Local Questionnaire
To facilitate gathering relevant information about your community and its pedestrian-related
issues, a Local Data Questionnaire has been provided in Appendix A. The questionnaire deals
with such topics as crash data, program activity, and community attitudes towards pedestrian
issues.
Local Slides of Local Problems/Accomplishments
In addition, the Instructor will deliver a second slide show on some facility improvements that
have been implemented in other communities. If you have already made some facility
improvements, you should provide some slides on these local accomplishments as well.
Below you will find a list of suggested images to include in your presentation.
The list is only offered as a suggestion. Your presentation should focus on those conditions
which you believe to be of greatest significance to local pedestrians.
Problem Facility Slides
Facility Improvements
Introductory Presentations
Many of the participants coming to the Road Show will be unfamiliar with exactly
what has
already been done for pedestrians in the community. A simple way to bring them up to speed is
for representatives of key agencies to provide very brief overviews of what has been done or is
being planned in their respective disciplines. These disciplines should include law enforcement,
traffic engineering or planning, education, and emergency medicine. The presentations should be
no more than five minutes in length, and will take place during the Introductions exercise at the
opening of the Road Show.
The presentation should be informal in nature and should not require a lot of advance
preparation.
Their primary purpose is to define where the community is with regards to pedestrian safety and
where it needs to go.
Local News Clippings
Early on in the Road Show, the Instructor will be conducting an exercise
designed to put a human
face on pedestrian crash statistics. This exercise would be greatly enhanced if you could provide
information about local pedestrian crashes. Some communities accomplish this by providing
copies of local news clippings about recent pedestrian crashes. You should make sufficient
copies of the clippings to distribute to all participants at the Road Show. If you have
invited a
representative from the local newspaper, he or she may be able to conduct a search of the paper's
files and provide re-prints.
Reminder
It is important to remember that the Pedestrian Safety Road Show is designed to
help
communities get a pedestrian safety program started. You are not at any disadvantage if your
community has not already conducted an extensive analysis of the problem and developed a
detailed plan of action. In fact, if you have already done all of this, you probably are too far
along to really benefit from the Road Show. The local information that is being
requested here is
designed to help the Instructor:
You must complete this form and return it to the Instructor no later than three
weeks prior to
the Road Show. Failure to return the questionnaire may result in a delay in the
scheduled
delivery of the Road Show.
If your community has not already gathered a lot of information about the nature of your
pedestrian safety problem, you may not be able to answer all of the questions on the
questionnaire. That is okay. You are not expected to conduct an extensive data collection and
analysis process prior to hosting the Road Show. It is important, however, that you
return the
questionnaire so that the Instructor will know what information you already have and what
information you will need to collect early on in the development of your pedestrian safety
program.
During the Road Show, you will be asked to deliver a slide
presentation on local facility
problems (and accomplishments). You will be responsible for providing the slides for this
presentation and for making the presentation, (or delegating this responsibility to someone in
the community who is very familiar with facility issues).
The Instructor will deliver a generic slide presentation on facility problems, using slides from all
over the country. Your slide presentation on local facility problems will either replace or
supplement this generic presentation, depending on the length of your presentation.
To be effective, the slides should be in-focus, properly lit, and not too cluttered. The problem
that is being displayed should be centered in the slide.
You do not need to send the slides to the Instructor. However, you do need to
send a list of
the images that you will be using. The list should include a brief description of the problem
that each slide portrays. This list must be provided to the Instructor two weeks before the
scheduled Road Show.
Your responsibility as local sponsor is to make arrangements for these
presentations. You
need to identify individuals representing the various agencies and secure their commitment to
make the presentation.
While providing local clippings is not a requirement, if you are going to provide
clippings
during the Road Show, please provide a set to the Instructor two weeks prior to the
Road
Show so that he or she can build them into the presentation.