Conduct an Active Living campaign such as a Safe Routes to School (SRTS) program.

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Conduct an Active Living campaign such as a Safe Routes to School (SRTS) program.

Best Practice of this action
Keywords
schools
Rating Guideline
1 star Describe elements of a SRTS program in which the city is involved; note how many schools are affected, how the program addresses engagement, equity, engineering, encouragement, education, and evaluation, and whether the city worked in concert with the local community health board; establish a city workplace wellness program. Report shared use agreements between cities and school parks under BPA 18.1.
2 star Describe key elements of other active-living efforts, such as which actions you are challenging which number of people/organizations to take, and length of the campaign; report collaboration/funding from your local Community Health Board (SHIP funding); host an Open Streets or Ciclovias event to temporarily make a street a pedestrian-only zone.
3 star Report outcome measures, such as increased walking/biking in the community, improved health outcomes, percent of the student body covered by SRTS programming, and school bus fuel savings; permanently convert a street to a pedestrian-only zone; adopt a city-wide Active Transportation/Living Plan. Report Complete & Living Streets policies under BPA 11.1.
Resources
  • Safe Routes to Schools: 
    • The MN Dept. of Transportation supports the Safe Routes to Schools program - an effort to improve walking and bicycling conditions for youth and to encourage more active lifestyles. 
    • Find additional resources. There is typically annual funding available for projects and education.
  • Active Transportation: 
    • MnDOT’s Active Transportation Program offers infrastructure and planning assistance grants to local communities through an annual solicitation process. These resources can be used to create a citywide Active Transportation Plan.
    • Find resources for and report Complete & Living Streets policies under BPA 11.1.
  • Active Living: 
    • The Albert Lea Blue Zones project is about making the healthy choice the easy choice.
    • The Hennepin Active Living Program has numerous planning and policy documents and other resources to help a city start an active living program in their own community.
    • Rural Active Living Assessment Tools (Robert Wood Johnson Foundation: 2009).
    • Prevention Minnesota, an initiative to make Minnesota a healthier place to live and work during the next decade, promotes SHIP - State Health Improvement Plan - interventions and funding through county health boards, and the MN Dept. of Health physical activity program.
    • Communities for a Lifetime resources from the MN Board on Aging are available to cities to help transform the physical infrastructure of communities, including housing, mobility options and accessible public space. Report being an Age Friendly Community under BPA 12.1.
    • See MN Dept. of Health active living resources.
Order Number
2
Action Type
Finite