Grants
For Healthy Active Communities, grantmaking decisions are based on an organization's ability to achieve one or more of the following objectives, with highest consideration given to those proposals that utilize a combination of programming, environmental changes, and policy changes to address physical activity and healthy eating:
1. Measurably increase physical activity and healthy eating opportunities for school age children and staff
- Increase physical activity levels during the school day1
- Increase access to and consumption of healthy food2 during the school day
- Increase parental reinforcement of healthy physical activity and nutrition habits learned during the school day
2. Measurably increase physical activity and healthy eating opportunities in rural communities3or for vulnerable populations4 in urban communities.
- Increase physical activity levels of a targeted population5
- Increase access to and consumption of healthy food
- Increase access to venues for physical activity through the creation of an implementation plan6for physical projects that enhance a community’s physical activity infrastructure
1 School day is defined as the time immediately before, during or immediately after school hours, and can also include track-out day camps. Programs to increase physical activity and access to healthy food during the school day do not have to take place on school property (e.g., YMCAs, recreation centers, Boys and Girls Clubs sites, etc.).
2 Healthy food is defined as fruits and vegetables, whole grains, lean meats, low fat dairy products, and snacks with reduced amounts of refined sugars, hydrogenated fats, and sodium. Healthy food also refers to food preparation methods that avoid frying foods and to balanced meal choices designed to achieve the My Pyramid daily intake suggestions
3 Rural communities are located in counties defined as rural by the North Carolina Rural Economic Development Center.
4 Vulnerable populations are defined as low-income uninsured, minority, and/or chronically ill individuals.
5 Active Living by Design's 5 P model is one recommended strategy for achieving the result of increasing physical activity. The model recommends the integration of the 5 P's: Preparation, Promotion, Programs, Policy Influence, Physical Projects, as a way to comprehensively promote active living in communities.
6 Requests for planning funds must include information on how funds will be obtained for construction of the physical project.
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