New York City Parks are not adequately funded and maintained at a level that is consistent throughout the city. When we look at our parks in the Bronx and compare them with Central Park or Prospect Park, it is difficult not to think we are getting the short end of the funding stick. We have a new Mayor, (will have) a new Parks Commissioner and there is no better time than now to make some changes, to shake things up some. The status quo is not working. I am hoping that the new Parks Commissioner will implement changes to start moving things in the right direction.
The Friends of Van Cortlandt Park was founded in 1992 by Bronx residents in response to a New York Times article describing the impact of declining NYC Department of Parks and Recreation budgets for parks like Van Cortlandt that lacked wealthy benefactors. Twenty years later, the Bronx Parks Department is still not adequately funded. With the largest NYC Park, Pelham Bay, and the 3rd largest park, Van Cortlandt, the Bronx has more parkland than any other borough. But we often wonder if we are getting our fair share of the Parks Department’s budget to maintain these parks at the level that Bronxites deserve.
Private conservancies and other public/private partnerships raise hundreds of millions of dollars to keep Central Park, the High Line, Prospect Park and a limited number of other parks in pristine condition. These private charities are thus solving, for now, their own maintenance problems. This is not a problem in and of itself except that it gives some people the false impression that the parks funding problem is solved. In the past twelve years, the City, in addition to other funding sources, also has provided hundreds of millions of dollars for capital improvements in a handful of new flagship parks, like Brooklyn Bridge Park and Governor’s Island. But for the vast majority of parks, there remain serious budget shortfalls for their maintenance.
Bronx park support groups are doing what they can to help close the gap between the current budget allocations and what Bronx parks really need. These groups raise money to provide special events, educational and cultural programming and work with volunteers to clean up their neighborhood’s parks. Representatives pound the pavement asking their elected officials to provide capital funding to restore neglected park facilities. But given the economic demographics of the Bronx, the fundraising capacity of these organizations is limited in a way that the Central Park Conservancy is not.
Van Cortlandt Park is 1,146 acres (yes, it’s bigger than Central Park) with the first public golf course in America, the oldest building still standing in the Bronx, numerous sporting fields, over 500 acres of forest, a freshwater lake, a nationally renowned Cross Country Course and 20 plus miles of hiking trails. However, Van Cortlandt Park will never be bordered by Central Park West and 5th Avenue. Does its location diminish its importance? Van Cortlandt Park is important to the thousands of community members who consider it their backyard and many others that visit to hike, run, swim, play and more. I urge Mayor De Blasio and the soon to be Parks Commissioner to make a greater commitment to addressing the deficiencies in Bronx Parks than prior administrations have been willing to do. We need a multifaceted approach of greater maintenance budgets and creative, alternative revenue strategies that will work outside of the most visible parks in New York’s wealthiest neighborhoods.
This blog post was written by Christina Taylor, Executive Director of the Friends of Van Cortlandt Park.
Bronx Health REACH is a National Center of Excellence in the Elimination of Disparities and a community-based coalition working to eliminate racial and ethnic disparities in health care.
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Monday, February 3, 2014
Food UnEarthed: Uncovering the Truth About Food at PS 132
Racial and ethnic disparities in disease rates are not more
apparent anywhere than in the Bronx. But what most people don’t know is that
most disease is caused by what Dr. David L. Katz, the Director of Yale’s
Prevention Research Center describes as the 3 F’s: feet (lack of
exercise), fork (poor food choices partly as a result of food
deserts/lack of healthy food), and fingers (tobacco use). That’s right –
most diseases – type 2 diabetes, heart disease, strokes, high blood pressure,
many cancers, and many autoimmune diseases are caused by “lifestyle.” The
estimate is that about 75% of these diseases are caused by lifestyle, and only
about 25% are caused by genetics. By changing lifestyle, we could eliminate 80%
of all heart disease and strokes, 90% of type 2 diabetes, and as much as 60% of
cancers (about half of these are caused by diet and the other half by tobacco).
This blog post was written by Amie Hamlin, Executive Director of the Coalition for Healthy School Food.
But if the U.S. Dietary Guidelines are supposed to help us
eat healthy, why is it that we keep getting heavier and sicker? A clue might be
found in New York Times’ reporter Michael Moss’s book “Salt, Sugar, Fat: How
the Food Giants Hooked Us,” in which he reports the food industries concerted
efforts to make their food irresistible – or to put it another way, addictive.
They call it the “bliss point.” That’s the exact level of salt, sugar, and fat
that will want to make us keep eating more, but not too little or so much that
we find it less appealing.
How do we fight multi-million dollar advertising campaigns,
campaign donations to elected officials or candidates, processed foods designed
with the “bliss point” in mind, and misleading information on food packaging?
The answer is education. Enter the Coalition for Healthy
School Food. Each Wednesday, CHSF teacher Tashya Knight and Program Director
Kelley Wind come to PS132 to bring their curriculum, Food UnEarthed:
Uncovering the Truth About Food to 4 classes of 5th graders.
Students become detectives and work to uncover the truth
about food. In addition to nutrition, students learn about food politics, media
literacy, how labels lie, food and the environment, and even a little bit about
the animals raised for food.
The focus is on “big picture” nutrition. Because it’s not so
important that oranges and broccoli have vitamin C or carrots have vitamin A.
It’s important that we eat more whole plant foods: vegetables, fruits, legumes
(beans, lentils, split peas), whole grains, nuts and seeds. That might not
sound that exciting, but the truth is there is a huge world of delicious – and
healthy – foods that can be made from whole plant foods. Plants are the only
source of fiber in the diet – and the only source of phyto-nutrients – those
special nutrients that help us fight cancer. It’s also important that we eat
less animal products (meat, dairy, eggs, fish, and seafood) and processed foods
(foods containing refined grains, added sugar, added oils or fats, artificial
colors, flavors, preservatives, artificial sweeteners, or trans fats). Animal
products are the only source of cholesterol in the diet and the primary source
of saturated fat. Regardless of what you have heard about them in the popular
media, the research is quite clear – we should eat (and drink) less animal
products. The same is true of processed foods. The fact is that a diet high in
processed foods and animal products results in disease and not feeling well.
Not only does it harm our physical body, but our mood as well.
Another thing it is important for students (and adults) to
understand is the myths surrounding the “macro” nutrients: carbohydrates, fats,
and proteins. “Carbs” are not bad. REFINED carbohydrates are. UNREFINED
carbohydrates should be the basis of our diet. Vegetables, fruits, whole
grains, and legumes are all primarily carbohydrates, and they are unrefined
carbohydrates – these are good and healthy. Fats are not bad – they are
important for our health. But there are fats we should eat for health, and fats
we should eat less of, which harm our health. The really good fats are nuts,
seeds, avocados, and olives. These are whole foods. The fats we should eat less
of are the kinds found in animal products, and foods with added oils. We should
be especially careful of trans fats. Despite labels that say “0 grams of trans
fats” you can know if there are trans fats in a food if you spot “partially
hydrogenated” on the ingredient list. How can this be so? The food industry
talked the government into rounding down to 0 if there was less than half a
gram per serving. The thing is, most people don’t eat one serving, especially
of the kinds of foods that have trans fats in them, and the World Health
Organization said that no level can be considered safe. About half of all the
trans fats we consume are actually naturally occurring in foods and
beverages that come from cows – or other ruminant animals. Finally, there is a
protein myth. Yes we need protein to grow – but most people get two or three
times more than they need. And most get it from animal products, which also
come in a package with cholesterol and saturated fat – and no fiber (fiber is
only found in plant foods, cholesterol is only found in animal foods).
Whole plant foods come with packages of fiber
and phytonutrients, don’t have any cholesterol, and are low in fat. All whole
plant foods have protein, and we should get enough as long as we eat enough
calories – even if we weren’t eating beans and tofu. The plant foods that have
more concentrated proteins, that most people like to replace their meat,
cheese, fish, seafood, and eggs with, are legumes (which includes beans,
lentils, split peas, and peanuts) soy products (the healthiest types being tofu
and tempeh – some of the others are quite processed), and Seitan, which is made
from the protein part of wheat. The grain quinoa also has a lot of protein, as
do green peas (which is where split peas come from). Gluten-containing grains
also have a fair amount of protein. We need protein and it is important for our
body – but we don’t need to worry about it. If we are eating enough
calories and a basic variety of foods, it would be hard to not get enough. The more we cut back on animal products, and the more we focus on whole plant foods in our diet, the better it is for our health and the health of the planet.
We teach these concepts to the students to help them become
critical thinkers about food, and to empower them so they know that they are in
control of their current and future health; then we teach them how they can
realistically make healthy choices to do so.
In a recent class, one student reported that she had been
eating less chips. Another student said she eats less junk food and more fruits
and vegetables. In a recent class about sugar we discussed how much sugar is in
chocolate milk. Children are much more observant than we often give them credit
for, and the hypocrisy of our culture is not lost on them. One student
pointed out “if we are supposed to be a healthy America then why do they keep
feeding us unhealthy junk food?”
Our classes are every week, and each class is accompanied by
a healthy plant-based snack. We have found that many students have very limited
experiences with fruits and vegetables at home, and that some students never
eat fruits or vegetables. In the classroom they are learning that they taste
good and make them feel good. For children that can't get them at home, fortunately the lunch room at school is loaded with a variety of fruits and vegetables.
Food UnEarthed: Uncovering the Truth About Food is a year’s
worth of valuable lessons for students so that they can change the course of
their future. We find that the students are sharing the information with their
friends and their families, and spreading the word that they don’t want to be
targets of a food industry gone haywire!
If you are interested in bringing Food UnEarthed to your
school, please contact Amie Hamlin, Executive Director, Coalition for Healthy
School Food at amie@healthyschoolfood.org
or 607-272-1154.
PS 132 is a partner in the Healthy Schools NY Program,
focused on improving nutrition, physical education, and physical activity in
New York public schools. For more
information, please contact Kelly Moltzen, Healthy Schools NY Program Coordinator
at Bronx Health REACH, at kmoltzen@institute2000.org
or 212-633-0800 x 1328.
This blog post was written by Amie Hamlin, Executive Director of the Coalition for Healthy School Food.