My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
YFMP PHASE I SEPTEMBER 2009 (2)
Clerk
>
Agenda Packets / Staff Reports
>
City Council (2004 - Present)
>
2009
>
12/21/2009
>
YFMP PHASE I SEPTEMBER 2009 (2)
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
8/3/2016 3:05:26 PM
Creation date
12/23/2009 4:11:30 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Item #
WSA
Date
12/21/2009
Destruction Year
2014
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
66
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
❖ Davis ❖ King ❖ Martin <br />❖ Edison ❖ Lincoln ❖ Washington <br />❖ Esqueda ❖ Madison ❖ Wilson <br />❖ Kennedy <br />To put this data in perspective, it should be noted that the average percentage for SAUSD 5th graders on <br />this fitness indicator was 59.5% and for Orange County overall it was 71.2 %. The average for the 5th <br />graders in the State of California in 2008 was 68.4 %. <br />As a comparison, we examined the healthy body composition rates for schools in the Garden Grove <br />School District that serve Santa Ana youth. The rates for these youth are as follows: <br />•'• Heritage Elementary- 63.1% <br />•'• Rosita Elementary- 60.5% <br />•'• Russell Elementary- 64.7% <br />•'• Hazard Elementary- 64.3% The 92701 zip code of Santa Ana, one of the <br />❖ Fitz Elementary- 65.3 %1$ <br />❖ Newhope Elementary- 64.5% most densely populated places in the state <br />and 92% Latino, has only 3 acres of park <br />Open space & joint use indicators space for 61, 000 residents, 68% of whom <br />The data on open space and joint use is a are living at or below two times the federal <br />combination of data from the Santa Ana PRCSA <br />GIS map of p J arks and joint-use locations poverty level (Flores, 2008). <br />(Appendix E), as well as the Trust for Public <br />Land's GIS map of park deficits (Appendix F). Research demonstrates that low- income neighborhoods - <br />such as those found in central Santa Ana- are especially park -poor. This puts undue strain on <br />communities that perhaps most need access to park space. A deficit of park space for children persists in <br />Santa Ana, particularly for City Council Districts 2, 4, and 5, where less than 3 acres of park space exists <br />for every 1,000 children (Trust for Public Land, 2006a). The analysis by TPL suggests that the area <br />between Grand, 17th, Bristol, and Edinger is particularly in need of more park space to accommodate <br />residents (Appendix F). To put this into perspective, in Denver, CO, nine out of ten residents live within six <br />blocks of a park (Harnik, 2006). <br />Nonetheless, as building more parks may be less feasible for built -out communities like Santa Ana, <br />another option may be encouraging more joint -use of facilities. Currently seven schools in the Santa Ana <br />Unified School District have active joint use agreements with the City of Santa Ana (Appendix E). These <br />are: <br />• Madison Elementary <br />• Monroe Elementary School <br />• Monte Vista Elementary School <br />• Spurgeon Intermediate School <br />• Willard Intermediate <br />• Godinez High School <br />• Valley High School <br />18 Data is for 7th grade because data is not available for 5th grade. <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.