developing & implementing master bike & pedestrian plans heleen dewey spokane regional...

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Developing & ImplementingMaster Bike & Pedestrian Plans

Heleen DeweySpokane Regional Health District

March 2010

Objective

• Involve transportation, planning and public health in the development of master bike and pedestrian plans

Public Health & Planning

• A story

About Spokane

About Spokane

• 2008 Spokane County population 459,000 (estimate)

• City of Spokane largest jurisdiction at 204,400

Our health and activity level?• 60% of County residents overweight or obese• Fewer than half of all adults and children get

recommended levels of physical activity

2006 Non-Motorized Transportation Study

• Average commute is a half-mile for walkers and 1½ for bikers

• 1% of trips by bike (2% nationally)• 9% of trips by walking (same as nation)• 42% of children are driven

[1] Nonmortorized Transportation Pilot Program Evaluation Study. University of Minnesota. 2007. Communities surveyed: Marin County, CA; Minneapolis, MN, Sheboygan, WI, Columbia, MO, and Spokane, WA

How Spokane got started…

• 2004 -$3500 annual grant for 5-years from WSDOT/WSDOH in cooperation with CDC

• Co-facilitated by Spokane Regional Health District and City of Spokane

• Task Force made up of professionals, advocates, and agency representatives

• Facilitated a series of events/workshops

• Educated elected officials

Active Living Symposium

• Education on connecting public health and planning specific to our community

Outcomes:• City of Spokane Plan Commission reviews

Comprehensive Plan for healthy community policies• Illustrated then Councilwoman Verner’s 2007 Quality

of Life resolution

Connecting the City

• Generate ideas and support to develop a stronger non-motorized plan within the City of Spokane

• Identify priority projects and effective policy/regulatory intervention

• Existing plan not implemented and needed updating

• Lack of clarity in non-motorized transportation planning (funding, RTPO involvement, priorities)

• More communication/collaboration among different user groups

Outcome of Workshop

• Enforce development standards• Bike/Pedestrian coordinator• Impact fees• Bike boulevards• Stripe streets• Route across river• Sidewalks• Fill gaps• Need pedestrian plans

Spokane Regional Pedestrian Plan

• 3-year DOH Preventative Health Block Grant• Focus to incorporate physical activity policies

into community pedestrian planning documents– First year Regional; Guidance document

provided by Spokane Regional Transportation Council.

– City of Spokane planning– Smaller jurisdictions in the county– Complete Streets education

Pedestrian Plan - Process

• Included a community process with multiple agencies

• Analyzed current data• Surveyed residents• Surveyed planners/engineers in jurisdictions• Draft plan in a team approach

Residents Survey

Barriers to pedestrian travel: • Lack of crosswalks• No sidewalks, sidewalks in disrepair, gaps and

snow removal needed• Lack of lighting• Poor driver behaviors• School issues, too much traffic near schools

and moving too fast thru neighborhoods

Planner Engineer Survey

Barriers to implementing pedestrian facilities: • Inadequate funding• Lack of staffing and training• Lack of pedestrian inventory/network• Lack of understanding of health & economic

benefits of walking• Consideration for disabled users

GOALS

GOAL 1: Support all levels of pedestrian travel by developing plans, projects, and programs

GOAL 2: Design & implement changes in the infrastructure to increase pedestrian safety and connectivity

GOAL 3: Support the planning, funding, & public knowledge of integrated networks of paved pedestrian paths that serve as an alternative to roadways & facilitate non-motorized travel to and through neighborhoods, shopping, parks, schools, & transit accessible areas.

GOAL 4: Improve actual & perceived pedestrian safety & security

GOAL 5: Support all pedestrian travel to improve physical health & slow obesity & chronic disease

GOAL 6: Pursue funding to maintain, enhance & expand pedestrian facilities.

GOAL 7: Increase the number of school children who walk to school by 2% from 26% to 28%

Other key public health recommendations

• Regionally significant project list• Complete street policies• Functional trail connections• Support transit use & linkages to transit

Insights• Understanding each other’s goals, needs, strengths• Clearinghouse• Quiet catalyst – could seed the project, didn’t have to

own it• Capacity – education, outreach, new Ideas• Unintentional succession plan• Timing – health, smart growth, gas prices,

sustainability, economics/market demands, political climate, grassroots

• Another face for funding requests• Rediscover the connections between planning and

public health

Next steps…• Quiet Catalyst - partnerships– YMCA Pioneering Healthier Communities– SmartRoutes 2010– Lands Council

• Complete streets resolution – Board of Health• Active Technical Transportation Committee• Health impact assessment training• Active Living Leadership• Elected officials

Heleen DeweyPhysical Activity & Nutrition Program

509-324-1555 hdewey@spokanecounty.org

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