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GOVERNMENT, POLITICS, AND LAW |
The authors are with the Georgetown University Law Center.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Wendy Collins Perdue, 600 New Jersey Ave, Washington, DC, 20001 (e-mail: perdue{at}law.georgetown.edu).
| ABSTRACT |
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The built environment significantly affects the publics health. This was most obvious when infectious disease was the primary public health threat during the industrial revolution; unsanitary conditions and overcrowded urban areas facilitated the spread of infection.
However, even today in the age of chronic diseases there remains an important connection between population health and the built environment. Physical spaces can expose people to toxins or pollutants and influence lifestyles that contribute to diabetes, coronary vascular disease, and asthma.
Public health advocates can help shape the design of cities and suburbs in ways that improve public health, but to do so effectively they need to understand the legal framework. This article reviews the connection between public health and the built environment and then describes the legal pathways for improving the design of our built environment.
| INTRODUCTION |
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Industrialization not only highlighted the connection between the built environment and public health, but it also established the dominant view that population concentration and proximity between businesses and residences were unhealthy. This view was reflected in the esthetics of the City Beautiful movement3,4 as well as in the social agenda of many in the early 20th-century housing-reform movement.4 It is also reflected in the zoning ordinances that took hold in the 1920s. These ordinances separated neighborhoods for residential, business, and industrial uses and specified building heights, setbacks, and the density of use.4 They were consistently justified because population deconcentration and separation of uses improved "public health, safety, morals, [and] general welfare."5
By the mid-20th century, the connection between public health and the built environment seemed to diminish. Infectious disease had been brought under control, and as a result the layout and planning of cities came to be viewed as a matter of esthetics or economics, but not health. Public health officials concentrated on human behaviors such as smoking and to the extent they considered the built environment, the focus was on more discrete issues such as lead paint rather than larger-scale planning issues.
Today the primary public health problems are chronic diseases rather than infectious diseases, and half of Americans live in suburban rather than urban or rural settings.6 These changes have not eliminated the connection between public health and the built environment but suggest a sharply different focus than that of a hundred years ago. Indeed, deconcentration of populations and the separation between residential and business areas, measures urged a hundred years ago to improve health, may contribute to chronic health problems. The spread-out design of suburbs increases reliance on the automobile. This in turn contributes to air pollution, with its detrimental effects including chronic respiratory ailments, and to a sedentary lifestyle and obesity.
In contrast to the situation in the cities of the mid-19th century, today nearly all aspects of the built environment are shaped by law and governmental decisions. What can be built in what location is regulated by a complex set of local, state, and federal laws. A second significant change is that unlike the situation in the 19th and early 20th centuries, todays public health advocates have been largely absent from discussions about major planning or land-use decisions involving the built environment. Many cities and counties around the country have large planning departments or other bureaucracies that regulate land use and buildings. These frequently include urban planners, architects, lawyers, economists, transportation engineers, environmental scientists, and demographers. They rarely include public health officials. This may reflect a broader phenomenon of the increasing isolation of public health officials within government.7 Nonetheless, public health officials can add an important voice to the decisions that shape the built environment. We later explain the relation between physical space and healthy populations, examine the legal tools to improve the built environment, and offer guidelines to help public health professionals be effective advocates in political decisionmaking.
| THE RELATION BETWEEN PHYSICAL SPACE AND HEALTHY POPULATIONS |
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To understand the effect of the built environment on health, it is necessary to examine the major health threats facing Americans. The leading causes of death in the United States today are heart disease, cancer, cerebrovascular diseases (including stroke), chronic lower respiratory diseases (such as asthma, bronchitis, and emphysema), and unintentional injuries.9
A sedentary lifestyle and poor nutrition contribute to obesity, a risk factor for some of the leading causes of mortality, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, stroke, and some cancers.1012 In fact, more stroke deaths in the United States are caused by obesity and hypertension than any other behavioral risks.11 Although the American public is largely aware of the health risks associated with obesity, the percentages of overweight or obese (overweight is defined as having a body mass index greater than or equal to 25, whereas obese is defined as a body mass index of greater than or equal to 30)9 American adults and children are growing. In 19992000, 64.5% of Americans older than 20 years were overweight, and 30.5% were obese.9 These figures are up about 8% from 19881994 figures. About 15% of children aged 6 to 19 years are overweight, a 4% increase from 19881994 data.9
Toxic conditions also contribute to the leading causes of morbidity and mortality, especially chronic respiratory diseases and cancer. Asthma, a chronic respiratory disease, can be triggered by environmental factors such as pollen and grass seeds and atmospheric pollutants, both indoor and outdoor.13 Indoor pollutants are believed to be a significant cause of asthma in the inner city. It has been shown that cockroach antigens, found in the insects feces, eggs, saliva, and shed cuticles, can trigger asthma.14 Outdoor pollutants, such as ground-level ozone and respirable particulate matter, can also increase the incidence of asthma.15 Automobiles and factories produce significant amounts of ground-level ozone, respirable particulates, and other pollutants. When traffic was reduced in Atlanta for the Olympic Games, peak ozone concentrations decreased 27.9% and the number of asthma emergency medical events simultaneously fell by 41.6%.16
Although the links between physical activity, proper nutrition, a clean environment, and health are well known, the current built environment does not promote healthy lifestyles. Many urban environments lack safe open spaces that encourage exercise and easily accessible nutritious food and promote the use of alcohol and tobacco products through outdoor advertising. A spread-out suburban design facilitates reliance on automobiles, increasing pollution and decreasing the time spent walking from place to place.
The environment is integral to encouraging physical activity.17 Yet urban areas frequently lack adequate safe playgrounds and green spaces. The "open space" that exists may be vacant lots covered with garbage and debris, which attracts vermin and can harbor criminal activities.18 Children may choose to play in the streets rather than in the broken glass, garbage, and used needles of the vacant lots.18 This lack of safe places discourages a childs play and exercise. In addition, neighborhoods without green space lack a sense of community and feature increased acts of violence when compared with those that surround green space.16
Land-use patterns also affect the health of urban communities. Urban neighborhoods may be home to a regions most toxic sites. One area of the South Bronx section of New York City had the largest wastewater sludge pelletization plant in the Northeast (it was forced to close) and the regions largest medical waste incinerator.19 Not coincidentally, the area has a childhood asthma rate 1000% higher than that of the rest of New York State.19
Urban environments may be lacking in other resources as well. Convenience stores and establishments that serve fast food may vastly outnumber grocery stores where people can purchase nutritious food. In addition, hospitals and medical care centers may close in urban places where constituents lack a strong political voice. The remaining medical providers are without sufficient resources.20 The urban environment may also encourage risky behaviors such as smoking and drinking. Researchers have noted that tobacco and alcohol marketers have targeted urban communities.21
The design of suburban communities also affects the publics health. Large distances between work and home mean more space taken up by roads and an increased reliance on automobiles. This has multiple health effects. First, pollutants from automobiles increase as miles traveled increases. Increased pollution increases deaths from respiratory22 and cardiopulmonary illnesses.23 Second, as time spent in traffic increases, leisure time available for health-promoting activities may decrease. This leads to reduced time in which to exercise and engage in other health-promoting activities. Third, increasing hours on the road increase the opportunity for traffic accidents and deaths due to unintentional injuries.
Although suburban dwellers have higher rates of leisure exercise and suburban women have lower obesity rates than their urban and rural counterparts, better suburban design could increase opportunities for exercise.24 Shopping areas are designed to be driven to, and walking from errand to errand is difficult. The spread-out nature of the suburb increases reliance on automobiles and may not be ideal for increasing opportunities for exercise.
The built environment affects health in a number of ways. It is not sufficient to educate people regarding healthy lifestyles; the built environment must promote, or at least allow for, engaging in healthy behaviors. Law can be used as a tool to accomplish this goal.25
| LEGAL PATHWAYS FOR IMPROVING THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT |
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There are 5 main legal avenues for affecting the built environment: environmental regulation to reduce toxic emissions; zoning ordinances that designate an area for a specific use and related developmental requirements; building and housing codes that set standards for structures; taxing to encourage or discourage activities or behaviors; and spending to provide resources for projects that enhance the built environment. The exact mechanisms vary by state and locality, but the general principles are similar.
Environmental Regulation
A web of federal and state laws regulates the emission of toxic substances or pollutants that degrade the environment. These measures are aimed at improving the built environment by reducing pollutants and ensuring the quality of air and water. Federal law, for example, requires US agencies to prepare an environmental impact statement before beginning a major action affecting the quality of the environment. The Environmental Protection Agency is empowered to establish air and water quality standards. This was the mechanism, for example, through which the Environmental Protection Agency prohibited the use of lead in automobile fuels, leading to improvements in childrens health. State and local governments often have their own regulatory regimes for controlling the industrial release of toxic substances, as well as laws concerning storm water management, forest and stream valley protection, and septic systems.
Zoning and Related Developmental Requirements
The Supreme Court, in Village of Euclid, Ohio v Ambler Realty Co, long ago recognized that zoning ordinances are a proper exercise of the states police power because they protect the health and safety of the community. Zoning laws specify within designated areas allowable uses of land and buildings and regulate building density and size. Common land-use classifications include industrial, manufacturing, agricultural, commercial, and residential. Zoning can have powerful effects on communities by separating manufacturing from residential areas but can also encourage spread-out suburban patterns where jobs, housing, and retail services are far apart, residents are entirely automobiledependent, and walking to a destination is difficult. Indeed, large-lot zoning intended to protect open space may be a major contributor to suburban sprawl. Moreover, zoning has not always been used effectively to protect poorer and minority residential areas from potentially hazardous industries and uses. In addition to zoning, many communities impose additional requirements on some developments. For example, large residential developments may be required to provide a percentage of affordable housing units along with recreation amenities.
Building and Housing Codes
Building and housing codes influence the built environment, especially as Americans spend approximately 90% of their time indoors. These codes are designed to ensure that buildings are safe, sanitary, and efficient. Most localities adopt codes based on models developed by national organizations such as the International Code Council. Building codes require minimal safety features, such as gated enclosures around swimming pools, insect screens on windows, smoke alarms, and negotiable stairways and exits. These codes may also regulate toxic materials, including the removal of asbestos and lead pipes or paint. In fact, partly because of the abatement of lead paint in housing stock, blood lead levels in children have declined dramatically.26,27 But building codes can also be so restrictive that they discourage the renovation of existing buildings and thereby contribute to urban deterioration.
Taxing Power
Although pollution regulation, zoning, and building codes exert direct control over the design of buildings and communities, the law also affects the built environment marketplace through taxing and spending. The tax code influences the built environment through tax relief, tax burdens, and the ability to recognize and take title to abandoned property. The government can provide tax incentives to encourage construction of affordable housing and investments to renovate existing buildings or abandoned industrial sites. The government can also discourage actions that degrade the built environment by taxing them. For example, government can improve air quality by taxing gasoline and ozone-depleting chemicals to reduce their use and more accurately reflect their cost to society.
Spending Power
Closely related to the power to collect revenue is the power to spend. Governments can spend resources in ways that create or promote a healthier and safer built environment. The government, for example, can promote physical activity by locating and designing public facilities to encourage pedestrian access and including in the funding sufficient money for adequate sidewalks, bicycle paths, and streetscaping. It can acquire open space for recreation and environmental protection. For example, in 1998, New Jersey voters approved a $1 billion bond initiative to acquire 1 million acres of open space. Similarly, governments can require public healthenhancing behaviors as a condition of receiving appropriations. For example, federal transportation appropriations are linked with regions achieving specified reductions in ground-level ozone. On the other hand, government spending can also contribute to some unhealthful aspects of the built environment. Roads can be designed primarily for automobile speed, with little attention to pedestrian safety or comfort. Many state reimbursement policies for local school construction favor building new buildings over renovating old ones, and this can contribute to deterioration in existing neighborhoods and encourage sprawl.
Summary
Law influences the built environment in a variety of ways, ranging from environmental regulation, zoning, and building codes to economic incentives and disincentives. The public health community can use its voice, expertise, and influence to encourage legislatures and agencies to create and enforce laws designed to ensure the conditions for people to be healthy. The concluding section presents 7 strategies for accomplishing this goal.
| PUBLIC HEALTH ADVOCACY FOR HEALTHIER PHYSICAL SPACES |
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Public health can be an influential voice in shaping the built environment. If advocates demonstrate competence in the legal process and use their expertise effectively, physical spaces can be designed to promote healthy populations.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication April 25, 2003.
| References |
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