Laserfiche WebLink
off. The City is looking for incentives the community can provide to invest in building and <br />site improvements. <br />• Public Tree Inventory. Over the last decade or so, the City has begun encouraging <br />planting boulevard/street trees as part of new development. As our street tree <br />population grows, both physiologically and in actual number of trees, we are in need of <br />an inventory to manage this often overlooked community asset. A completed inventory <br />would allow the City to utilize tools such as i-tree to inform and educate both the public <br />and policy makers on both the environmental and financial benefits street trees provide. <br />• Exploration of Organics Collection Program (curbside or drop-off). The City has a <br />successful curbside recycling program for standard recyclables; however, food and paper <br />waste (organics) constitute the largest component of our waste stream. We would like <br />to research, analyze and implement an optional organics program (whether curbside <br />and/or small scale drop-off) for residents. <br />• Floodplain Modelling. The City's Flood Insurance Rate Maps, which were just updated by <br />FEMA in December of 2015, still include a number of areas identified as floodplain but <br />without detailed analyses to provide a Base Flood Elevation (BFE). This has created some <br />difficulty for various property owners and the City desires to complete modelling of these <br />areas to be able to provide at least an estimated BFE that could be used as part of a Letter <br />of Map Change application to FEMA. <br />• Volunteer Opportunities and Program Development. The City participates in a bi-annual <br />statistically -significant citizen survey benchmarked against peer communities. One of the <br />primary findings of this survey continues to be strategies to create additional <br />opportunities for residents to participate in the community. <br />