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The Rhode Island Department of Health (RIDOH) has announced that three organizations have been awarded a total of $4.950 in grant funding to support projects that aim to improve public access to active transportation and promote physical activity.

The 2024 Rhode Island Streets Transformation Project grant recipients are Bike Newport, the Providence Preservation Society, and the Woonasquatucket River Watershed Council. The selected organizations will implement projects that encourage and increase public use of temporary bike lanes, bike paths, and pop-up parks.

More on the grant recipients;

– Bike Newport: Bike Newport received $4,950 to create a temporary bike lane so Newport Folk Festival attendees can travel by bike to and from the Festival. Bike Newport will collaborate with community agencies to encourage and increase public use of the route throughout the summer while the bike lane is in place. The organization will also install counters to track public use of the temporary bike lane.

​Newport City Council will receive the following communication from the City Manager on Wednesday, June 26, regarding the traffic pattern. ​

– Providence Preservation Society: The Providence Preservation Society received $4,935 to offer 11 new neighborhood walks and on-foot exploratory programs between May and September 2024. Walk PVD will promote public health, build civic connections, and educate Rhode Islanders about beloved places through community discovery walks. The program will help build community and encourage participants to advocate for safe and accessible streets and spaces across Providence’s diverse neighborhoods. Walk PVD participants will be invited to make subjective asset maps of the neighborhoods and streets covered during their walk, marking and labeling places that were meaningful to them. Walk PVD 2024 will culminate in a September 2024 exhibition of these asset maps. A Flickr page of the maps will also be created so city and state agencies, advocacy organizations, nonprofits, and citizen-led groups can learn how people experience Providence’s streets and neighborhoods. ​

– Woonasquatucket River Watershed Council: The Woonasquatucket River Watershed Council received $4,950 to create a pop-up park and temporary bike path in Providence’s Eagle Square. The Council plans to link intersecting bike paths with signage to inform users that bike paths continue in multiple directions. The Council also plans to convert a defunct vehicular bridge into a pop-up park with picnic areas and food truck events, and to host a PVD Bike Jam event to encourage bike riding. ​

“Supporting community design that encourages physical activity is one of the most effective steps that we can take to promote healthy living,” said Director of Health Jerry Larkin, MD. “Through the enhancement of the built environment, we can help people use forms of active transportation, such as walking, biking, and rolling, that make it easier to incorporate physical activity into their daily lives.”

The Rhode Island Streets Transformation Project is part of RIDOH’s Healthy Eating and Active Living (HEAL) program, which works with partners across the state to implement programs and initiatives that promote healthy living and physical activity. The program is funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and is part of the state’s efforts to improve public access to safe and healthier places to live.

Generative artificial intelligence (AI) assisted a What’sUpNewp journalist with the reporting included in this story.

Ryan Belmore is the owner and publisher of What's Up Newp. He took over the publication in 2012 and has grown it into a three-time Rhode Island Monthly Best Local News Blog (2018, 2019, 2020). He was named LION Publishers Member of the Year in 2020 and received the Dominique Award from the Arts & Cultural Society of Newport County the same year. He has been awarded grants for investigative and community journalism, and continues to coach and mentor new local news publications nationwide. Ryan...

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