Eastern Neighborhoods Community Plans

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Eastern Neighborhoods Community Plans
Location San Francisco California
Organization San Francisco Department of Public Health

The San Francisco Department of Public Health conducted an HIA in response to community requests in the Mission, South of Market, and Potrero Hill neighborhoods. The HIA addressed a range of factors in the community plans that could affect health, including housing affordability; the potential that low-income residents could be displaced; the availability of safe places to walk; noise; air quality; employment; public services; and access to parks and open space. Rather than advance a specific set of recommendations, the HIA supported developing the Healthy Development Measurement Tool (HDMT) as its main outcome, which was then recommended for future use.

The HIA brought together organizations and individuals who were previously not included in the city's planning process. The process provided a space to collaboratively develop a vision and objectives for development in the city and then to submit those formally for consideration to planning staff. The HDMT, now known as the San Francisco Indicator Project, is an online framework and data repository that helps stakeholders examine how San Francisco neighborhoods perform on eight aspects of this vision for healthy, equitable city development. The San Francisco Indicator Project has been used to provide baseline data on many assessments, to plan evaluations of its long-term planning process, and for advocacy and research. The indicators, objectives, and methods have been used and adapted by at least five other cities in the U.S. and in Geneva, Switzerland.

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The Health Impact Project’s toolkit contains resources that help communities, agencies, and other organizations take action to improve public health. The toolkit offers a collection of health impact assessments, guides, and other research to support policymakers’ efforts to consider health when making decisions across sectors, such as housing, planning, and education.

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At A Glance
  • Status:
    Completed
  • Publication date:
    2007
  • Decision-making levels:
    Local
  • Sectors:
    Housing, Planning and zoning
  • Additional topic areas:
    Land-use planning
  • Drivers of health:
    Access to healthy food, Access to services/medical care, Clean air and water, Community safety, Diet and physical activity, Employment, Family and social support, Safe and affordable parks and recreational facilities, Safe, affordable, and healthy housing, Safe and affordable public transit
  • Affected populations:
    Chronic health conditions, Economically disadvantaged
  • Community types:
    Urban
  • Research methods:
    Literature review, Qualitative research
  • Funding source:
    Other funding