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Un proces participativ este o succesiune de activități participative (de exemplu, prima etapă poate fi completarea unui sondaj, urmată de formularea de propuneri, discutarea lor în cadrul unor întâlniri față în față sau virtuale și, în cele din urmă, stabilirea priorităților) cu scopul de a defini și de a lua o decizie pe o temă specifică.

Exemple de procese participative pot fi: un proces de alegere a membrilor unui comitet (atunci când candidaturile sunt prezentate pentru prima dată, apoi dezbătute și, în final, se alege o candidatură), un buget participativ (atunci când cetățenii fac propuneri, acestea sunt evaluate din punct de vedere economic și apoi sunt votate tot de către cetățeni în limita unui buget prestabilit), un proces de planificare strategică, elaborarea în colaborare a unui regulament sau a unei norme, conceperea unui spațiu urban sau elaborarea unui plan de politică publică.

Calgary's Playgrounds: Equitable Access to Safe and Inclusive Play Spaces

Help identify where playgrounds are aging, missing, or inaccessible — and shape the case for investment in every neighbourhood

Despre acest proces

Calgary maintains over 1,100 playgrounds, but aging equipment, accessibility gaps, and unequal distribution mean not every child has safe, quality play space nearby. This process invites residents to identify where the gaps are and what needs to change.

Play is not a luxury — it is essential infrastructure for child development, community connection, and neighbourhood wellbeing. Yet across Calgary, access to quality playground space is far from equal. Established neighbourhoods often benefit from well-maintained, recently upgraded equipment, while newer communities on the city's outskirts and lower-income areas frequently lack basic amenities or are served by aging structures that have sat on replacement lists for years.

Calgary's own benchmark is five playgrounds for every 1,000 children under 12, but that target means little if the playgrounds that exist are broken, inaccessible to children with disabilities, lack shade in the summer heat, or sit in locations poorly connected to where families actually live. In November 2024, City Council faced a budget decision that nearly cut $4 million from the Parks and Playground Amenities program — a reminder that playground investment is not guaranteed and that community voices matter in defending it.

This process gives Calgarians a structured way to document playground conditions in their communities, submit proposals for upgrades or new installations, and collectively prioritize where investment should go. Your local, on-the-ground knowledge of which playgrounds are deteriorating, which neighbourhoods are underserved, and what design features matter most to families in your area is exactly what this process is designed to surface and amplify.

Referință: AB-PART-2026-02-6

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