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Living in a Healthy Community
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Get in the Car
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In most suburbs of the United States, it's "get in the car" to go to the grocery store, the drugstore, the playground, the soccer field, to a friend's house around the corner, and even to the health club.
"Kids today are better at running a software program than running a mile," said Mark Dessauer, communications director of Active Living by Design. "They have stronger thumbs than legs." Active Living is a national program to promote increased activity among people of all ages.
Thanks to the post-World War II building boom, driven by a surge in car ownership, the need for housing for returning G.I.'s and government-subsidized road building, America spread out and systematically programmed itself into a motor-driven sedentary society that is now taking a serious toll on the nation's health.
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US Transportation Department Study
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A 1995 study by the Transportation Department of found that children's nonmotorized trips to school had declined 40 percent in the previous 20 years and that adults' trips on foot dropped 42 percent in that same period. Other facts from the study:
With an increasing focus on roads to accommodate sprawl, sidewalks and protected crossings were often forgotten so that even people willing to walk could not do so safely.
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Restoring Person Power
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One major result of this failure to use "person power" is that children and adults today are bigger in size than ever. Diabetes rates are soaring, and an increase in hypertension and heart disease cannot be far behind. Furthermore, mounting evidence suggests that a sedentary life is bad for emotional and cognitive well-being. Then there is the pollution from motor vehicles and the stress associated with long and congested commutes that take an additional toll on health.
Currently, just a minority of Americans achieve the minimum recommended amount of physical activity — 30 minutes a day at least 5 days a week — and 60 percent get no exercise.
Impediments include lack of time (especially when hours a day are spent commuting), unsafe neighborhoods and, perhaps most important of all, no convenient and enticing place to be active.
Congress has not helped matters. Several years ago, it voted to increase financing for highways but against more money for bike lanes.
It is time to make changes, in what planners call the "built environment," to give more people the opportunity to become physically active and remain so. "It's not just a question of health. It's also quality of life," Mr. Dessauer said. "Can I walk to the store, bike to the park, see my neighbors out on the street?"
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25 Communities Promoting Active Living
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The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation underwrote a $15.5 million active-living program in 25 communities to test the widely held belief that making the built environment friendlier to pedestrians and cyclists will encourage more people to become active and increase activity among those now less-than-optimally active. Three neighborhoods in the Portland metro area were selected - see information in next section.
In 2003, each of the 25 communities has received a five-year grant of $200,000 to create partnerships of programs, promotions, policy changes and physical projects like sidewalks, bike lanes and racks, speed bumps and striped crossings aimed at making the community safer and more accessible to those willing to use their feet.
The philosophy is that a holistic approach, not just education, is needed to change people's behavior.
One such project is under way at the site of Denver's old Stapleton Airport that will eventually be five town centers with 30,000 residents, 35,000 jobs and 2 square miles of city parks.
The 1,500 residents of the first finished neighborhood can walk to two parks; a swimming pool; an elementary school; and a town center with a grocery store, drugstore and restaurants, as well as bus service. The sidewalks, narrow streets, parkways and greenways are links to 150 miles of Denver trails.
Chapel Hill, N.C., the base of Active Living by Design, is another test case. There, a mile from the University of North Carolina, a community called Carolina North is being developed.
A combination of homes, stores, parks and playgrounds will result in a "mixed-use community of pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods well connected to Chapel Hill's network of sidewalks and bus routes," the planners say.
In still another project in the South Bronx, a part of the Sheridan Expressway will become a greenway where people can walk, bike and plant gardens. "We're not anticar; we're pro-choice," Mr. Dessauer said. "People should have the option to walk and bike, as well as drive."
Even without the support of a major foundation, communities and individuals can do much to promote healthful activities among their fellow residents. Mr. Dessauer suggested supporting bond measures to establish or extend trails where people can walk and bike. When new housing developments are proposed, zoning requirements should include building sidewalks and safe play areas. Cluster housing, leaving a large community-accessible area in the middle, is a concept gaining acceptance in many areas.
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Healthy Portland Area Communities
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The Oregon Coalition for Promoting Physical Activity in collaboration with the American Heart Association - Pacific/Mountain Affiliate and other partners will focus this project on three Portland Metro area neighborhoods in two counties.
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The Damascus project will capitalize on a recent extension of Portland's Urban Growth Boundary. Partners hope to influence development and help create a mixed-use community with an integrated system of streets, parkways, and greenways.
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The North Portland project will focus on a light rail line corridor by using TravelSmart to help community residents improve their options for using light rail, walking and biking for transportation.
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The Southeast Portland project will focus on the design, building, and promotion of the Lents Station Interpretive Trailhead on the existing Springwater Corridor. This partnership could be a good example of multiple counties working together to promote different types of active living projects.
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Making Your Next Move
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When moving to a new home, consider whether the neighborhood has sidewalks and how close the home is to shopping, schools, parks or exercise centers. Can children walk or bike to school? Is there a trail or park or playground nearby where you or your children can run around and play and get the 30 minutes a day of moderately intense activity that can preserve health?
Is the neighborhood safe and accessible for older adults who may not have cars or may be too old to drive?
If possible, support programs like Rails to Trails, which establishes walking and biking trails all over the country on unused railroad tracks. These trails, found in many urban, suburban and rural areas, often pass through some of the most beautiful countryside.
Encourage transportation authorities to establish bike paths, install traffic lights, create pedestrian islands and hatched crossings and close neighborhood boulevards to traffic on weekends.
Get children involved in fostering active programs, perhaps through fund-raising (though, please, not selling candy), selling raffles or distributing fliers. If possible, volunteer to be a parent chaperon from time to time so that children can be taken to activity areas beyond the school and become better acquainted with what's available in the neighborhood.
The bottom line? Being healthy is not just a matter of avoiding illness. It also means feeling strong and vibrant, able to walk up stairs, carry a child or bag of groceries and otherwise perform life's activities without becoming breathless or exhausted, no matter what your age.
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