ImpACT! Leadership Projects
2024 cohort
On September 24, this year's ImpACT! Leadership cohort presented their highly anticipated final projects. After 10 moths of leadership training, immersive TDM learning, and collaboration, this group has expanded their knowledge, created lasting connections, and produced projects that they can be truly proud of. Each resource is extremely valuable to TDM professionals of all experience levels, and we encourage you to take an opportunity to review them. Visit the links below to learn from this year's class and see what they've been working so hard on!
Watch 2024 presentations
Advancing TDM Through Local Laws
This group, composed of Sarah Dreitlein (City of San Jose), Bennett Foster (Atlanta Regional Commission), Ricardo Gotla (Washington State DOT), Timothy Hams (King County Metro), and Shontay Rose-Bell (Odonnell Company), developed a fantastic TDM ordinance reference guide for local jurisdictions. Through the approach of "So you want to have a TDM Ordinance," this group pulled together a comprehensive resource that outlines insights, strategies, and best practices for implementing TDM ordinances.
Building a TDM Library
This project, produced by Sabrina Green (Atlanta Regional Commission), Christine Krolewicz (GOBuffalo Niagara), Jennifer Sazehn (Liftango), Michael Wandler (Washington State DOT), and Catherine Windyk (Move Minneapolis), features a library of helpful information for TDM practitioners. Titled "Wayfinding for new TDM Professionals," this resource brings viewers through key concepts, strategies, and building blocks of the industry. Visit TDM town, their interactive graphic, to view curated one-pagers about topics from behavior change to career areas and more!
Creating a Shared Understanding of TDM
This resource, created by Michael Holme (Liftango), Lakeshia Lewis (OmniRide), Lauren Mishoe, Justin Narayan (Stanford University), and Kaylei Verrill (ICF International, Inc.), stems fromm an investigation into how TDM practitioners and those not working in the industry understand the term. Through interviews, surveys, and the establishment of personas, the group poses and answers critical questions about TDM. Their findings highlight a need to transform the understanding of TDM to one that audiences can more easily receive. This project includes a memo and an accompanying one-pager with guidance for
View the memo View the one-pager