24 June 2019

Getting-A-Clue Better Late Than Never: Mesa Mayor John Giles On Affordable Innovative and Equitable Housing

What "bubble" has Hizzoner John Giles been in for decades when he stated publicly last Friday that he's just "beginning to understand" what other mayors have understood for a long time:
Giles has been the mayor here in Mesa for more than 4 years
Affordable Housing is a problem
ASPEN, Colo. — In the midst of one of the country's leading gatherings on health and health care, one issue – quality, affordable housing – has been pointed to as the source of many of the nation's ills.
"Mayors have understood for a long time that affordable housing is a problem," John Giles, mayor of Mesa, Arizona, said Friday during a session at the Aspen Ideas: Health conference here in Colorado.
"I am beginning to understand that it is the problem."
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Post on his Facebook page June 21, 2019
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Image with Maria Hinojosa and Shirley Franklin
"Excellent panel this morning at the #AspenIdeas Festival about Housing and Health, how they are inextricably connected and how communities are developing new approaches to housing that include health. #AspenIdeasHeaIth "
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That revelation came in a recent article in U.S. News and World Report
Better Housing for Better Health
Improving where people live can go a long way toward helping them live healthier lives, stakeholders say.
By Steve Sternberg Assistant Managing Editor for Health Initiatives
June 21, 2019, at 5:46 p.m.
 

Dr. Richard Besser, a pediatrician and president of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, noted that many people don't realize such neighborhood disparities are the result of deliberate policy decisions designed to disadvantage people who lived in them.
"Who was given the opportunity to buy homes? It was not people of color," he said. "They were not given mortgages. They were not allowed to move to suburban America."
"I realized this was going to have a significant impact in my community," Giles said. "There was nothing more important than what we were doing that day."
Research indicates links between substandard housing and problems ranging from asthma and lead poisoning to cardiovascular disease and mental health issues.
Evidence documenting housing's impact on health has been piling up for decades.
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The challenge is coming with solutions, said Shirley Franklin, the former mayor of Atlanta and the executive board chair of Purpose Built Communities, an Atlanta-based community revitalization consultancy. . .
Today, that housing has been replaced with appealing mixed-income residences. . . "The goal is to build a community where you can't tell the socioeconomic status of the people who live there," she said.
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HOW NOT TO BE IGNORANT ABOUT THE WORLD
Views: 1,775,133
 
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THE INFLUENCE OF HOUSING ON HEALTH
Aspen Ideas: Health explores challenges in medicine, science, and global health and brings together people unafraid to face them down.
https://www.aspenideas.org/sessions/the-influence-of-housing-on-health
"Improved housing offers a tremendous opportunity to boost health. Some of the links between substandard housing and poor health are obvious, if alarming – pests and mold promote asthma, lead poisoning irreversibly damages the brains of developing children, inadequate heating and ventilation increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. Less immediately visible is the impact of unaffordable housing, which forces families to make choices among basic needs, and neighborhood conditions, such as lack of access to nutritional food. To lift up their residents and position their cities for economic growth, US mayors are turning to innovative partnerships to safeguard that place called home.
"John Giles is the mayor of Mesa, AZ.
< He was first elected in a special election in August 2014, then re-elected two years later to begin a full, four-year term in January 2017.
Giles previously served on Mesa City Council from 1996 to 2000, including a term as vice mayor. He has managed his own law firm, Giles & Dickson, for over 20 years. Overseeing a growing economy that has added thousands of new jobs, new national employers, and over $1.5 billion in capital investment, Giles is bringing renewed focus to Mesa’s downtown, which includes a budding innovation district, as well as expanding higher education and pre-K options in the city."
https://www.aspenideas.org/speakers/john-giles https://www.facebook.com/MayorGiles/

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