Tuesday, September 29, 2009

21st Century Community Learning Center Grant Recipient

The New Britain-Berlin YMCA today announced that the Association has been awarded a $200,000 21st Century Community Learning Center Grant, and will be serving as the lead agency and fiduciary, partnering with the New Britain School District.
The 21st Century Community Learning Center Program supports the creation of community learning centers that provide academic enrichment opportunities during non-school hours for children, particularly students who attend high-poverty and low-performing schools. The program helps students meet state and local student standards in core academic subjects, such as reading and math; offers students a broad array of enrichment activities that can complement their regular academic programs; and offers literacy and other educational services to the families of participating children.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Wilton Family YMCA Bubble-Up!

A sure sign that fall is arriving in New England is the annual inflation of the "air structure" covering the fifty-meter aquatic facility of the Wilton Family YMCA in Wilton, Connecticut.
The Wilton Family YMCA makes a fun event of the task of inflating the "bubble". Days of preparation culminate in an "all-volunteers-on-deck" service day to ready the natatorium for the fall-winter-spring seasons.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Defining Attributes of Pioneering Healthier Communities

What are the defining attributes of Pioneering Healthier Communities?

- Leadership model
- Utilize multiple sectors and diverse organizations to maximize experience, resources, assets and skills
- YMCA serves as a convener in the community and co-leads with partners
- Influence policy and environmental change
- Local initiatives are organically grown with strategies specific to the needs of each community

Pictured are: (L-R) Kathleen McNamara, Partner Coach, Greater Waterbury YMCA; Jim O'Rourke, Interim Executive Director of the Greater Waterbury YMCA

Wilton Family YMCA Pioneering Healthy Living

The YMCA of the USA's Pioneering Healthier Communities initiative engages community leaders, convened by local YMCAs, in policy and environmental change efforts that support and promote healthy lifestyles. These initiatives empower local communities with proven strategies and models to create and sustain positive, lasting change for healthy living.
More than 100 YMCAs are involved in Activate America's Healthier Communities initiatives. Communities that are currently involved have been successful in influencing environmental and policy changes that affect community walkability and pedestrian safety; access to fresh fruits and vegetables; physical education requirements in schools; enhancements in opportunities for employees to havde access to healthy foods, among other things.
Pictured are: (L-R) Stephanie Barksdale, Executive Director of the Wilton Chamber of Commerce, and Karen Strickland, Development and Marketing Director of the Wilton Family YMCA.

Prevalent, Costly and Preventable

The YMCA recognizes that health and well-being programs and initiatives are cricital to the nation's efforts to combat the crisis of chronic disease, including heart disease and stroke, cancer and diabetes. YMCAs also recognize that they can't do it alone. These diseases are the most prevalent, costly and preventable of all health problems.

Chronic diseases are the leading cause of death in the US;
133 million Americans live with one or more chronic diseases, and 75% of the nation's medical care costs go to treating people with these conditions;
About half of all deaths in the US can be attributed to largely preventable behaviors.

Pictured are: (L-R) Barbara Moore, Project Director for the Connecticut Pioneering Healthier Communities / Robert Wood Johnson Foundation initiative; and Jason Cohen, Connecticut Statewide Pioneering Healthier Communities Chair (Director of Parks and Recreation in Colchester, CT and Treasurer / Legislative Chairman of the Connecticut Recreation and Park Association.

PHC YMCAs Visioning Success

Pioneering Healthier Communities YMCAs gathered in Arlington, Virginia this week, in the PHC Coaches Conference for the 2009 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation grant recipients, have established "Signs of Success for State Alliance / Statewide PHCs Work":



A thriving learning community - Statewide PHCs will have well-established forums and patterns for learning and sharing at both the local and state levels;



Increasing collaboration on state legislative priorities - Networks, communities, assocations across the respective states will have identified and committed to working together on one or more state-level priorities;



Growing more community-level work - More local communities taking on childhood obesity through policy / environmental change strategies, partly as a result of statewide PHC;



Getting meaningful and measurable results - Clear changes at the state and local level that are observable and measurable.


Pictured are: (L-R) Southington-Cheshire Community YMCA PHC Team members - Howard Thiery, Assistant Superintendent of Schools for Southington, CT; Karen DiGirolamo, Health and Wellness Director at the Southington-Cheshire Community YMCA; John Myers, Executive Director of the Southington-Cheshire Community YMCA

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Healthier Communities Initiative

Tracy Wiedt, Project Director for Activate America, Healthier Communities Initiative, chats with Greater Hartford YMCA Vice President of Operations, Jim Scherer at the 2009 Pioneering Healthier Communities Coaches Conference in Arlington, Virginia.