#170 Summer 2012 — Election Issue

Are Planners Responsible for Public Health?

Could planners have an effect on waistlines around the Beltway? Maryland’s Prince George’s County and Virginia’s Fairfax County are examining how land use and transportation policy can be modified to […]

Could planners have an effect on waistlines around the Beltway? Maryland’s Prince George’s County and Virginia’s Fairfax County are examining how land use and transportation policy can be modified to promote more healthy and safe environments — potentially improving long-term health outcomes as a result.

In Prince George’s, where 50 percent of children are either obese or overweight, the County Council unanimously voted to make the Port Towns area a “wellness opportunity zone.” Wellness Opportunity Zones are intended to encourage local communities to make health a priority in planning decisions. The Port Towns Community Health Partnership, funded by Kaiser Permanente, is taking this a step further by working to change municipal zoning codes in order to encourage walkability, bikeability, and access to recreational areas throughout the four Port Towns.

In Fairfax, the county’s Partnership for a Healthier Fairfax has reviewed how local land use and transportation policies could be modified to promote a more healthy and safe environment and reduce health inequities. The partnership to date includes over 80 community stakeholders, including Reston Interfaith, Northern Virginia Urban League, and the Fairfax County Department of Planning and Zoning.

It’s becoming a familiar refrain that a zip code often does, but should not, determine a person’s health, an idea we explored in the spring 2012 issue of Shelterforce. As Greater Greater Washington, a DC-area blog covering issues related to walkable communities, puts it, improving health needs to include “transportation policy, street-scale improvements, and access to places suitable for physical activity.”

We couldn’t agree more.

OTHER ARTICLES IN THIS ISSUE

  • Public Housing, Private Property

    October 10, 2012

    1070 Washington Avenue in the Morrisania section of the Bronx sounds like just another address, but it’s notable for being the home of a new affordable housing complex that could […]

  • Adding to What We Know

    October 10, 2012

    The Rise of Residential Segregation by Income, by Richard Fry and Paul Taylor. Pew Research Center, August 2012.

  • Defending Progressive State Housing and Land Use Policies

    October 10, 2012

    The fates of three venerable policies on fair share housing and sustainable land use can point the way for how to support similar efforts in other states.