The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in several tough challenges for transportation project teams to convey project information and gain feedback from the public in order to keep projects on schedule and deliver much-needed infrastructure improvements. Finding ways to foster public engagement while conventional large gathering meetings and hearings are limited or prohibited is now one of the biggest issues in advancing projects that require public engagement moving forward.
But our industry has found a way to keep projects moving forward and communities involved. And it’s now becoming clear the communities we serve – and the projects we are designing – may be better for it.
Here are a few lessons we have learned in the field this year that have led to more community engagement through virtual meetings.
Just like in-person meetings, planning is as important as execution when it comes to virtual presentations. There are a few steps your team can take to get ahead of questions and issues attendees may have.
It’s likely that your team will need to host multiple virtual presentations on the project to multiple audiences. But it is important that your message does not change. Here are some tips to keep in mind to ensure every audience you talk to receives the information they need.
Virtual public engagement meetings will be around long after the COVID-19 pandemic fades away. While in-person meetings cannot be abandoned, virtual technology will be a much more used tool — and much more effective.
Consider the PD&E study we recently completed for a pivotal and community-sensitive corridor expansion project in South Florida.
We had met several times with the city and developed innovative solutions to address a lot of concerns, as well as provide more details and enhance other aspects of the project. The team had gotten to a good spot in the development and was ready to start meeting to explain these refinements to the public and stakeholders. And then COVID-19 struck.
We went from planning large public meetings in April and May to quickly realizing that a large public meeting was not going to take place anytime soon. Realizing this new reality, we pivoted quickly to evaluate how best to execute a large public meeting virtually.
We developed a plan and executed three virtual public update meetings for the project during the summer, hosting and reaching almost 800 attendees over 3 virtual meetings. The team followed up with smaller virtual stakeholder meetings. For one week in October, our team planned, developed and hosted 13 Public Hearing Sessions – 9 of them virtual hearings held across 3 days and reaching nearly 400 people.
Our virtual public engagement after-meeting surveys found:
We have an opportunity to be much more effective in a virtual meeting than an in-person meeting. We can better explain the project and give the audience nice, clear graphics to ensure everybody’s on the same page at the same time.
Most importantly, we have the potential to reach more people affected by each project. Our virtual webinars got three times as many people participating in and attending meetings as the in-person meetings. More attendees means more questions and a greater opportunity to showcase the benefits of a project to its core audience.
And, ultimately, virtual meetings may lead to more acceptance from the community over pivotal projects. That acceptance can ultimately move your project forward.
Learn how we can serve as a partner on your next transportation project.