multnomah county brownfield initiative: mapping health equity october 13, 2015 corvallis, oregon...
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Multnomah County Brownfield Initiative:
Mapping Health Equity
October 13, 2015
Corvallis, Oregon
Matt Hoffman, MPH
Caislin Firth, MPH
Multnomah county
Project Objectives:
• Establish relationships with traditional brownfield stakeholders
• Develop a tool to assess health equity and inform prioritization for brownfield clean up and redevelopment efforts
• Share findings and develop strategy for using the tool
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Multnomah county
Background
• What is a brownfield?– A former industrial or commercial site where future
use is affected by real or perceived environmental contamination
• Why are they significant to the health of our built environment?– Potential human health threat– Opportunity for infill development in areas where
developable land is scarce
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Multnomah county
Characterization of Brownfields in Multnomah County
• As many as 2,300 properties covering approximately 6,300 acres (7 percent of all commercial, mixed use and industrial zoned land within the metro UGB)
• Approximately ½ are within 1000 ft of sensitive environmental areas
• Three times more likely to be located in underserved area (Metro 2012)
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Metro Brownfields Scoping Project (2012): http://www.oregonmetro.gov/sites/default/files/brownfields_scoping_final_report_november_2012.pdf
Multnomah county
Tool Development: Outline
Health equity composite measure•Purpose: Develop a GIS-based tool to assess health equity across Multnomah County and inform prioritization for brownfield clean up and redevelopment efforts.
•Objective:– Identify health indicators and construct a health equity composite
measure that identifies areas of health inequity within the county
– Overlay health equity composite with brownfield site map to identify brownfield sites in areas experiencing health inequity
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Multnomah county
Selection of Data Indicators
• Initial list was populated based on input from community
based organizations and traditional brownfield stakeholders
• Selected indicators that were available at the census tract level or smaller
• Prioritized locally-collected indicators • Incorporated components of EPA’s definition of
vulnerable populations (youth, seniors, poverty, communities of color, prevalence of chronic disease)
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Multnomah county
Indicators in Health Equity Composite
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Indicator Years Direction of health equity need
≥ 15% population identify with community of color 2011 Greater need
Youth (ages 0–17) 2009–2013 Greater need
Seniors (ages 65+) 2009–2013 Greater need
Students eligible for free or reduced lunch 2014 Greater need
Body Mass Index (adults) 2013 Greater need
Asthma (ages 5–50) 2011 Greater need
Cardiovascular events (ages 18–75) 2011 Greater need
Diabetes (ages 18–75) 2011 Greater need
Walkability (intersection density) 2013 Greater need
Air quality: Modeled diesel particulate matter 2017 modeled Greater need
Home value (sales price) 2011 Greater need
Change in median income from 2000 2006–2010 Greater need
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Constructing Health Equity CompositeHealth equity composite = Communities of color + youth + seniors + free lunch + BMI + Asthma + CVD + Diabetes + Walkability + Air quality + Home value + income change
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Results of Health Equity Composite
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Selecting Potential Brownfield Sites
• Sites registered to DEQ Environmental Cleanup Site Information database
• Contained on undeveloped Multnomah county tax lots
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Portland Metro ECSI (2015):1,351 sites
ECSI sites in Multnomah county:
815 sites
Multnomah county taxlots (2013):273,949 lots
Undeveloped tax lots in Multnomah county:
18,178 lots
ECSI sites on undeveloped tax lots in Multnomah County:
94 sites
Multnomah county
Health Equity & Potential Brownfield Sites
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Multnomah county
Next Steps
• Advocate: health equity informs brownfield site selection• Collaborate with community organizations in areas of high health
equity need• Use findings from tool to bolster application for federal cleanup
funds by demonstrating a community benefit• Refine tool
– Update health indicators
– Expand potential brownfield site data
– Make tool user-friendly—web-based platform
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Multnomah county
Questions?
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Matt Hoffman, MPHMultnomah County Health DepartmentHealthy [email protected]
Caislin Firth, MPHProgram Design & Evaluation Services Multnomah County Health Department & Oregon Public Health [email protected] 971.673.0188