lists a number of next steps to be explored. One step that was not listed, and will be added, is including an opportunity for the public to approve more funds for housing through the Capital Plan. ˜ Make some wording changes in the Safety section. Make it clearer that preventive programs are part of the direction, and reword some of the "what's new" section based on Police Department suggestions. ˜ Replace bike photos in the Transit, Walking, and Biking section: In response to information from bicycling groups, these photos will be replaced to show riders wearing helmets and using safer bike lanes. ˜ Add a next step to the Public Places section on developing a public places strategy to provide a way of achieving the other parts of this section. This report asks Council to adopt the draft Plan with the changes proposed above. RECOMMENDATIONS: A. THAT Council adopt the draft CityPlan: Directions for Vancouver, (February 1995), with the additions and amendments noted in Appendix B, as a broad vision for the city. B. THAT the Associate Director of Planning-City Plans, prepare and distribute the approved CityPlan document. 4.0 PLAN IMPLEMENTATION Adopting CityPlan means the city has a vision for the future. The next step is to begin implementing the Plan. This section explains each of the recommendations relating to Plan implementation: ˜ use CityPlan as an ongoing framework for decisions and budgets; ˜ continue recent initiatives which have already started to implement CityPlan directions; ˜ work with the public to agree on a program for implementing CityPlan in neighbourhoods;˜ use CityPlan to influence the next Capital Plan; and ˜ report back on other next steps described in the Plan and on a process for Plan status reports. 4.1 Use CityPlan as a framework for City decisions CityPlan was written as a broad vision for the City over the next 30 years. It provides a framework for policy decisions, corporate work priorities, budgets, and capital plans. Where appropriate, individual Council reports should note how they relate to CityPlan. In this way, the Plan can continue to provide guidance and the City can gradually move toward the vision described in CityPlan, without having to know or detail every decision in advance. CityPlan also provides a framework for the City's work with the region. The Greater Vancouver Regional District has developed the Livable Region Strategic Plan. The CityPlan vision and the regional vision are generally consistent. The GVRD will rely heavily on municipal cooperation to implement its plan. The GVRD's approach is to develop "partnership agreements" with individual municipalities which define shared goals and targets that work toward achieving the regional plan. For Vancouver, it would be appropriate that these agreements be based on CityPlan. A separate Council Report outlines a City response to the Livable Region Strategic Plan. RECOMMENDATIONS: C. THAT Council and Departments use CityPlan to guide policy decisions, corporate work priorities, budgets, and capital plans. D. THAT future Council reports make reference, where appropriate, to the CityPlan vision, directions, and next steps, noting how proposals relate to CityPlan. E. THAT CityPlan provide a context for developing partnership agreements between the City of Vancouver and the Greater Vancouver Regional District with respect to the Livable Region Strategic Plan. 4.2 Some new initiatives are already under way When CityPlan started, Council agreed that good ideas, which were widely supported by CityPlan, need not await the conclusion of CityPlan to be implemented. This particularly applied to ideas first introduced through other public processes, such as the Urban Landscape Task Force, Safer City Task Force, and Arts Initiative. CityPlan provided an opportunity to give these ideas broader review, and to integrate them with an overall vision for the city. The following initiatives, which received broad support through CityPlan, have, during 1993-95, been approved by Council and are under way: ˜ Integrated Service Delivery ˜ Community Policing ˜ Industrial Lands Strategy ˜ Vancouver Arts Initiative ˜ Greenways Council has also approved that work begin to develop a transportation plan. RECOMMENDATION F. THAT the City continue work on new initiatives contained in CityPlan and already under way, as described in Section 4.2. 4.3 Start now to agree on a program for implementing CityPlan in neighbourhoods (a) Developing a work program for neighbourhood planning CityPlan provides directions for the future of Vancouver which together represent a broad policy framework. The next step is to detail these directions at the local level where they can reflect the priorities and needs of each neighbourhood. The CityPlan directions affecting neighbourhoods are varied. They include community services, decision making, arts and culture, and safety. They also include directions that could have significant physical implications for neighbourhoods. Neighbourhoods may wish to identify locations for neighbourhood centres and opportunities for increasing housing variety and affordability, public places, jobs and services, traffic calming and parking, local parks, and the character of the neighbourhood. Some of these changes may happen relatively quickly. Others may be much more gradual, spread over the next 25 to 30 years. It would be an advantage to begin implementation with a clear vision of what the neighbourhood will be like. This is especially true for directions related to neighbourhood centres. Creating a neighbourhood vision of this kind means preparing some kind of plan. It could be a detailed plan for a neighbourhood centre, or perhaps, a more general and long term overview of the whole neighbourhood. In all cases there will be many concerns to address and issues to resolve. CityPlan provides for residents and businesses to be involved in planning their neighbourhoods and neighbourhood centres in a way that fits their local situation. Residents will also be involved in defining the features people want in alternatives to single- family housing in their neighbourhoods. A program to prepare neighbourhood plans would be a significant undertaking. A three-step process is proposed to start neighbourhood planning: Step 1: Staff report back, by July 1995, on a process to seek public input on how to undertake neighbourhood planning (Step 2). Step 2: The general objective of Step 2 is to bring people from across the city together with Council and City staff, to determine how to plan for neighbourhoods. Issues to be addressed in designing the program might include: * boundaries for neighbourhood planning; * ways to involve many people in planning for their neighbourhood; * which neighbourhoods should receive priority; * fair allocation of planning across the city; * fair allocation of new jobs, services, amenities, and housing growth; * a city-wide perspective on neighbourhood planning, and the relationship to other city-wide programs, such as the transportation plan; * the key directions to be explored; * the form and content of any resulting neighbourhood plan; * the relationship to land use zoning; and * issues which might be addressed urgently. Step 3: Based on the results of Step 2, staff will report on options for undertaking planning programs to prepare neighbourhood plans. (b) Interim measures for dealing with rezoning applications. The proposals contained in CityPlan to establish neighbourhood centres with a greater variety of jobs and housing require that, at some time in the future, rezoning of land in selected centres will need to take place. CityPlan proposes that the planning of neighbourhood centres should occur in close collaboration with local residents. To avoid prejudicing the outcome of any planning program, private rezoning applications for neighbourhood centres should normally await the completion of neighbourhood planning. In addition to determining how each centre is to develop, such a plan permits development cost charges to be established, and so provides an important means of funding the public benefits needed to complement each centre. However, creating neighbourhood plans will take some time and there may be proposals that offer public benefits that may be lost if delayed for long periods. Staff recommend that the issue of rezonings be discussed more fully with interested parties, such as resident groups and the development industry. Options for dealing with rezoning applications while neighbourhood planning is under way will be examined, with a report to Council on a recommended approach by the end of 1995. Staff recommend that until such a rezoning process is approved by Council, applications for rezoning should not justify the rezoning on the basis of CityPlan proposals for neighbourhood centres. RECOMMENDATIONS: G. THAT, to apply CityPlan directions in neighbourhoods, the Planning Department, in cooperation with appropriate departments: i. Report back by July 1995 on a program to consult with the public on an approach to neighbourhood planning that addresses CityPlan directions, as described in Section 4.3 of this report. ii. Report back by the end of 1995 on a process to deal with rezoning applications submitted while neighbourhood planning is under way; until a process is approved by Council, applications for rezoning should not justify the rezoning on the grounds that it "supports CityPlan neighbourhood centres." 4.4 Use CityPlan to influence the next Capital Plan CityPlan provides a framework to guide Council decisions on issues including allocation of both operating and capital budgets. CityPlan should be a principle consideration for determining priorities and criteria for selecting proposals for inclusion in capital plans. CityPlan should also be an impetus for developing proposals to submit to the capital planning process. Several of the next steps in CityPlan will lead to Capital Plan submissions over time. The Plan mentions two specific directions which can be addressed through proposals in the 1997-99 Capital Plan: ˜ New and More Diverse Public Places: Include a proposal for funding for improved public places; and ˜ Addressing Housing Costs: Include a proposal for additional funding to provide assisted housing. Other proposals will not emerge until later in the implementation of CityPlan. This is especially true for proposals that need neighbourhood-level planning to develop. Unfortunately, this could mean that none of these proposals would be ready for the 1997-99 Capital Plan and would have a long wait until the next Capital Plan, 2000-2002. The last Capital Plan was able to address this type of issue when it provided money for greenways even before specific greenway proposals had been developed. Implementing CityPlan where capital funds are needed will unfold over 30 years. The 1997-99 Capital Plan will be the first Capital Plan opportunity after CityPlan is approved. Therefore, staff propose that projects that reflect CityPlan be included in this Capital Plan, both detailed project proposals, as well as funding for projects that may only be at a concept stage. RECOMMENDATION H. THAT CityPlan provide a context for developing and selecting proposals for inclusion in the 1997-99 Capital Plan, as described in Section 4.4 of this report.4.5 Undertake other "Next Steps" Throughout the CityPlan document, each section contains a list of steps to take in achieving the CityPlan vision. Some of these are new initiatives already under way as described in 4.2 above. Others will be part of neighbourhood processes as described in 4.3. Still others will need to be included in ongoing work programs of various City departments and boards. Frequently, these are extensions of activities the City already has started, like tree and heritage protection or waste reduction and water conservation. Not all the steps identified in CityPlan can be done right away. Departments will report back on how this work can begin to be reflected in their work programs. As a key policy document of the City and with so comprehensive a reach, CityPlan will need to be reviewed over time. We need to identify a process to provide status reports on Plan implementation. Such a process would likely involve public input. As well, we need to provide for Plan up-dating. Staff will report back on ways to do this. RECOMMENDATIONS: I. THAT, to implement other next steps identified in CityPlan, the Planning Department, in consultation with appropriate departments, report to Council by the end of 1995 on the following: i. Review the "next steps" in each section of the Plan and identify further growth initiatives to implement CityPlan as part of the 1996 work programs. ii. Propose a process to provide annual status reports on Plan implementation. 5.0 CITYPLAN REMAINING BUDGET The Council approved budget for the Plan Review Step of CityPlan was $215,000. To date approximately $145,000 has been spent or allocated, as shown in Appendix C, leaving a balance of $70,000. Staff request approval to use approximately $20,000 of these funds to print and distribute the final plan and to prepare and send a newsletter to the CityPlan mailing list to update people on plan approval and implementation. The funds that will remain are proposed to be used for consultation with the public to agree on an approach to neighbourhood planning to implement CityPlan directions, as described in Section 4.3 above. RECOMMENDATION J. THAT funds remaining in the CityPlan Program budget ($70,000) be allocated to printing and distribution of the final Plan and a newsletter, as noted in Appendix C; with a report back, as part of Recommendation G, on using remaining funds for public consultation on an approach to neighbourhood planning. CONCLUSIONS This report presents the draft CityPlan for Council adoption and outlines several implementation actions. CityPlan describes a broad vision for the next 30 years, based on people's ideas and choices during an extensive public process. During this final phase of public input on CityPlan, support for the Plan directions continued, consistent with earlier phases. Some changes are proposed to the draft Plan. However, these changes do not alter the main vision and directions. The task now switches from creating the Plan to implementing it. This will continue to involve people in neighbourhood and city- wide planning. Some initiatives are already under way, such as greenways, community policing, and a transportation plan. Other next tasks include incorporating CityPlan Directions into the upcoming Capital Plan and consulting with the public to agree on a program for preparing plans that apply CityPlan directions in neighbourhoods. * * *