One and a half years after the contentious “pool bond” election of November 2019, in which more than 90 percent of Camas voters shut down the city’s bid to build a $78 million public community-aquatics center and hundreds of Camas residents loudly complained in online forums of a perceived communications breakdown between city officials and the community, the city has launched Engage Camas, an online platform designed to be “an alternative to traditional public engagement.”
“As many people know, traditional public engagement or community involvement usually involves attending a public meeting or providing a written submission to the city council,” the Engage Camas site informs Camas residents. “This can be time consuming and inconvenient; it can also be a little intimidating. Engage Camas gives you the opportunity to have your say on issues that are important to you, at a time and place of your choosing.”
Camas Communications Director Bryan Rachal, who spearheaded the Engage Camas project, has used Engage platforms in his work with other cities, including Boulder, Colorado, and said the online platform is another tool for the public to communicate with city staff and officials.
“This isn’t the be all, end all,” Rachal said of the new Engage Camas platform, which launched in early April on the city of Camas’ recently redesigned website. “We still have to do outreach. But this is another touchpoint, another type of engagement tool.”
Rachal, the city’s first communications director, started his new position at the start of the new year, on Jan. 11. He landed in Camas as the website redesign was wrapping up, and said he heard from the city’s new administrator, Jamal Fox, as well as Camas Mayor Barry McDonnell, about the importance of establishing better methods of communication with Camas residents.