Aiuto
A processo partecipativo è una sequenza di attività partecipative (ad esempio, prima compilando un sondaggio, poi formulando proposte, discutendole in riunioni faccia a faccia o virtuali e infine dando la priorità a esse) allo scopo di definire e prendere una decisione su un argomento specifico.
Esempi di processi partecipativi sono: un processo di elezione dei membri del comitato (in cui le candidature vengono presentate per la prima volta, poi discusse e infine si sceglie una candidatura), i budget partecipativi (dove le proposte sono fatte, valutate economicamente e votate con i soldi disponibili), un processo di pianificazione strategica, la stesura collaborativa di un regolamento o norma, la progettazione di uno spazio urbano o la produzione di un piano di politica pubblica.
Calgary's Water Future: Community Input on the Water Main Crisis and Long-Term Resilience
Calgarians deserve a voice in how the city prepares for, responds to, and recovers from critical water infrastructure failures
Informazioni su questo processo
The 2024 Glenmore Trail water main break exposed serious vulnerabilities in Calgary's aging water infrastructure. This process invites residents to engage with the long-term questions of how Calgary should invest in water resilience, equity, and transparency going forward.
In June 2024, the catastrophic failure of a water transmission main near Glenmore Trail disrupted water service for hundreds of thousands of Calgarians, triggered emergency restrictions, and revealed how dependent the entire city is on aging infrastructure that the public rarely thinks about until something goes wrong.
The incident raised urgent questions that go beyond the immediate repair: How old is Calgary's water network, and which parts are most at risk? How are repair and replacement priorities set, and by whom? What role should residents play in decisions about water infrastructure investment? Are the costs and risks of infrastructure failure distributed equitably across the city?
This participatory process creates space for Calgarians to learn about water infrastructure challenges, submit proposals for policy and investment improvements, and collectively prioritize what the city should do differently. The outcome will be a community brief to inform Calgary's water resilience strategy and capital planning conversations.