New Partnerships for Healthier Neighborhoods
Bringing Public Health and Redevelopment Together
Some innovative public health departments have begun collaborating with redevelopment agencies to incorporate health-promoting strategies into the process of rebuilding low-income or “blighted” neighborhoods. This guide explores the potential for collaboration between these agencies and shows how both can overcome their own institutional challenges to create a strong partnership to improve community health.
PHLP, in collaboration with the Bay Area Health Inequities Initiative and the National Policy & Legal Analysis Network to Prevent Childhood Obesity (NPLAN), developed “New Partnerships for Healthier Neighborhoods,” a report that emerged from a 2009 roundtable of redevelopment and public health departments in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Be sure to view our other redevelopment resources.
| Downloads | Size |
|---|---|
| New Partnerships for Healthier Neighborhoods (PDF, Updated 3/10) | 1.28 MB |
- Policy Area:
- Economic Development :
- Redevelopment / TIF
- Economic Development :
- Getting Involved in Redevelopment
- Economic Development and Redevelopment: A Toolkit on Land Use and Health
- Involving Public Health in Climate Change Policy
- Changes in the WIC Food Packages: A Toolkit for Partnering with Neighborhood Stores
- Model Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Tax Legislation
- Creating a Permit Program for Produce Cart Vendors
- How to Use Redevelopment to Create Healthier Communities
- Partners for Public Health