Building Healthy Communities for Active Aging Awards 2008
- About the Award
- Achievement Award Winners
- Commitment Award Winners
- 2007 BHCAA Winner Updates
- What is Smart Growth?
- What is Active Aging?
- Connecting Smart Growth and Active Aging
- Announcing the 2009 Awards for Building Healthy Communities for Active Aging
- Self Management Assessment and Resource Tool
- Acknowledgements
- Printable version of the Building Healthy Communities for Active Aging Awards 2008 (PDF). (16 pp, 557K About PDF).
About the Award
The principal goal of the Building Healthy Communities for Active Aging Award program is to raise awareness across the nation about healthy synergies that can be achieved when communities combine and implement the principles of smart growth with the concepts of active aging.
Awards are presented to communities demonstrating the best and most inclusive overall implementation of smart growth and active aging at the neighborhood, municipal, tribal, county, and regional levels. Applicants are evaluated based on:
- overall effectiveness of the programs
- level of community involvement and outreach
- use of innovative approaches
- overall environmental health benefits of the project
There are two types of awards-the Achievement Award and the Commitment Award. The Achievement Award winners demonstrate excellence in building healthy communities for active aging. These recipients have implemented programs and policies that improve the health and well-being of the community and its citizens. The Commitment Award recognizes communities that are planning for and beginning to integrate smart growth and active aging.
Achievement Award winners:
Commitment Award winners:
2007 BHCAA Winner Updates
Achievement Award Winner
Bureaus of Portland Parks & Recreation and Transportation, Oregon
"The actual strolls through Portland neighborhoods were a worthwhile and beneficial activity, which I wouldn't have undertaken on my own."
Long considered a national leader in smart growth design, the City of Portland is using active aging programs to integrate older adults into its communities. Since the 1980s, Portland has been building compact neighborhoods and placing homes, businesses, services, and recreational opportunities within walking distance. These neighborhood centers are connected by nearly 2,500 miles of sidewalks, a sophisticated transit system, and a bike network of more than 270 miles of lanes, paths, and boulevards. To encourage older adults to use this infrastructure and promote active living, the City's Parks & Recreation and Bureau of Transportation developed the Senior Strolls and Senior Bike programs. The bike program, now run by Portland Parks & Recreation, offers training on free, comfortable, stable recumbent tricycles and provides helmets for all participants. Portland Parks & Recreation also offers graduates of the walking program the option to move on to progressive, three-level hiking programs, which can lead to wilderness hikes, in addition to many other recreational activities.
Portland's program to build strength and confidence in walking and cycling is working. Of the 300 people who have participated in the Senior Strolls program since 2005, 53 percent say they walk more and 71 percent report they have replaced at least one driving trip with a walking trip. The biking classes are consistently full.
Creating opportunities for active aging is one reason Portland was recently named by AARP Magazine as one of the nation's top five cities for older adults and retirees.
Contact:
Donna Green (Donna.green@pdxtrans.org)
Transportation Demand Management Specialist II
Bureau of Transportation
Transportation Options Division
(503) 823-6114
Commitment Award Winner
City of Casper, Wyoming
"Exercise and fresh air are very important to us in our retirement years. We enjoy using the extensive trail system in order to accomplish our goal of a healthy lifestyle."
Since 2005, Casper has been developing a plan to encourage active aging. The City established the Senior Study Committee to determine the needs of its aging population. The Committee analyzed local data, reviewed survey and focus group findings and identified gaps in services including the need for an improved infrastructure to improve walking and the need to build a variety of housing options.
Casper has begun to implement the recommendations. A study was conducted of the walking environment and as a result, sidewalks with curb ramps are being installed along major streets. Future sidewalk investments will be driven by active aging considerations. Casper also is considering amending zoning and development codes to expand the development of a variety of housing types that may be attractive to older adults, including assisted living facilities, board and care homes, shared housing, and accessory dwelling units.
Casper is focusing on the needs of its older population as it redevelops the Old Yellowstone District by encouraging development of diverse housing types within walking distance of shops and services. Additionally, Casper is expanding its senior center to accommodate more seniors. With these actions Casper is taking steps to meet the needs of older adults and the wave of aging baby boomers.
Contact:
Linda L. Witko (lwitko@cityofcasperwy.com)
Assistant City Manager
City of Casper
(307) 235-8296
Commitment Award Winner
City of Iowa City, Iowa
"The City's efforts help make this community a wonderful place to stay active as we grow up and grow old."
Iowa City, working with the Johnson County Livable Community for Successful Aging Policy Board, analyzed the community's needs for active aging and responded with a variety of policies and programs to encourage physical activity among older adults. Its research found that walking was the primary activity for 90 percent of those who regularly exercised. At the same time, many of Iowa City's older adults do not live within walking distance of stores, services, and other needs. The automobile-oriented design of shopping areas outside of downtown do not encourage walking as part of daily activity.
The City has adopted a variety of policies to improve the walking environment. A revised zoning code encourages commercial zones throughout the City that combine housing, shops, parkland, and services to make walking a viable choice for conducting daily errands. A new complete streets policy requires all streets to be designed to accommodate pedestrians and bicyclists, as well as cars. New subdivision codes require streets to connect, reducing dead ends and shortening distances residents need to travel.
The Iowa City/Johnson County Senior Center provides a variety of dance, yoga, tai chi, and fitness classes to complement seniors' walking routines. There is also a drill team that marches in the University of Iowa homecoming parade.
A great place for older adults to live, Iowa City has laid the groundwork for a more active lifestyle among its fast growing older adult population.
Contact:
Robert Miklo (bob-miklo@iowa-city.org)
Senior Planner
Iowa City Department of Planning and Community Development
(319) 356-5240
Commitment Award Winner
City of Satellite Beach, Florida
"The audible crossing signal on SR A1A lets me safely go to restaurants, stores, and supermarkets by myself. This enables me to live independently in my community."
Satellite Beach is transforming itself to meet the needs of its growing aging population. By increasing the number of sidewalks, creating new parks, and rezoning its commercial strips into walkable town centers with homes, stores, and services, the City has begun to create a place where residents can choose to walk or bike as part of their daily activities. Within this newly zoned district, the City has invested in the redevelopment of an old shopping center, creating a civic center and gymnasium with expanded physical activity classes including yoga, dance, and aerobics.
Public views and access to the water are extremely important to encouraging physical activity. Satellite Beach has invested in oceanfront parkland. It also refurbished two waterfront parks and disability access points to the beach. About 40 percent of waterfront property is under public ownership and City management is enhancing opportunities to enjoy the beach.
The transformation of Satellite Beach is driven by older adult participation in the community. The City actively engages older residents in volunteer opportunities, such as school crossing guards, "Citizens on Patrol" with the police department, or the "Neighbor-helping-Neighbor" program (senior volunteers assist neighbors by providing transportation and helping with yard work or repair projects). This year, seniors represent nearly 87 percent of City volunteers and volunteered almost 4,000 hours. Satellite Beach has created a positive and enriching environment for its growing aging population.
Contact:
Barbara Montanaro, CMC (bmontanaro@satellitebeach.org)
City Clerk
City of Satellite Beach
(321) 773-4407
BHCAA Winner Updates
Atlanta Regional Commission, Georgia
2007 Achievement Award Winner
The Atlanta Regional Commission's (ARC) Lifelong Communities Initiative has been working with the counties and cities in the metropolitan region to prepare for the growing older adult population by developing priorities, policies, and programs that support three goals: promoting housing and transportation options, encouraging healthy lifestyles, and expanding information and access to services.
Over the last year, ARC and its partners have made significant progress toward all three goals. Accomplishments include: passage of several zoning ordinances that encourage a diverse housing stock, integration of transportation needs into local comprehensive plans, and a program to train older adults how to advocate for changes to zoning codes and regulations regarding the built environment. Six of the county and city teams have formed preventive health collaboratives, finding new ways to deliver flu shots, pneumonia vaccines, mammograms, and monitor glucose and cholesterol levels. ARC is working in one community to develop a more pedestrian- and elder-friendly downtown. The Lifelong Communities Initiative has been able to bolster existing and initiate new walking clubs, helping more older adults increase their physical activity.
ARC is planning a multiday charrette for February 2009, during which participants will develop designs for six sites that incorporate mixed use, mixed income housing options, connection to surrounding neighborhoods, and walkable environments to insure that people of all ages, but particularly older adults, can live in the communities as long as possible.
Contact:
Cathie Berger (cberger@atlantaregional.com)
Director
Area Agency on Aging
Atlanta Regional Commission
(404) 463-3235
BHCAA Winner Updates
City of Kirkland, Washington
2007 Achievement Award Winner
Kirkland continues to build on its accomplishments by improving its programs and infrastructure to support active aging. To publicize the PedFlag program, the Kirkland Senior Council and the Kirkland Steppers, a senior walking group, produced a pedestrian safety video, Excel as a Pedestrian, which highlights the importance of using the flags for safe road crossing. As part of Kirkland's $6 million pledge to encourage walking and biking, the City's revised non-motorized transportation plan includes 28 new sidewalk projects and 25 new bike lane projects.
Kirkland named affordable housing as a top priority in the City's transit-oriented developments, creating more opportunities for seniors to live in and around these developments. Kirkland is exploring options to revise its comprehensive land use plan and rezoning that would allow the City to transform the underutilized South Kirkland Park & Ride lot into a transit-oriented hub that incorporates affordable housing, shops, and offices. In compliance with the City's Complete Streets Ordinance, the site will encourage the use of alternative transportation, such as transit, walking, and biking. Older adults living in or near the South Kirkland transit-oriented hub stand to benefit from the addition of local amenities and pedestrian-friendly walkways, which will be part of this development.
With Kirkland's holistic development approach that embraces walkable communities, affordable housing, and transit-oriented development, the City is not only practicing smart growth, it also is ensuring ongoing capabilities for active aging and healthy lifestyles.
Contact:
Carrie S. Hite (chite@ci.kirkland.wa.us)
Deputy Director
Parks & Community Services
City of Kirkland
(425) 587-3320
BHCAA Winner Updates
City of Rogers, Arkansas
2007 Commitment Award Winner
The Adult Wellness Center in Rogers, Arkansas recently completed construction of a Wellness Garden. The Wellness Garden, located directly behind the Center, provides visitors and residents of the adjacent senior housing complex an opportunity for outdoor physical activity and connects pedestrians with the surrounding community. The Wellness Garden features a rubberized walking trail as well as balance, strengthening, stretching, and exercise stations. The entire Wellness Garden is handicapped accessible.
The Garden also includes a meditation garden with a labyrinth, a rock and water garden teeming with fish and water plants, a demonstration garden with raised handicap accessible planter beds, a "4 Seasons Garden" designed and maintained by volunteers, a bird and butterfly sanctuary, a gazebo, a picnic area, and a recreational lawn panel.
Trails extending from the Garden lead to senior housing and retail shops, and eventually will connect into the City's master trail system, making walking a viable option to and from the Wellness Center and nearby senior housing.
Contact:
Keri York Wilkinson (kwilkinson@rogersark.org)
Director
City of Rogers
Adult Wellness Center
(479) 631-3333
For more information, please visit…
What is Smart Growth?
The built environment—places where we live, work and play—impacts people of all ages. Housing and transportation opportunities shape our environment and have longstanding consequences on our daily lives and the quality of our environment. Smart growth strives to minimize the impacts of our built environments both on human health and the natural environment by integrating environmental considerations into development patterns. Using smart growth, communities create attractive, walkable neighborhoods that give people of varying age, income level and physical ability a range of safe, affordable and convenient choices in where to live and how to get around.
Growing smart helps to reduce our ecological footprint and preserve natural resources and open space.
Smart Growth Principles
- Mix land uses
- Take advantage of compact building design
- Create a range of housing opportunities and choices
- Create walkable neighborhoods
- Foster distinctive, attractive communities with a strong sense of place
- Preserve open space, farmland, natural beauty and critical environmental areas
- Strengthen and direct development toward existing communities
- Provide a variety of transportation choices
- Make development decisions predictable, fair and cost effective
- Encourage community and stakeholder collaboration in development decisions
For more information on active aging, please visit these Websites…
Learning Network for Active Aging
www.LNactiveaging.org
National Council on Aging’s Center for Healthy Aging
www.healthyagingprograms.org
National Blueprint
www.agingblueprint.org
What is Active Aging?
By 2030, the number of older persons in the United States is expected to double to more than 70 million. As our population ages, a growing number of us will be living with chronic conditions, placing increased pressure on our health care system. Only 20 percent of those over the age of 65 participate in regular activity, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Many older adults live with at least one chronic condition. Research demonstrates that daily physical activity is vital for keeping fit and controlling chronic conditions. Creating a walkable community is one of the principles of smart growth that fosters active aging.
Active aging strives to promote strategies that engage older adults through a variety of structured and unstructured physical activities. Communities can promote active aging by implementing a diverse array of accessible physical-activity programs, increasing the accessibility of opportunities for self-directed physical activity for those 50 years of age or older and providing a safe, walkable environment.
Connecting Smart Growth and Active Aging
By adopting smart growth principles, communities can design places that increase mobility and improve quality of life for older adults. Neighborhoods that integrate homes, shops, and services, as well as parks and recreational facilities, allow residents, especially older adults, to pursue an interesting and active life without depending on a car.
Properly designed sidewalks and bikeways allow older residents to walk and bike to doctors' offices, businesses, and local shops. Transit provides access to places that are further away. These everyday activities promote physical fitness. Across the nation, the average transit rider walks or bikes 20 minutes a day as part of using transit, meeting two thirds of his or her daily needs for physical activity.
The benefits of building healthy communities for active aging are being realized in communities across the country. For example, the City of Saratoga Springs, New York has created a mix of housing opportunities near the Saratoga Senior Center and medical facilities. By living near key amenities, older residents may choose to walk rather than drive.
Smart land use planning that incorporates smart growth principles by modifying the built environment can lead to a supportive environment for active aging.
Announcing the 2009 Awards for Building Healthy Communities for Active Aging
For more information…
EPA Aging Initiative
www.epa.gov/aging
Please submit questions to
aging.info@epa.gov
EPA's Aging Initiative announces the 3rd annual Building Healthy Communities for Active Aging Awards program. The awards recognize outstanding community planning and strategies that support active aging. Winners will be announced in spring 2010. Applications are due July 17, 2009. Applications, award guidelines, and entry rules can be found at www.epa.gov/aging/bhc/awards.
Self Management Assessment and Resource Tool
The Self Management Assessment and Resource Tool includes 20 questions that can help a community assess its progress in integrating active aging concepts with smart growth principles. Each question focuses on a particular milestone, such as conducting a community assessment to determine the level of older adult participation in physical activity programs or formulating a plan to adopt smart growth planning. Communities are asked to select the category that best describes the progress of their active aging initiatives: not at all; partially completed; or fully completed. The tool also provides tips for getting started and links to potential resources for addressing each milestone. Communities can use the results from this self-test to identify opportunities to improve their active aging initiatives and smart growth planning efforts to promote a safe and healthy environment for older residents. For more information, please visit www.epa.gov/aging/bhc/smart/index.htm.
Acknowledgements
Thanks to the Steering Committee.
- Terry Bazzarre, PhD, Senior Program Officer, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
- David M. Buchner, MD MPH, Chief, Physical Activity & Health Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- Wojtek Chodzko-Zajko, PhD, Professor and Department Head, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
- Judy Kruger, PhD, Epidemiologist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- Catherine Liles, MPH, School of Rural Public Health, Texas A&M University
- Michael Marcus, MSW, Program Director for Aging, Weinberg Foundation
- John N. Migliaccio, PhD, Director of Research, MetLife Mature Market Institute
- Kevin Nelson, AICP, Senior Staff Member, Community & Environment Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
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Marcia Ory, PhD, Professor, Texas A&M University
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Serena Sanker, MS, Senior Program Associate,
National Council on Aging, Center for Healthy Aging
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Chris Spain, Director, Research, Planning & Special Projects, President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports
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Kathy Sykes, MA, Senior Advisor, Aging Initiative,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
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Brett Van Akkeren, MBA, Senior Staff Member, Community & Environment Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- Nancy Whitelaw, PhD, Director, Center for Healthy Aging and Senior Vice President, National Council on Aging
Thanks to the BHCAA Awards Supporters.
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AARP
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Active for Life
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America Walks
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Administration on Aging
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American Medical Association
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American Public Health Association
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Atlanta Regional Commission
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American Society on Aging
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Center for Civic Partnerships
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Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists
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Elder Care Advocacy of Florida
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Generations United
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Gerontological Society of America
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Healthy Aging Research Network
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International City/County Management Association
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International Council on Active Aging
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Local Government Commission
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Milton H. Erickson Foundation, Inc.
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National Association of Area Agencies on Aging
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National Blueprint Initiative
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National Council on Aging
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National Indian Council on Aging
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National Recreation and Park Association
- Project for Public Spaces