A
healthy community for children is a healthy community for all
By
Michael J Morris
When I was a kid growing up
in a small town, I travelled all over the place on my tricycle, and as the
years passed graduated to my two wheel bicycle waving at folks and at times
stopping to chat. I climbed the trees in our yard and in all ways felt part of
the community.
I was reminded of those
wonderful years while reading about an initiative launched by Dana Osiowy,
executive director of Big Brothers, Big Sisters and Frankie Hols, youth liaison,
to make Cranbrook more youth friendly.
It struck me as being quite
amazing that a city now actually has to undertake a project to ensure that it is
youth friendly, but after doing a bit of research, I began to grasp the need for
it.
I came
across work being done by the International Making Cities Livable Council and
the National Town Builders Association in the United States who are partnering
"to guide the development
of a “Child-Friendly Community” Certification Program that gathers together
under one umbrella all of the guidelines necessary to design and restore
neighborhoods that encourage children’s physical and emotional health and
well-being – neighborhoods that provide children with the free range and daily
contact with nature and community that their grandparents
enjoyed.
"The guidelines will
incorporate the collective wisdom – from many disciplines and many countries –
to set standards for Child-Friendly Communities, and will be made available to
developers and municipalities. Qualifying projects will be officially certified
and celebrated as 'Child-Friendly'."
What has happened? Well,
council and association points out there was a "time when kids had free range of
their neighborhoods – shimmying up trees, biking around their community, and
being greeted by neighbors."
That was my life experience
for sure, but they explain that "Today, however, due to modern zoning practices,
planning for the car, and uncontrolled growth, children are growing up
unhealthy, obese, and depressed in sprawling subdivisions. We cannot damage the
health of another generation of children."
Their vision: "Contact with
nature, opportunities to walk and bike, and participation in community social
life improve the health and well-being of adults, as well as children. By
creating communities responsive to the needs of children and young people, this
approach to community planning will also result in neighborhoods, towns and
cities that are ecologically and socially sustainable. The most sustainable
community is one that raises healthy children who maintain their involvement in
community, and love for nature into adulthood, and transmit these values to
their children. A healthy community for children is a healthy community for
all."
My quick search for some
information led to the discovery that the City of Surrey launched a Child and
Youth Friendly City Strategy in 2009. Its purpose is to increase opportunities
for children and youth to meaningfully engage in civic issues and contribute to
the community; to create vibrant public spaces that promote social connection
and play, and to increase young people's interaction with access to
nature."
All in all, it is a pretty
sad commentary on our society that we now need to certify communities as "child
friendly" and city's need child and youth friendly strategies, but the more I
think on it, the more I agree -- somewhere along the way, myself included, we
have forgotten the kids, and are less healthy for it. I wish Dana well with her
initiative, and I hope the powers that be in Cranbrook pay more than lip service
to it.
As always, your comments are
welcome. My email is mj.morris@live.ca
Full disclosure: I am not now and never have been a member of the Citizens for a Livable Cranbrook Society; however, I did conduct a workshop for its members for which I was paid.
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