The City of Boulder and Boulder County are getting ready for the first-ever Community Assembly in Boulder, which will help to shape the 50th anniversary update to the Boulder Valley Comprehensive Plan (BVCP). The topic for deliberation will be How, and where, can we implement 15-minute neighborhoods? Together, the members of the Assembly will define their vision for 15-minute neighborhoods in the Boulder Valley; consider their potential costs, benefits and challenges; and make recommendations to policymakers that will be considered as part of the BVCP update.
The current BVCP references 15-minute neighborhoods in several policies, though our community’s vision for these places and the roadmap to create them are not entirely clear, leading to slow and irregular implementation.
Why this topic?
The idea rose out of community feedback and was vetted by city and county staff, as well as the city’s assembly design consultant, MASS LBP. The topic meets the criteria for an assembly, including:
- Is there a meaningful problem to be solved?
- Are there valid tradeoffs?
- Will we learn something new?
During their deliberations, we expect the assembly will take up related questions on land use, transportation, housing, economic vitality and other important policy areas of the BVCP.
How will Assembly members be selected?
There will be two ways to become a member of the assembly: either by responding to one of 10,000 invitations that will be mailed to randomly selected households or by responding to an open call to participate, both of which will go out in March 2025. The assembly will include 48 community members who will be randomly selected — around 40 from respondents to the mailed invitation and eight to the open call. The benefit of the hybrid approach is that we increase the pool of individuals in communities that are harder-to-reach, and we create pathways for commuters to participate.
From the pool of all applications received, members will be randomly selected in April 2025 using sampling criteria based on geography, age, gender, race/ethnicity, disability status and housing situation to roughly match the demographics of the Boulder Valley, using data from the American Census and American Community Survey, while also leaning into the city’s commitment to racial equity.
City and county officials (and their immediate families); city and county staff; individuals and entities under contract by the City of Boulder or Boulder County will not be eligible. These restrictions are in place to maintain the independence of the process and prevent conflicts of interest and disproportionate influence.
Learn more about the Community Assembly on the city’s website. For questions, contact Vivian Castro-Wooldridge, Community Engagement Senior Project Manager (P&DS), at 303-548-4769 or castrowooldridgev@bouldercolorado.gov.