OpenGov
will share your response with the City of Sunnyvale staff. Do you also want your response shown on this website?
Yes -
show it with my name
Sign in and be yourself
Sign in and let others know who you are and what you think. You can sign in now or after you submit your response. You'll be able to read your response on this website and change it if you change your mind.
Read more about privacy >
Yes - show it without my name
Sign in and be someone
Sign in and let others know what you think. Only OpenGov will know who you are. You can sign in now or after you submit your response. You'll be able to read your response on this website and change it if you change your mind.
Read more about privacy >
No - just show it without my name to staff
* required
Be anonymous
We recommend against this option. Even though your response will be shared with staff, it won’t be shown on this public website so other community members won’t have the opportunity to see it.
Concerned about sharing your contact information with OpenGov?
Read more about privacy >
Read more about privacy >
What is a disruptive statement?
A statement
containing personal attacks, profanity, commercial advertising or content which is entirely off-topic, and/or
from a user who has falsified their registration information with the intent to post multiple statements in one topic or to misrepresent their city of residence.
Why does Open Town Hall monitor for disruptive statements?
OpenGov is a non-partisan company dedicated to building public trust in government and broadening civic engagement. Many people will not participate if the forum has disruptive statements.
Does Open Town Hall find many disruptive statements?
No. Disruptive statements are quite rare - less than one in a thousand statements are disruptive.
What does Open Town Hall do if they find a disruptive statement?
Open Town Hall
moves the statement to a different web page,
describes the problem in an email to the author, and
invites the author to change the statement.
Does Open Town Hall ever edit or delete statements?
Never. Only the statement's author can edit or delete a statement.
If I disagree with someone, can I post my opinion?
Yes. Open Town Hall encourages open dialog which, by necessity, includes disagreements.
How do I know if my statement is a 'disagreement' or a 'personal attack'?
Personal attacks are disparaging remarks which impute motives to a person's action. Statements of fact, or of your own opinion are generally not personal attacks.
Here are some examples of statements which are, and are not, personal attacks.
Personal Attack
Not A Personal Attack
He lied.
He said he did X, but in fact he did Y.
She misrepresented the truth.
I don't trust her.
He is greedy.
He is making plenty of money.
It is merely a power play on her part.
She will announce her candidacy soon.
Open City Hall has two participation channels :
The Registered Channel: Sign in before or just after you submit your response. Either way, Open Town Hall will show your response on this website.
The Unregistered Channel: Don't sign in and remain anonymous. Open Town Hall will just share your response with Sunnyvale staff.
Note: The first time you sign in, you'll need to register (establish an account on Open City Hall). Registration is free.
The City of Sunnyvale has contracted with Open Town Hall to monitor responses shown on this website.
To prevent any single user from dominating the forum, the City of Sunnyvale restricts the number of responses any one user can post on selected topics. Registration helps Open Town Hall enforce this restriction.
Users, staff and government leaders often want to know the neighborhood from which a response is posted. Open Town Hall uses registration to show the neighborhood next to each response (not the address).
If a user posts a response that does not meet the City of Sunnyvale guidelines for civility , Open Town Hall uses the user's email address to invite the user to resolve the issue.
Open Town Hall will get your contact information. The company is under contract with the City of Sunnyvale to hold it in strict confidence per their privacy policy .
Since you'll see your own response on Open City Hall, you'll be able to confirm that your response was posted as you intended.
You'll be able to change and/or delete your response as long as the topic is open.
Yes. Sign out, then set your privacy preference to be "No - just show it without my name to staff". You won't need to register.
While no authentication procedure can perfectly detect every fraudulent registration, Open Town Hall is able to secure the registered channel against systematic fraud : cases where users submit enough statements with fraudulent registrations to sway the overall interpretation of the feedback.
Open Town Hall is unable to secure the unregistered channel against systematic fraud, because unregistered users are anonymous.
Neither the registered nor the unregistered channel represent a certified voting system or ballot box - and that caveat is footnoted on every page of feedback. Instead, both are additional channels for feedback to government.
Users can participate on the registered channel (by signing in) or on the unregistered channel (by remaining anonymous). The City of Sunnyvale offers both channels in order to broaden participation and maximize decision makers' insights.
The registered channel enables users to assure decision makers that their feedback comes from a real person in a specific neighborhood. It also enables users to participate in a public discussion on the website, as well as manage their own response after posting it.
The unregistered channel is for users who want to provide quick feedback without registering, and/or whose privacy concerns would prevent them from participating if required to register. Because many users with valuable insights will only share them anonymously, this channel gives decision makers the option to consider those insights in their deliberations.
OpenGovl is a non-partisan company whose mission is to broaden civic engagement and build public trust in government. The City of Sunnyvale has contracted with OpenGov to administer Open City Hall.
The five alternatives under consideration include:
OPTION 1: Four lanes of motor vehicle travel plus protected bike facilities and sidewalks
OPTION 2: Two lanes of motor vehicle travel plus protected bike facilities and sidewalks
OPTION 3: Pedestrian/bicycle/transit overcrossing
OPTION 4: Pedestrian/bicycle overcrossing
OPTION 5: Removal of the overcrossing from the General Plan
The Draft EIR will cover the following topics:
Aesthetics and visual impacts
Air quality
Biological resources
Cultural resources
Geology and soils
Greenhouse gas emissions
Hazardous materials
Hydrology and water quality
Land use and planning
Noise
Public services
Recreation
Transportation and circulation
Utilities and service systems
What significant environmental concerns do you have regarding a specific project option? For each environmental concern, select the project options to which this concern relates.
What other significant environmental issues would you like to see addressed in the Environmental Impact Report (EIR)?
About This Survey
The rest of this survey is divided into sections reflecting the 6 issues above, as well as a section for other concerns / general comments.
At the end of each section (beginning with the question below), you'll be asked which section of questions you'd like to "skip" to so that you can focus on the issues most important to you. In each case, select the first one on the list that is of importance to you. If, for example, you selected "Noise impacts," this would take you to that section, which will end with a question allowing you to choose only among the remaining sections: "Transit ridership" and "Other."
Which section would you like to skip to?
* required
What is a disruptive statement?
A statement
containing personal attacks, profanity, commercial advertising or content which is entirely off-topic, and/or
from a user who has falsified their registration information with the intent to post multiple statements in one topic or to misrepresent their city of residence.
Why does Open Town Hall monitor for disruptive statements?
OpenGov is a non-partisan company dedicated to building public trust in government and broadening civic engagement. Many people will not participate if the forum has disruptive statements.
Does Open Town Hall find many disruptive statements?
No. Disruptive statements are quite rare - less than one in a thousand statements are disruptive.
What does Open Town Hall do if they find a disruptive statement?
Open Town Hall
moves the statement to a different web page,
describes the problem in an email to the author, and
invites the author to change the statement.
Does Open Town Hall ever edit or delete statements?
Never. Only the statement's author can edit or delete a statement.
If I disagree with someone, can I post my opinion?
Yes. Open Town Hall encourages open dialog which, by necessity, includes disagreements.
How do I know if my statement is a 'disagreement' or a 'personal attack'?
Personal attacks are disparaging remarks which impute motives to a person's action. Statements of fact, or of your own opinion are generally not personal attacks.
Here are some examples of statements which are, and are not, personal attacks.
Personal Attack
Not A Personal Attack
He lied.
He said he did X, but in fact he did Y.
She misrepresented the truth.
I don't trust her.
He is greedy.
He is making plenty of money.
It is merely a power play on her part.
She will announce her candidacy soon.
Fields marked with * are required
What significant environmental concerns do you have regarding a specific project option? For each environmental concern, select the project options to which this concern relates.
What other significant environmental issues would you like to see addressed in the Environmental Impact Report (EIR)?
No response.Which section would you like to skip to?
Please explain the nature of your other concern(s).
Creating this overpass will add more congestion to an already congested stretch of Mary between Central and Fremont Ave. Commuter traffic to and from Moffit Park should be utilizing 101, 85, 237 or Central Expressway via Mathilda, not using Mary thought residential areas as a shortcut down to 280 at Homestead or 85 at Fremont. Keep commuters and commuter busses off of neighborhood roads! Mary was not connected to 280 or 101 to keep commuter traffic off it and we need to retain that mindset.
Can you suggest other reasonable alternatives that would also achieve the project goals and avoid these impacts?
Fix the Mathilda monster, where 101, 237 and Mathilda converge. It's a disaster. This would help this issue and beyond. Who approves the plans to build these large corporate buildings without having a plan for transportation to and from?
What mitigation measures would minimize these impacts?
Mary already went on a road diet and does not have capacity for Moffit Park traffic. Mathilda is the proper road to be using as it connects across the valley to all major freeways.
Do you live in Sunnyvale?
If you live in Sunnyvale, in which neighborhood do you live?
If you live OUTSIDE of Sunnyvale, please tell us which municipality:
No response.Do you work or study in Sunnyvale?
If you work or study in Sunnyvale, which area?
No response.If you work or study OUTSIDE of Sunnyvale, tell us in which municipality:
No response.