Littleton advisory board drafts quarterly survey for residents ages 18 to 36
Board members said they want feedback on the survey by July 24 so it can launch ahead of the next City Council meeting and help shape future recommendations.

Littleton’s Next Generation Advisory Board is drafting a quarterly survey for residents ages 18 to 36 that members said could become a standing way to gather feedback from younger adults and guide future recommendations to City Council.
During a July 7 meeting, board members said they wanted feedback on the survey by July 24 so it could launch before the next council meeting, according to the meeting transcript. Members described it as a short, recurring “continuous feedback” tool rather than a one-time poll.
The initial audience would be Littleton residents living within city limits, though members also discussed whether to later include people who work or attend school in the city and whether to verify residency through the city’s address wizard, the transcript shows.
Possible survey topics include e-bikes and youth infrastructure, neighborhood mapping, third-space activation, affordable child care access, and recurring questions about quality of life and whether young adults feel represented in city decision-making, the transcript shows.
Members said the survey should take about five to eight minutes and remain anonymous unless a respondent chooses to provide an email address for follow-up, according to the transcript.
Board members also discussed possible school-based outreach to residents under 18 after classes resume, but framed that as a later expansion rather than part of the initial launch, the transcript shows.
The board has not finalized the survey or said how results would be published. But members said the responses would help set board topics, initiatives and council recommendations, making the survey a potential ongoing channel for younger residents to influence city priorities.