Posts Tagged ‘active living’

Did you miss these? (March 21, 2009)

Saturday, March 21st, 2009

A recap of this week’s equity news.

 ”The Culture Warriors Get Laid Off,” -  The New York Times

SOMEDAY we’ll learn the whole story of why George W. Bush brushed off that intelligence briefing of Aug. 6, 2001, “Bin Laden Determined to Strike in U.S.” But surely a big distraction was the major speech he was readying for delivery on Aug. 9, his first prime-time address to the nation. The subject — which Bush hyped as “one of the most profound of our time” — was stem cells. For a presidency in thrall to a thriving religious right (and a presidency incapable of multi-tasking), nothing, not even terrorism, could be more urgent.

When Barack Obama ended the Bush stem-cell policy last week, there were no such overheated theatrics. No oversold prime-time address. No hysteria from politicians, the news media or the public. The family-values dinosaurs that once stalked the earth — Falwell, Robertson, Dobson and Reed — are now either dead, retired or disgraced. Their less-famous successors pumped out their pro forma e-mail blasts, but to little avail. The Republican National Committee said nothing whatsoever about Obama’s reversal of Bush stem-cell policy. That’s quite a contrast to 2006, when the party’s wild and crazy (and perhaps transitory) new chairman, Michael Steele, likened embryonic stem-cell research to Nazi medical experiments during his failed Senate campaign.

The benefits of walking around your neighborhood,” - USA Today

Good morning! Did you get up and take a walk today?

Well, if you live in a neighborhood where you can easily walk to nearby shops, you are likely to be more active and thinner than if you live in a place where you have to drive everywhere, a new study shows. This is true no matter what income level the neighborhood.

“Walkable neighborhoods seem to be healthier for both lower-income and higher-income people,” says lead researcher Jim Sallis, director of the Active Living Research Program at San Diego State University.

A model for Obama‘Different, smarter’ way of helping kids in low-income areas,” - Metro News 

President Barack Obama’s plan to combat urban poverty draws on lessons learned from a New York charity called the Harlem Children’s Zone Project.

The nonprofit offers educational, health and social services to low-income families in a 97-block section of Harlem, with the aim of guiding poor children from birth to college.

Organizing in Action!

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

Judith BellThis has been a lively discussion about community organizers and why they matter.  I thought I would add a story to showcase the role of organizers, the different kinds of impacts they have, and the different kinds of people who end-up as organizers.  I’m hoping that others will add their own stories, so we can underscore how deep and wide the culture of organizing is, and how many different kinds of people are organizing in communities, large and small, across the country.  Here’s the story-from rural California, north of Sacramento…

The Wal-Mart in Anderson, Calif., may look like any other. But thanks to community organizers, several check-out lanes are now lined with healthy snacks - trail mix, granola bars, dried cranberries, diced peaches, and animal crackers - instead of the junk food that normally populates the impulse-buy aisle.

The organizers responsible for this progress probably don’t fit the harsh stereotypes of the profession we’ve been hearing about recently. They’re just regular neighborhood students - part of Kids Make A Stand, a project to promote healthy eating in Shasta County.

The students made a pretty compelling case to store manager Tim Trimble that the healthy snacks would help develop their bodies and minds.

“They put me on the spot in a big way, but in a good way,” Trimble told the Redding Record-Searchlight newspaper.

The students designed the “Kids Healthy Choices” stands in two check-out aisles and hoped people would respond. The reaction has been phenomenal. Shasta OrganizersSince the project began, sales of the healthy snacks have doubled.

The kids of Anderson continue organizing for positive change. They’ve made presentations to the managers of the Wal-Mart stores in Redding and Red Bluff, who are replicating the healthy food aisles in their own stores. The also plan to lobby the Anderson City Council for an ordinance to have healthy food sections in every store in the area.

Kids Make A Stand is a project of the South Shasta Healthy Eating, Active Communities (HEAC) initiative. HEAC is a four-year, $26-million initiative to combat childhood obesity, spearheaded by The California Endowment. The project increases opportunities for physical activity and healthy eating throughout California and develops policies to reduce the risk factors for diabetes and obesity.

Kids Make A Stand is one of many efforts Shasta County HEAC has undertaken, and one of several that show the power of young people when they’re organized and focused on making change. In another example, young people’s organized efforts helped convince the City of Anderson to install sidewalks along the road to a skate park and pressed the Anderson parks director to refurbish park restrooms and replace basketball nets. They have helped farmers in unincorporated Happy Valley create a trail map to encourage purchase of local produce and to preserve agriculture in the community. Farmers report an increase in visits to their farms.

These projects are making a big difference in the area.  It’s the organizers and those who participate that make the difference.

“HEAC is becoming part of the psyche of this community,” says Sheryl Vietti of Shasta County Public Health, a partner in the Shasta County HEAC project. “There’s a growing awareness that people care about healthy eating and physical activity. And the community has been receptive and responsive to all of our efforts.”

Please share your stories of successful organizing in the comments.

Judith Bell is president of PolicyLink and an experienced organizer for policy change.

Photo of Kids Make A Stand students by Michael Woodward, reporter, Anderson Valley Post. From left to right, Jonni Hinton, Emily LaFayette, Ally LaFayette, James LaRiza and Rebecca LaRiza.