Read More Healthy Neighborhoods & Communities Articles



Sugary Drinks Are Out, Healthy Choices In at Chicago-Area High Schools



During the school day, lunch time is a chance for busy students to take a break, relax with friends, and refuel. Refueling with healthy foods and drinks is vital. At two high schools in the Chicago suburbs, a concerned school board member saw a disconnect between the emphasis on healthy eating at lunch and the large sugary drink selection in cafeterias. The concern turned into a semester-long discussion between students, food services managers, and administrators that resulted in a new beverage policy for the school district that reduced the number of unhealthy drinks and marketed healthy ones in creative ways. EMERGENCE Awareness/Learn: The Latino student population is small—but rapidly growing—at Glenbrook High School District 225, which is commonly known as “the Glenbrooks” ...

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UPDATE: The Portland Mercado Seeks Healthy and Hispanic Flavor-Oriented Food Venders



The Latino community in Portland, OR, along with the Hacienda Community Development Corporation (HCDC) have exciting plans for a new fruit and veggie venue with cultural roots. The Portland Mercado will combine elements of indoor public markets and farmers’ markets with the bustle and feel of many Latin American open-air markets. The Mercado entrepreneurs will offer a mix of goods and services, including culturally specific prepared and fresh foods and artisan and handcrafted items. The HCDC's reputation as a trusted advocate for the low-income Latino community will help promote the Mercado as a safe, legal, and reliable place to find goods and services. Update: The Portland Mercado is seeking healthy and specialty product vendors for the new market. The group is working ...

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13-Year-old Creates Interactive App for Youth Fitness and Health in San Antonio



Estrella Hernandez grew up in San Antonio, a predominantly Hispanic (63.2%) city with a 28.5% rate of obesity in its population of over 1.3 million people. When she was in middle school she began to take a look around her city and found that there was a big problem with obesity and overweight, especially with kids her age. She knew that there had to be a way to get her classmates and peers to become healthier, while still having fun. Estrella came up with the idea of an interactive mobile app she titled WeWalk, which combined active living, healthy eating, and gaming. As she worked with members of the San Antonio community she began to discover that together as a city they could change the obesity epidemic while having fun through exercise. EMERGENCE Awareness: Sitting in health ...

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Affordable Farm Stands Sprouting Up in Denver Food Deserts



The Denver Botanic Gardens run a community supported agriculture (CSA) program at their farm in Chatfield. In addition to growing food for their members, in June 2014 they began taking the food off the farm and into the hands of folks who live in Denver area food deserts, low-income areas without a full-service grocery store near by. The farm stand debuted on the first Friday in June near Denver Human Services, in the Sun Valley neighborhood, and will continue to operate there on the first two Fridays of every month through October. The second location is downtown on the 16th Street Mall, where it will operate for the second two Fridays of the month.  To make their farm-grown fruits and veggies accessible to everyone, all the stands ...

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New Double-Up Program Hits Western New York’s Farmers’ Markets



More programs that double Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits at local farmers' markets are coming to communities everywhere. In New York, where almost 20% of residents are Latino, a Double Up Food Bucks program is spreading across the western half of the state. The idea is simple. When a SNAP recipient swipes their card at the farmers' market EBT machine, they are given tokens worth double their dollar amount for folks to use on fresh, healthy foods. Double Up Food Bucks are limited to fruits and vegetables sold by participating farmers at designated farm markets, said Lisa Tucker, co-founder and executive director of the Field & Fork Network and food systems educator with Cornell Cooperative Extension of Niagara County. “We’re hoping that ...

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Green Bay Program Helps Low Income Families Stretch Their Dollars at the Farmers’ Market



Studies found that farmers’ markets allowing SNAP recipients to use part of their benefits to buy fresh produce with Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) cards increases purchase of these foods. So it follows that if SNAP users could double the amount of benefits they could use at the market, they might buy even more fresh fruits and vegetables. Many farmers' markets across the country are trying these "double-up" programs, and markets in Green Bay are the latest. Called the Double Your Bucks program, Green Bay's version doubles the first $10 people can spend weekly on fresh produce, at each farmers market participating. A handful of markets in the area have had EBT capabilities for over two years, but this is the first time customers using the machines have been able to ...

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DC Doctors Encourage Kids to Connect With Nature Via Park Prescriptions



Some doctors prescribe only medicine, but others like the pediatrician, Robert Zarr, MD, in Washington, D.C. are prescribing nature to children as a way to prevent obesity and to address a nature deficit disorder. In a blog from the Children and Nature Network, Dr. Zarr said he noticed that too many of his patients weren't getting outside like they should. Fortunately through a collaboration of several healthcare providers, private foundations,and partners like the National Park  Service, the DC Department  of  Health, US Health and Human Services, NEEF, GW University, and AAP, Zarr and his colleagues launched the DC Park Prescription Program (DC Park Rx). Within four months, Zarr had handed out over 400 park prescriptions and some of his colleagues have reported positive ...

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City of Honolulu Expands Healthy Food Access at Local Farmers’ Markets



More folks in Honolulu will be able to purchase affordable fruits, vegetables, and whole grains at farmers' markets, thanks to new EBT machines at a handful of markets in the area, including the People's Open Market (POM) sites . EBT machines make it possible for food assistance recipients to use their Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits at the market. 15% of SNAP participants in the United States are Latino. The City and County of Honolulu currently has four market sites accepting EBT: On Tuesdays, at Waipahu District Park and Wahiawa District Park; on Friday, at Ewa Beach Community Park and on Saturday, at the Kalihi Street parking lot at (Kalakaua District Park). Hawaii participation in SNAP is currently at a historic high. An average of 94,649 ...

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Tampa, Corpus, & Phoenix Rank 28th in the Nation for Parks—How Does Your City Measure Up?



Every kid deserves easy access to parks and safe places to play! That's why the Trust for Public Land (TPL) collected city park and demographic information, to learn more about how US cities rank in terms of public parks. Of the 60 largest cities that were included in the analysis, Minneapolis (10.5% Latino) ranked first, followed by New York (28.6% Latino), San Francisco (15.1% Latino), and Portland (9.4% Latino). Other cities like Tampa (23.1% Latino), Corpus Christi (59.7% Latino), Detroit (6.8% Latino), Honolulu (5.4% Latino), and Phoenix (40.8%) also made the list, and tied for 28th place in the rankings. According to a Tampa Bay Times article, this was the first time that Tampa appeared on TPL's Park Score index. In the article, Tampa's mayor Bob Buckhorn said ...

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