Thursday, September 12, 2013

... And We're Back! aka Why Not Walk?

I've been thinking a lot about walking recently. Last week I started a new job at a hospital that is 1.5 miles from my new apartment. Google maps told me that it would take me 10 minutes to drive, 15 minutes to talk the bus, 15 minutes to bike, and 30 minutes to walk. Parking is crazy there so driving is out, the bus is crowded at that time of day, and by the time I get my tires pumped and my bike outside it's been more than 15 minutes. So I've been electing to walk there and back, getting a nice 3 mile roundtrip walk in every day. I love it because if I'm too tired to exercise when I get home at least I know that I've been a bit active during the day - and I'm only dependent on my own two feet (plus stop lights!) not on the bus running on schedule or finding a spot for my bike on the crowded racks.

The hospital has a Parking Department where you can get a parking pass, a discounted train pass, and a reimbursement for bike parts/maintenance if you bike to work. But for some reason, they have no monetary incentive for people to walk to work. When you think of how small of a city Boston is, it's sort of silly not to incentivize walking. I'm often struck by how few miles away my destination is (when I type it into my gps and it tells me it will take 45 minutes of sitting in traffic to make it 6 miles for example!).

It's one thing for me to walk myself to my destination - I'm a grown up, I know where I'm going and know not to cross the street outside of a crosswalk. But what about kids who as a population are less active than ever before? I recently read an article that said only 1/3 of students who live within a mile of school walk or bike and less than 3% of students who live within 2 miles of school walk or bike. I also just got an e-mail today from the Alliance for a Healthier Generation about a meeting that they're having to discuss programs like Safe Routes to Schools and Fire Up Your Feet. I think it's great that there are programs out there to encourage kids to walk to school and make it safer to do so, but in a way it's also sad that these programs are necessary.

Let's try to be a good example to everyone around us by choosing to walk next time your GPS tells you that your destination is less than 2 miles away. It'll take you a little over 30 minutes to get there and I bet you'll notice things about your neighborhood along the way that you never saw from you car. Let me know how it goes!

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