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places and structured activities, so that young people can maintain a "healthy balance between <br />structured, supervised activities and unstructured time." In addition to stimulating pro - social development <br />in these youth, building on both safe places and structured programming help battle two increasing <br />community concerns: (1) the obesity epidemic and (2) youth violence (Northridge, 2004). <br />Obesity epidemic <br />Childhood obesity has become one of, if not the biggest, health concern facing the nation. Approximately <br />one -third of all children and adolescents are overweight or obese (MMWR, 2006). The Orange County <br />Health Needs Assessment found that 34.9% of Santa Ana children were overweight or at risk for being <br />overweight (85th -94th percentile BMI) (OCHNA, 2005). In the same study, 70 -79.5% percent of adults <br />living in Santa Ana were found to be overweight or obese. <br />Furthermore, the Youth Behavioral Risk Factors Surveillance System, surveys youth ages 10 -24 years <br />old nationwide, reports that in 2006, on average 24.9% of students do not participate in recommended <br />physical activity levels. According to data from the 2006 -2007 California Physical Fitness Test, more 5th <br />and 7th grade students in Santa Ana Unified School District (40 %) are overweight /obese compared to <br />students in Orange County (29 %) and California (32 %). Fewer 5th and 7th grade students in SAUSD <br />(22% and 29% respectively) met 6 of 6 physical fitness standards compared to students in Orange <br />County (33% and 41 %) and in California (27% and 31 %). <br />Multiple factors impact a person's ability to maintain a healthy weight and many of these health <br />determinants are social (Marmot et. al., 1999). In particular, safe places to recreate are a key to <br />maintaining a healthy lifestyle. Research shows that youth need safe, open spaces to play, at least 60 <br />minutes a day, to keep healthy. Some research even suggests that maintaining healthy levels of physical <br />activity may be even more important than carrying excess weight for prolonging and increasing quality of <br />life (Active Living by Design, 2004). <br />ouch violence <br />Juvenile arrests for violent crimes in California significantly declined by 30% from 1994 -2003 (California <br />Department of Justice, 2004).9 However, "... even with the substantial decline in child gun deaths, in <br />2002 nearly 1000 young Californians between the ages of 12 and 24 lost their lives to gunfire." <br />(Commonwealth, 2005). The gang presence in Santa Ana is relatively large considering the city is only <br />27 square miles. <br />The California Department of Justice, Office of Attorney General's Criminal Justice Statistical Center <br />tracks the percentage of misdemeanor and felony arrests that are committed by juveniles and adults. <br />This provides us with a sense of what percent of crimes in Santa Ana are committed by youth. For 2006, <br />the results are as follows, <br />➢ 16.6% of total Santa Ana felonies committed by juveniles <br />➢ 16.2% of total Santa Ana misdemeanors committed by juveniles <br />In targeting obesity prevention and youth violence, the literature on safe places, joint use and sports <br />programming provide supporting evidence for ways that these three factors can have a positive impact on <br />healthy and safe youth development. <br />9 Juvenile (used in the crime reporting literature) is defined as 17 years of age and younger. For the purposes of <br />this report, it is used almost interchangeably with youth, which we define as 13 -18 years of age (USDOJ, 2009). <br />