City Meetings and Updates Week of April 13

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  • City Meetings:
    • Finance Committee 4/13
    • Plan Commission 4/13
    • Transportation Commission 4/15
  • News: Local Air Quality Monitoring Information Now Available Online
  • Reminder: Spring Yard Waste Collection Begins Soon; Expanded Hours for Streets Division Drop-Off Sites
  • Parks Seeking Public Input: Reimagining Odana Hills Golf Course 
  • Events & Announcements

City Meetings

Finance Committee

The Finance Committee meeting will take place on Monday, April 13, at 4:30 p.m. in virtual format. Agenda items include:

  • Item 4: a resolution authorizing a competitively selected contract with REDI Transports for emergency detention transport services (I'm a cosponsor). This program provides third-party, non-police transport for mental health-related transports to the Winnebago Mental Health Facility. Here's a 2023 local news story on the topic.
  • Item 5: a resolution approving the 2026 Neighborhood Grant Program funding recommendations (I'm a cosponsor). Two District 3 projects are recommended for grant funding: a “wayside area" with a kiosk, planting bed, and bike maintenance area at Sycamore Park proposed by the Burke Heights Neighborhood Association; and a community wellness and violence prevention program at Harmony Apartments proposed by Seein' is Believin' LLC. Here is the full list of scored proposals with more information about each.
  • Item 14: a resolution amending the 2026 Operating Budget and setting the 2026 Municipal Services bill rates for the Sewer Utility, Landfill, and Stormwater Utility. For the average residential customer, Sanitary Sewer charge is proposed to increase by 2.7% or $1.06/month, the Landfill charge will stay the same, and the Stormwater charge is proposed to increase by 2.3% or $0.29/month.

Meeting info:

Plan Commission

The Plan Commission meeting will take place on Monday, April 13, at 5:30 p.m. in virtual format. Agenda items include development-related requests (none in District 3).

Transportation Commission

The Transportation Commission meeting will take place on Wednesday, April 15, at 5:00 p.m. Agenda items include a discussion about pain points and potential process improvements to Safe Streets Madison, which is the City's program for identifying, ranking, and approving traffic calming projects. Here are a detailed staff memo and a staff presentation to the Transportation Commission members for Wednesday's discussion. 

Here are the staff recommendations for Safe Streets Madison program changes according to the memo, each of which aligns with the identified challenges of the program:

  • School-related projects – Add 30% weight to a potential project's benefit score for those projects identified through a Safe Routes to School planning process and dedicate a minimum of 10% of funding for each round to these projects.
  • Lifetime project costs – Use anticipated 30-year cost in place of construction costs in prioritization process. 
  • Maximum individual project costs – Direct staff to stop scoring if a proposed project's estimated lifetime cost exceeds $200,000 and develop a formal process to redirect high-cost, high-impact projects to alternative programs. 
  • Low-scoring project migration – Migrate low-scoring projects from the candidate list to an archived list after 3 years; allow projects from the archived list to return to candidate list if warranted by new data. 
  • Quick-build projects – Direct staff to consider temporary paint-and-post construction for projects that have a high impact score but a low benefit/cost score.

Meeting info:

News: Local Air Quality Monitoring Information Now Available Online

Madisonians now have a new resource for information about air quality in their neighborhood. Data from City of Madison's low-cost air quality sensors is now available on the Love My Air Wisconsin website. Residents can now access real-time measurements of particulate matter at more than 40 locations across town. The project is a collaboration between the City of Madison and the Children's Health Alliance of Wisconsin, which will strengthen local efforts to better understand and improve air quality for residents of all ages. 

Screenshot of Love My Air sensor readings as of Sunday morning, showing mostly "Moderate" air quality in Madison today, with a couple of "Good" spots on the East and North sides.
Image credit: Love My Air Wisconsin
Screenshot showing Madison's air quality readings as of Sunday morning.

Love My Air Wisconsin displays hour-by-hour data on fine particulate matter (PM2.5), particles that can cause serious health problems when we breathe them in. Users can explore sensor readings, view air quality trends in their neighborhoods, and learn about actions to reduce exposure.

Love My Air began in 2018 as an initiative by the City of Denver to provide actionable air quality information to residents. Since then, the program has expanded from 9 to more than 35 schools in the Denver Public School System and three health care centers, and other communities in Colorado. Building on this success, the Children's Health Alliance of Wisconsin launched the Love My Air Wisconsin program, installing air quality sensors at 15 schools in partnership with Milwaukee Public Schools. The City of Madison has joined this initiative to provide accessible information about air quality that helps our community know when to take action to protect our health.  

Reminder: Spring Yard Waste Collection Begins Soon; Expanded Hours for Streets Division Drop-Off Sites

Parks Seeking Public Input: Reimagining Odana Hills Golf Course 

Branded photo of Odana Hills Golf Course
Image credit: Madison Parks

The City of Madison Parks Division is excited for the new partnership with Michael and Jocelyn Keiser and the Madison Parks Foundation. Through the Keisers' philanthropic vision and generous donation, we have an opportunity to reimagine, redesign and reconstruct Odana Hills Golf Course. The baseline course improvements will address tee boxes, green complexes and surrounds, along with some potential for routing adjustments.
In addition to the golf course improvement project, the City is planning to leverage the private donation and take advantage of the temporary closure of the property in a way that allows for public infrastructure improvements to both Odana Hills Golf Course and Odana Hills East Park. 

Get Involved!

Events & Announcements 

Please visit the City news webpage to find additional news and announcements and to subscribe to receive notification of news releases as they are posted. Additional upcoming events can also be found on the City events calendar.

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Portrait of Alder Derek Field

Alder Derek Field

District 3
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