by Ion Mates
Transport in Birmingham was the main issue in a meeting at Birmingham City Council.
Birmingham Connected was discussed recently by the Economy and Transport Overview and Scrutiny Committee. Anne Shaw, Head of Transportation Services, presented the progress.
More details on the scheme are available under the Birmingham Connected Whitepaper, outlining a 20 year transport strategy for the city.
The #Birmingham economy and transport overview and #scrutiny committee is about to begin @bhamscrutiny @bhameastside pic.twitter.com/NILVRs9FeG
— Ion Mates (@JohnnyMates) November 21, 2014
.@anneshaw10 talking at @bhamscrutiny about a "go anywhere transport system" in #birmingham , namely @bhamconnected.
— Ion Mates (@JohnnyMates) November 21, 2014
Birmingham Connected – Birmingham City Council http://t.co/Zxze39cA2f @bhamscrutiny
— Ion Mates (@JohnnyMates) November 21, 2014
Equitable, efficient, sustainable, healthy, attractive. Some of the highlights of #birminghamconnected. #bcclive
— Ion Mates (@JohnnyMates) November 21, 2014
.@anneshaw10:If people used alternatives for just 2 return journeys Mon-Fri it would remove around 200k car journeys every weekeday @bcclive
— Ion Mates (@JohnnyMates) November 21, 2014
Webcast: @bhamconnected being discussed at today’s @bhamscrutiny: http://t.co/bkkB5oVeXD #bcclive #localgov pic.twitter.com/2NodSMG2C6
— Bham City Council (@BhamCityCouncil) November 21, 2014
Could the poo bus be part of the sustainable solution to Birmingham's transport problems? #BMAP http://t.co/fJQq4jNvfW
— Birmingham FOE (@Bham_FOE) November 20, 2014
Birmingham | UrbanPivot http://t.co/rokeBIVBEH @anneshaw10 #bhamconnected
— Ion Mates (@JohnnyMates) November 21, 2014
#electric #taxis in #birmingham on discussion at @bhamscrutiny . Sounds clean and good. pic.twitter.com/spo6v13Vqu
— Ion Mates (@JohnnyMates) November 21, 2014
Next topic: Changing Gear: Transforming Urban Mobility through cycling and walking #bcclive #bmap http://t.co/FsKEijsGX0
— Ion Mates (@JohnnyMates) November 21, 2014
#bcclive Changing obsolete wet-film speed cameras to digital variants pic.twitter.com/MI7QXjCpEG
— Ion Mates (@JohnnyMates) November 21, 2014
The session continued with a private agenda.
This post was originally published on Birmingham Eastside.