The Broward Transforming Our Community’s Health (TOUCH) Initiative recently shared what New York City is doing to implement Complete Streets. New York is implementing a Complete Streets initiative that gives walkers and bikers not only more room to move, but the opportunity to feel safe when doing it.

To read the full article and watch a video, click here: http://www.touchbroward.org/2012/09/10/complete-streets-in-action-new-york-streets-shows-off-updated-look/

To Learn More about the TOUCH Initiative, click here: http://www.touchbroward.org

To Learn about the Complete Streets Initiative in Broward County, click here: http://www.browardcompletestreets.org

A recent Sun-Sentinel.com article by Angel Streeter highlights Complete Streets in South Florida. Read more below:

Sun-Sentinel.com Article

South Florida roads are all about vehicles, getting motorists to destinations quickly with little thought given to pedestrians, bicyclists and public transportation users.

But a growing number of South Florida communities are beginning to think that roads shouldn’t be all about the motorist. They’re starting to think their roads should be “Complete Streets,” available to everyone, and are adopting policies to reflect that.

Complete Streets, a concept championed by the National Complete Streets Coalition, make it easy to cross roads, walk to shops, bike to work or catch a bus.

Roads can accommodate not only cars but also pedestrians and bicyclists, providing an infrastructure and welcoming environment for non-motorized traffic.

“It’s more than just having sidewalks and bike lanes,” said Bret Baronak, pedestrian and bicycle coordinator for the Palm Beach County Metropolitan Planning Organization. “We have roads [in the county] with bike lanes and sidewalks, but are they still conducive to biking and walking? That can be debated. … It’s having that environment with equal access for everyone and accommodating them comfortably.”

The Broward County Metropolitan Planning Organization recently approved Complete Street guidelines to help the county’s municipalities transform their roads.

Cities such as Deerfield Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Oakland Park and Pompano Beach have begun the process of adopting Complete Street policies.

“Folks really do want to change,” said Patrice Gillespie Smith, program manager for Urban Health Solutions, which helped develop the Broward guidelines. “Broward residents want to drive less.”

Two years ago, Boca Raton changed its long-term growth and development plan to reflect a Complete Streets philosophy.

The plan says the city isn’t concerned just about building sidewalks and bike lanes, but also about making the environment safer and encouraging more travel by foot and bike. To do that, the city would focus on creating wide sidewalks, crosswalks, pedestrian refuges in medians and pedestrian-activated traffic signals.

The city would focus on installing street trees for shade, on-street parking, narrow lanes for cars and traffic-calming devices to slow vehicular traffic.

The city also would require developers to create projects with pedestrians, bicyclists and public transportation users in mind.

West Palm Beach became a model for the Complete Streets concept even before the term was coined in 2003. With CityPlace, the city showed that a development could have a pedestrian focus while at the same time revitalizing a neighborhood and providing economic vitality, said Stefanie Seskin, deputy director of the National Complete Streets Coalition.

West Palm Beach didn’t actually adopt the Complete Streets policy until 2004. One of the city’s first projects incorporating the concept was done last year on Parker Avenue, where the city reduced the number of lanes to make the road safer for pedestrians.

The city is in the process of designing projects for Tamarind Avenue and 15th Street that will include improving pedestrian crossings and reducing the width of vehicle lanes to make room for bike lanes and to reduce the speed of cars.

“We’re making it safer for pedestrians and bicyclists to use these roads,” said Alex Hansen, the city’s senior transportation planner.

In Deerfield Beach, Hillsboro Boulevard east of Federal Highway has Complete Street elements, with its marked bike lanes, landscaping that separates the sidewalk from the road and bus stop shelters, Smith said.

It’s possible the street could use more improvements, she said, but such transformations can take time. Plus, the city plans to ask the Florida Department of Transportation to make Hillsboro west of Federal a Complete Street when the state resurfaces it in two years.

“They’re thinking, ‘We’re going to do the street anyway. Let’s make it more livable,’” Smith said.

The interest in complete streets is coming from residents, who are looking for ways to get around other than by car in a time of roller-coaster gas prices, a struggling economy and high childhood obesity rates, Seskin said.

About 350 communities across the country have adopted Complete Street policies, with 146 of those policies adopted last year, according to the National Complete Streets Coalition.

“The movement has really caught on a lot, especially in the last two to three years,” Seskin said. “Neighbors are saying, ‘It would be really nice if we could walk around our neighborhood.’”

astreeter@tribune.com, 561-243-6537 or Twitter: @adstreeter

Copyright © 2012, South Florida Sun-Sentinel

View the full article: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/palm-beach/fl-complete-streets-20120823,0,5336113.story

An Op/Ed by Gregory Stuart, Broward MPO’s Executive Director, was published in the Sun Sentinel today highlighting the Broward Complete Streets Initiative. Read on below:

Sun Sentinel Op/Ed

In the last two weeks there have been a half dozen accidents involving vehicles that struck a pedestrian or bicyclist. From 2006-2011 more than 280 pedestrians and bicyclists were killed. From these tragedies comes a small ray of hope — a Community Transformation Grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Transforming Our Community’s Health initiative, awarded to the Broward Regional Health Planning Council in partnership with the Broward Metropolitan Planning Organization and Smart Growth Partnership.

The “Healthy and Safe Physical Environment” focus of the (TOUCH) initiative recognizes the connection between transportation and health outcomes, which allows us to shift our focus from moving cars to moving people. To this end, the Broward Regional Broward Metropolitan Planning Organization, Urban Health Partnerships and Smart Growth Partnership partnered with BRHPC to develop new Complete Street Guidelines that will ultimately create safer, healthier streets for all users.

In a recent survey, more than half of Broward residents indicate that they would travel more without a car if it weren’t for safety concerns. And 40 percent indicate that if their community had a more balanced infrastructure they would walk or bike more often. In addition, the majority of attendees of the spring Complete Streets public workshops identified with many of the benefits and felt their communities were ready for Complete Streets.

The Broward MPO is working with Broward’s cities and municipalities to implement the new guidelines. The Complete Streets Guidelines provide the opportunity to look at our existing streets and identify ways they can be improved to accommodate people of all abilities. They provide a framework by which to engage residents and decision makers in transportation planning to ensure long-lasting improvements to both roadways and the communities in which we live.

Visit http://www.browardcompletestreets.org to learn more about how built environments, such as our streets, can impact the safety and health of those who live, work, learn and play in Broward County.

Gregory Stuart is the executive director of the Broward Metropolitan Planning Organization.

Click here to view the full article: http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/opinion/fl-readers-view-safety-20120824,0,2042073.story

BROWARD COMPLETE STREETS GUIDELINES PAVE WAY FOR SAFER, HEALTHIER STREETS

CDC Grant mobilizes Broward MPO to Create Tools for walkable, bikable communities

Taking a big step toward safer, healthier streets, the Broward Metropolitan Planning Organization (Broward MPO) unanimously endorsed the Broward Complete Streets Guidelines today.

The Broward MPO is the first regional agency in Florida and the nation to use The Model Design Manual for Living Streets for Los Angeles County for the development of customized Complete Streets Guidelines.  These Guidelines can now be used to empower local governments to design, construct and operate streets to meet the demands of all transportation modes and all users, of all abilities.

Leveraging a recently awarded Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) grant, the Transforming Our Community’s Health (TOUCH) Initiative, the Broward Regional Health Planning Council (BRHPC) partnered with the Broward MPO and the Smart Growth Partnership, to create healthy and safe places in Broward County that support active lifestyles.  As the regional transportation planning agency for Broward County, the Broward MPO developed Complete Streets Guidelines that can be used by local jurisdictions.

“By providing the framework for all transportation modes, this grant helped us lay a foundation for healthy, livable communities,” Gregory Stuart, Broward MPO Executive Director said. “It is all about connecting communities through transportation choices.”

Through surveys, focus groups, public workshops and the guidance of a 30+ member Technical Advisory Committee, the Broward MPO transformed a national Complete Streets template into a customized, comprehensive resource for Broward area planners, engineers and public officials. The guidelines include recommended traffic calming measures; pedestrian, bicycle and public transportation improvements; environmental enhancements; roadway design; and public outreach tools to help communities shift from an autocentric focus to one that includes all modes.

According to recent research, Broward has a pent up demand for infrastructure that provides a safe and comfortable environment for biking, walking and taking public transportation. In an Initiative sponsored survey, approximately 50 percent of respondents indicated they would drive less if they felt safe getting out of the car.

“Broward residents said in the community survey, they would walk more if the appropriate infrastructure is in place; now local governments have the tools to create a more balanced transportation infrastructure,” Mike De Lucca, BRHPC President and CEO, said.  “Given the soaring rates of childhood obesity and diseases related to a sedentary lifestyle, even a small increase in physical activity among Broward residents can significantly improve health outcomes.”

Now the Guidelines have been endorsed, the next step will be implementing them into each local jurisdiction’s transportation policies and practices. Two municipalities have already taken steps to begin adopting the Guidelines into their design standards.

“These Guidelines mean nothing if they aren’t incorporated into local government policy,” Stuart said.  “We are committed to providing the necessary support to advance their implementation.”

For more information about the Guidelines and the team partners, please visit: www.browardcompletestreets.org

About TOUCH
The Transforming Our Community’s Health (TOUCH) initiative is a true collaborative effort among more than 30 community organizations and coalitions that will support efforts to reduce health disparities and improve the health and well-being of the residents, commuters, and workers of Broward County. For more information about TOUCH, please contact TOUCH Program Director Teina Phillips tphillips@brhpc.org or at (954) 561-9681.

About the Broward MPO
The Broward MPO is a transportation policy-making board responsible for transportation planning and funding allocation in Broward County. The Broward MPO works with the public, planning organizations, government agencies, elected officials, and community groups to develop transportation plans.

Media Contacts
Teina Phillips
TOUCH Program Director
Broward Regional Health Planning Council
954.561.9681 ext. 1325

Christopher Ryan
Public Information Officer/Title VI Coordinator
Broward MPO
954.876.0036

Click here to download the full press release: http://urbanhs.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/CompleteStreetsguidelinesrelease_final.pdf

Valerie J. Amor, Fort Lauderdale Green Culture Examiner for Examiner.com profiled the recent Broward County Complete Streets Initative Workshop that took place at Nova Southeastern University.
Examiner Article

While you celebrate Earth Day with activities around the city and county, take note of whether you are driving, walking or biking down a complete street. So what does complete streets means? This was part of the question posed in a series of recent workshops hosted this past week through the Broward Complete Streets Initiative.

Attending the third workshop on Thursday afternoon at Nova Southeastern University, it translated into a series of boards mounted on easels that staff from Urban Health Solutions and Urban Health Partnerships walked participants through asking for their input as to whether we live on a complete street, what are the essential elements of a complete street and our views on public transportation.

With the goal of getting us out of our cars and engaged with the public domain in a safe manner it is hoped that through these efforts greenhouse gases will be reduced, our health will improve and we will spend less of our already challenged incomes on transportation costs. Citing that the poor are especially hard hit paying a disproportional amount of their income on vehicle related costs i.e. gas, insurance and upkeep – consistency, frequency and availability seem to be the keys to insuring that mass transit will be fully used and support by the general public.

While you celebrate Earth Day with activities around the city and county, take note of whether you are driving, walking or biking down a complete street. So what does complete streets means? This was part of the question posed in a series of recent workshops hosted this past week through the Broward Complete Streets Initiative.

Attending the third workshop on Thursday afternoon at Nova Southeastern University, it translated into a series of boards mounted on easels that staff from Urban Health Solutions and Urban Health Partnerships walked participants through asking for their input as to whether we live on a complete street, what are the essential elements of a complete street and our views on public transportation.

With the goal of getting us out of our cars and engaged with the public domain in a safe manner it is hoped that through these efforts greenhouse gases will be reduced, our health will improve and we will spend less of our already challenged incomes on transportation costs. Citing that the poor are especially hard hit paying a disproportional amount of their income on vehicle related costs i.e. gas, insurance and upkeep – consistency, frequency and availability seem to be the keys to insuring that mass transit will be fully used and support by the general public.

Trees were selected as being critical to the success of the walkability of streets along with the relative scale of road width to pedestrian walkway. One way roads are less apt to be either pedestrian or retail friendly benefiting from a transition to a two way road. Wider roads that can easily be six lanes across such as Broward Boulevard in downtown Fort Lauderdale which is three lanes of traffic each way posing a challenge to pedestrians crossing from one side to the other within the time allocated. All too often, pedestrians end up jogging near the end as time runs out creating particular hazards for the elderly, handicapped and young children, people with baby carriages etc.; shall I go on? You get the picture, this is not pedestrian friendly.Another deterrent to walkability is the access to pedestrian, bicycle and car right of ways. Pedestrians need a wide sidewalk to comfortably accommodate their needs as well bicycles need a dedicated lane that is not compromised by opening car doors or turning car lanes. A vegetated buffer area of parked cars between the road way and sidewalk is also important in providing a layer of safety and security for pedestrians.

Calming devices have been wisely included in examples of walkable cities that take the time and care to create an urban environment that balances the need of all forms of transportation. This includes bus stops that provide more than a bench, some locations don’t even have that much. When it rains here, shelter is what is needed making choosing a bus over the convenience of a car, an acceptable alternative.

The Broward Complete Streets Initiative is part of a Transforming Our Community’s Health (TOUCH) Initiative which is being funded under the Affordable Care Act by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Community Transformation Grants of $8.8 million dollars over a five year period. A collaborative effort of more than 20 community organizations and 10 coalitions including the American Lung Association, Smart Growth Partnership, Broward Metropolitan Planning Organization, Fort Lauderdale Vegetables and the South Florida Regional Planning Council, will focus on public outreach to reduce chronic disease, promote healthier lifestyles, reduce health disparities and control health care spending.

As the collaboration continues to develop guidelines to implementing complete streets, it will provide direction for the 31 municipalities of Broward County to implement policies that support complete streets as well review existing codes and practices.

They are encouraging everyone to participate in a survey that will provide invaluable feedback regarding what you think is important in creating complete streets.

To take the survey, please follow: https://www.surveymonkey.com/browardcompletestreets

To learn more about the Complete Streets Initiative, go to www.urbanhs/completestreets

Read the full article on Examiner.com: http://www.examiner.com/article/complete-streets-initiative-supports-earth-day-everyday#ixzz1srxfkr1z