Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
Ladies and gentlemen, I am very pleased to be here, at the invitation of the Standing Committee on Health, to contribute to its study on childhood obesity and factors affecting the health of Canadians.
I represent the branch within Infrastructure Canada that is responsible for policy development as it relates to cities and communities, which is a key component of the new Transportation, Infrastructure, and Communities portfolio now under the responsibility of the Honourable Lawrence Cannon.
Although Infrastructure Canada has not commissioned any research in this area, we are following with some interest the research being carried out in other departments and the academic community, when it relates to our specific interest in built infrastructure, and the sustainability and competitiveness of our communities.
My comments will cover a few of the programs and initiatives of the transport, infrastructure, and communities portfolio. First I will highlight some statistics that emerged from a series of reports prepared by Statistics Canada, in collaboration with Infrastructure Canada, part of which relates to the link between health and investment in infrastructure. Second, I will discuss the Government of Canada's investment in infrastructure, including sports and recreational infrastructure, that provides opportunities for physical activity in communities throughout the country. Third, I will follow with investments in urban and active transportation. Finally, I will talk about the role of some crown corporations in the development and rehabilitation of healthy urban centres.
First I will detail a few statistics. In 2005 Infrastructure Canada and Statistics Canada jointly prepared a series of reports on trends and conditions in census metropolitan areas, CMAs, which are cities with 100,000 or more people, in order to better understand spatial differences in our urban communities. One of these reports, which analyzes health in CMAs, reveals that geographic differences are indeed important to consider when discussing the well-being of Canadians.
For example, according to data for 2000-2001, the highest proportion of people between the ages of 20 and 64 who are obese is in Thunder Bay, Ontario, where they represent 20% of the population, the lowest proportion being in Victoria, where they represent only 9.8% of the population. The cities of Vancouver and Victoria have the lowest rates of physical inactivity of the census metropolitan areas in terms of periods of recreation, with 40% of respondents over the age of 12 saying they are inactive, compared to 50% elsewhere in Canada. On average, 15% of Canadians aged from 20 to 64 were considered obese, whereas rates in Vancouver and Victoria were as low as 10%. However, gaps in the data available for communities remain a significant challenge.
Through its research and statistical capability, the Government of Canada can provide cities and communities with a better basis for long-term planning.
This is also the philosophy behind the integrated community sustainability plan, a key component of the government's gas tax agreements with the provinces and territories, some of which, as you know, include municipalities or municipal associations as signatories for the sharing of revenues from the federal excise tax on gasoline for the purpose of investing in environmentally sustainable municipal infrastructure.
The agreements stipulate that a municipality must develop an integrated community sustainability plan, an ICSP, that sets out the guidelines for allowing it to achieve environmental, cultural, social, and economic sustainability outcomes. Ideally, a community's health objectives are best achieved when they are linked and embedded within urban development and land use planning that relates to urban densification, transportation, green space, and community services.
Very few people are unaware of the direct relationship between physical inactivity, participation in sports and healthy communities. The responsibility for providing these services falls to our cities and communities, whose institutions are a provincial responsibility, as you know. The Government of Canada is working in partnership with these two levels of government to support Canadians' quality of life, while respecting each level of government's jurisdiction.
The physical design of our cities and communities, delivery of sports and recreational services, either through educational systems or municipal recreational infrastructure, as well as the provision of active transportation structures, are provincial and municipal responsibilities. Access to community infrastructure, such as arenas, pools, parks or pedestrian paths, can play an important role in Canadians' desire to become more active, particularly when we see that every year, more than two thirds of deaths in Canada are caused by chronic illnesses in four different groups — mainly cardiovascular diseases, cancer, type 2 diabetes and respiratory illnesses.
Some sport and recreational infrastructure has received funding through the Canada Strategic Infrastructure Fund, CSIF--in particular, large-scale facilities for major amateur sport and athletic events--and through the Municipal Rural Infrastructure Fund, the MRIF, which is primarily designed to meet the needs of smaller Canadian communities.
For example, funding through CSIF will enable the Summerside Wellness Centre in P.E.I. to build a sports centre for large-scale amateur sporting events that will support the 2009 Canada Summer Games to be held there. With funding from MRIF, the Buhler Recreation Park project, in Transcona, in east Winnipeg, will provide a new recreational and exhibition space for citizens and users. The park's year-round accessibility will improve access to the community's other existing facilities, which are currently overcrowded and represent safety risks for users and spectators alike.
Quality of life, beyond the obvious benefits of physical activity in terms of improving Canadians' health status, is also measured by the air that we breath, particularly in large urban centres where smog too often obscures the sky.
In its gas tax agreements with the provinces and territories, the Government of Canada has included the funding of active transportation infrastructure as an eligible funding category. These green community projects include bike and pedestrian paths and their related infrastructure. They are often tied in with existing public transit, and we want them to be as widespread as possible for Canadians, so they can use them to get to work and elsewhere.
A couple of examples of the way municipalities have used the federal gas tax funds are the pedestrian and the bike paths in Halifax and the bike paths in Markham.
Personally, I've had the opportunity to participate in this process as lead negotiator on the agreements with the three territorial governments. I can tell you that I found the experience extremely enriching, in terms of the green initiatives put forward. The snowshoe trail in the Yukon and the cross-country skiing trails in downtown Yellowknife are good examples that illustrate what I've been saying.
Investments in public transit are also linked to active transportation. Indeed, the levels of walking, cycling, and transit use in Canadian communities tend to rise or fall together. Transit and walking have a strong relationship, and maximum desirable distances are used to help define transit service patterns in many cities. Research shows that the willingness of passengers to walk to transit increases with higher-quality transit service and better pedestrian environments.
In addition, programs that make it easier for cyclists to go to transit services and then store or bring along their bicycles—as is the case on several OC Transpo routes here in Ottawa—can boost transit ridership, reduce the cost of parking provisions at stations, and reduce congestion and pollution.
Indeed, Transport Canada has implemented the Urban Transit Demonstration Program with a view to supporting the development and integration of strategies, planning tools and best practices in the area of transportation, such as those intended to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. This initiative will allow Canadian cities to implement demonstration projects aimed at promoting innovative approaches in this area.
For example, the City of Whitehorse is investing in its transit infrastructure, including active transport. By redesigning the layout of Main Street to reduce bus waiting times, the City of Vancouver is improving pedestrian safety and revitalizing this major artery — another example of good practices that result in healthier living.
In terms of Crown corporations, the Canada Lands Company, or CLC, is responsible for managing, redeveloping and selling the Government of Canada's strategic real property. It does this using innovative approaches that obviously provide a financial return to the government, while at the same time revitalizing Canadian communities. The site development plan for Benny Farm in Montreal is an excellent example of what CLC is doing to improve the community's quality of life, with its recreational centre comprising both sports facilities and community halls.
The Garrison Woods urban revitalization project in Calgary, likewise under the CLC auspices, is working to find better ways of dealing with public health issues, such as street lighting on sidewalks and safer street lay-outs.
The Downsview Park corporation on a former military base in Toronto has been busy since 1996 transforming the site into a unique urban green space with a recreational focus, highlighting children's sports and offering them summer camps and environmental learning programs year round. It is a fine example of how urban land can be rehabilitated.
I could share many more success stories with you, but I know that time is short. So I will conclude my opening comments.
Mr. Chairman, the Transport, Infrastructure and Communities portfolio aims to implement the necessary measures to improve the quality of life of Canadians living in cities and communities across the country, one of the effects of which will be to combat obesity.
Thank you very much for giving me this opportunity to share with you some of the practical examples of the way in which the portfolio I represent is helping to improve the health of Canadians. Thank you.