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Appendix C | 2 <br /> <br />Overview <br />This appendix provides a detailed summary of the results from the online engagement activities, <br />which included an online survey and an interactive map. These tools were used to gather community <br />input on transportation safety and capacity concerns throughout the Snoqualmie Pass area. Both <br />activities were hosted on the CSAP project website and were open to the public from September <br />25th, 2024, through May 31st, 2025. <br />Interactive Map <br />Community members pinpointed locations where they experienced transportation safety or capacity <br />concerns using an interactive map. Participants dropped markers to identify specific sites and <br />indicated the mode of travel related to each concern—walking/rolling, biking, driving, or other—as <br />well as whether the issue occurred during winter, summer, or year-round. Participants could place <br />multiple markers and had the option to upvote locations or comments added by others to highlight <br />shared concerns. <br />Results <br />A total of 30 contributors engaged with the interactive map, resulting in 194 combined contributions <br />and upvotes—referred to collectively as comments.1 As shown in Figure 1, 73% of comments related <br />to driving, 30% to walking/rolling, 6% to biking, and 5% were categorized as other concerns.2 As <br />depicted in Figure 2, 53% percent of comments reflected concerns present year-round, while 43% <br />were specific to winter conditions and 7% related to summer-specific issues. Figure 3 and Figure 4 <br />illustrate the location of comments by mode and season respectively. <br /> <br />1 “Contributors” refers to unique individuals who submitted comments. “Contributions” are the individual <br />comments provided by contributors. “Upvotes” represent comments that were liked or endorsed by other <br />contributors. For reporting purposes, each contribution was counted as one comment, and each upvote was <br />also counted as an additional comment. <br />2 These percentages total more than 100% because some comments were classified under multiple travel modes.