Looking for new ways to gather community feedback, Minnetonka city leaders turned to Facebook Live, hosting a virtual town hall meeting this month.
The west metro suburb is perhaps the first Minnesota city to use the new platform, with more than 100 people tuning in for the meeting, which has now been viewed more than 1,600 times.
"It's truly breaking ground," Rebecca Ryan, a futurist hired to oversee the process, said at the half-hour town hall.
It's part of Minnetonka's new input effort, "Imagine Minnetonka," begun this year to get feedback from residents through October.
So far, pedestrian and bicyclist safety and amenities have emerged among respondents' top priorities, suggesting more mountain bike trails and sidewalks.
It's a common theme suburbs across the Twin Cities are hearing from all ages: People want streets that were designed amid suburban sprawl to be reconfigured to focus less on cars and more on bicycles and pedestrians.
"It's a wonderful neighborhood, a wonderful city. But the one thing I get a sense isn't being taken seriously enough is pedestrian safety," said Mike Tikkanen, who's pushed for more crosswalks and pedestrian bridges near Ridgedale Center. "We have to plan ahead because there's going to be more pedestrians and more bicyclists."
City leaders say the campaign wasn't started because there's anything wrong with Minnetonka, but rather because they want to get ahead of the curve to see what residents envision for the city over the next 20 years. The process could help the 50,000-resident suburb rebrand and set new goals for its strategic plan.