mobilizing knowledge on active transportation act canada sustainable mobility summit; calgary,...
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MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
ACT Canada Sustainable Mobility Summit; Calgary, Alberta; October 30, 2013
Presented by: Nira Lalji, Public Health Agency of Canada and Diana Daghofer, Wellspring Strategies
Lead author: Kerry Robinson, Centre for Chronic Disease Prevention, Public Health Agency of Canada
Agenda
• Highlights of scan results• Small group discussion• Plenary discussion• “25 gets you 10” – Your best ideas!• Wrap-up
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
The Project
• The Mobilizing Knowledge on Active Transportation (MKAT) project was created to strengthen evidence-informed Active Transportation work across Canada
• Guided by a Reference Group of stakeholders at the provincial and federal levels and from NGOs working directly in the area of Active Transportation (AT).
• Interviews with health, transportation and other departments in all provinces
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Why is PHAC interested?
• All levels of government have identified childhood obesity prevention as a key priority
• Physical activity and active transportation are seen as key in creating supportive environments for healthy living
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Overall findings
• Half of provinces have identified AT as a priority• Some areas where there is tremendous activity, and other areas where it is
just beginning (nature and scope of AT initiatives vary considerably across provinces)
• Municipalities are very active in this area
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Data Collection and AT
• Appear to be gaps in:
-Setting AT goals and targets
-Capturing, sharing or reporting AT data
-Analyzing effectiveness of existing AT initiatives on whether more people are choosing modes of AT
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Barriers
• Lack of awareness of policy barriers across departments and jurisdictions• Lack of interministerial coordination• AT not in mandate• AT as municipal role• Lack of capacity• Lack of resources• Car-centric culture• Lack of AT commuters• Safety issues
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Catalysts
• Can be:» Health» Injury prevention/safety» Tourism» Economic development» Sustainable transportation» Environmental
• Opportunities include broader topic areas» Built environment » Childhood obesity prevention
• Municipalities more active in AT than provincial governments
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Facilitators
• Current networks and structures• Collective benefits of AT• Provincial funding mechanisms• Policies that facilitate AT
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Case study: Nova Scotia
• “Nova Scotia Moves” supports community-based sustainable transportation and province-wide initiatives
• Priority is on supporting existing community/municipal plans as well as innovative pilot projects
• Program offers matching grants up to $200K• Lead department: Energy• Program began in 2012; is expected to run through 2015-2016
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Case study: Quebec
• Infrastructure and funding dedicated to cycling through Vélo Quebec and Ministry of Infrastructure Development
• Funding dedicated to promote, plan and manage “La Route Verte” and to monitor changes through a cycling count
• $120 million spent over 15 years on improvements to cycling infrastructure• Led by the Ministry of Transport, a Sustainable Mobility Policy will replace
and broaden the provincial Public Transit Policy, dealing with:» Land use planning/transportation» Public transport funding and governance» Transportation electrification and the environment,» Transportation networks» Transport for those with disabilities or limited mobility.
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Case study: Manitoba
• Grant programs for municipalities, planning districts and transit communities• Cycling infrastructure projects in Winnipeg• Provincial planning regulation supportive of AT• Manitoba’s three-year, four-point action plan on AT (2012-2015)• Manitoba in Motion/Communities in Motion
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Characteristics of progressive efforts
• AT plan that formalized the intent to work on AT• Cross-ministry structure or more formal mechanism to work on AT• A lead department in charge of AT• Leadership from advocacy organizations• Involvement/buy-in from senior management• Someone in transportation has AT in their portfolio/mandate, even if not full
time
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Recommendations
Policy
1. Make AT a mandate
2. Establish a collaborative governance model
3. Implement legislation that supports AT
Funding
4. Create matching funding
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Recommendations (cont’d)
Health promotion
1. Undertake education and awareness campaigns
Measurement and exchange
2. Encourage measurement of success for AT projects
3. Organize cross-discipline AT technical and knowledge sharing forums
4. Collaboratively develop a robust data collection program framework covering transportation data and health outcomes
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Next Steps
• Facilitate dialogue• Identify future needs• Identify opportunities to work across jurisdictions and sectors to advance
active transportation efforts.
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Acknowledgements
OPUS International
Elizabeth Dyke• Reference Group Members:
Alice Miro (Heart and Stroke Foundation, BC)
Kim Perrotta (Healthy Canada by Design)
Gene Chin (Healthy Canada by Design)
Amy Schwartz (Department of Health and Wellness, Nova Scotia)
Vicky Reany (Provincial Government, Manitoba)
Matt Herman & Toby Green (BC Ministry of Health Services)
Olivier Bellefleur & François Gagnon (National Collaborating Centre on Healthy Public Policy)
Sharon Lewinson, ACT Canada
Ahalya Mahendra and Jane McCarney, PHAC Regional Offices
Heidi Craswell, Centre for Chronic Disease Prevention, PHAC
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
Questions?
MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ON ACTIVE TRANSPORTATION
25 gets you 10: crowd sourcing great ideas
• One card per person
• Write clearly: “One exciting idea +
an action you are considering”
• No name on index cards
• 5 rounds of scoring 1 to 5
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Top 10 ideas as chosen by you