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STEP Annual Conference 2017 - John Howie, NHS Health Scotland - CAFS and the Place Standard
1. The Scottish Transport
Emissions Partnership
Conference 2017
@placestandard
www.placestandard.scot
Cleaner Air For
Scotland & The
Place Standard
2. Will cover ….
• Place, Health & Inequalities
• Origins of the Tool
• Key Features
• Where & For What
• National Place Standard
Implementation Plan
• The Review Process &
Cleaner Air for Scotland
4. Place
• the environment in
which we live
• the people that
inhabit these spaces
• the quality of life that
comes from the
interaction of people
and their surroundings
Creating Places (2013)
6. Global Life Expectancy
• Sierra Leone – 50.1 Years*
• Scotland – 77 (M) 81 (F)**
• Japan – 83.7 Years*
WHO Global Health Estimates Technical Paper (2016)*
Office National Statistics (2016)**
10. The Place Standard
Partners:
Scottish Government (Planning & Architecture)
NHS Health Scotland
Architecture & Design Scotland
Glasgow City Council
12. Place Standard Purpose
…to support the delivery of high quality places in
Scotland and to maximise the potential of the physical
and social environment in supporting health, wellbeing
and a high quality of life.
13. Place Standard Principles
Are we having the right conversations with the
right people at the right time to change things for
the better?
22. When to Use the
Place Standard
Early stages
Identifying needs and assets
Aligning priorities and investment
Empowering communities, allowing their
views to be articulated
Design and development stages
Action planning
Informing or reviewing proposals
For continuous improvement
Monitoring changes and improvements
Community after-care or stewardship
Shared Learning
Gathering community priorities
Informing CPP considerations
Identifying needs
Reviewing impact of initiatives
Business planning
Baseline data
Development planning
Planning consultation
Regeneration planning
Capacity studies for places
Needs assessments
Asset mapping
Data for consultant briefing
Design charrette briefing
Development briefs
Participatory budgeting
Development frameworks
Masterplanning
Option appraisals
Desktop review
Design and access statements
Design review
Cross sector working
Community action planning
Development management
23. Place Standard – How Good is Our Place?
Understanding National Reach
Since December 2015:
• Over 80 instances of
use across Scotland
• 11,000 + individuals
using the tool
• More than 70% of
Local Authorities are
using or have signed
up to use the Place
Standard
24. Application – For What?
PURPOSE No.
Local Development Plan F.
Masterplan 1
LOIP/Locality Plan / C. Local Development Plan 1
LOIP/Locality Plan / C. Local Development Plan / H. Other (State in
Comments) 1
LOIP/Locality Plan Development 20
LOIP/Locality Plan Development / B. Funding Requirement 2
Funding Requirement 1
Local Development Plan 14
Strategic Development 3
Local Development Framework 1
Masterplan 2
Other (State in Comments) 30
Community Engagement 4
TOTAL 80
Based on Returns to Date June 2017
25. Worth a Look …
City of Edinburgh Locality Planning Workshop
30/31 January 2017
26.
27.
28. Findings So Far
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Walk or Cycle
Public Transport
Traffic & Parking
Streets & Spaces
Natural Space
Play & Recreation
Facilities & Amenities
Work & Local Economy
Housing & Community
Social Interaction
Identifying & Belonging
Feeling Safe
Care & Maintenance
Influence & Sense of Control
Averages for Shetland
Improvement
needed
1 = A lot
7 = Little
30. Shetland Place Standard
What Next?
• Initial public feedback - September 2016
• Community Forums – September / October 2016
• Public report – Early 2017
• Overall report will form the basis of the locality plans
and feed in to a range of strategic documents :
Local Development Plan
Local Housing Strategy
Shetland Transport Strategy
Local Outcome Improvement Plan
36. Governance & Support Structure
Communications &
Marketing
Working Group
(Action Area 7)
Monitoring &
Evidence
Working Group
(Action Area 4)
Community &
Practitioner
Learning &
Development
Working Group
(Action Area 5)
PLACE STANDARD
IMPLEMENTATION BOARD
PLACE STANDARD
IMPLEMENTATION
GROUP
Local Delivery
Processes
National Policy &
Delivery Processes
Place Standard
Alliance
(Communities,
Practitioners & Other
Stakeholders)
37. Place Standard – How Good is Our Place?
Place Standard Leads
Area Name
Aberdeen City
Anne-Marie
Steehouder-Ross
Aberdeenshire William Munro
Angus Isabelle Davies
Argyll & Bute Rona Gold
City of Edinburgh Jo McStay
Comhairle nan Eilean
Siar
Lesley McDonald
Clackmannanshire Cherie Jarvie
Dumfries and Galloway Kirsty Peden
Dundee City Julie Robertson
East Ayrshire Karl Doroszenko
East Dunbartonshire Nicola McAndrew
East Lothian Stephanie Kerr
East Renfrewshire Julie Nicol
Falkirk Andrew Wilson
Fife Paul Vaughan
Glasgow Derek Speirs
Highland Scott Dalgarno
Inverclyde Miriam McKenna
Midlothian Alasdair Matthews
Moray John Ferguson
North Ayrshire John McKnight
North Lanarkshire Leanne Pollock
Orkney Marie Love
Perth & Kinross David Stokoe
Renfrewshire Stuart Graham
Scottish Borders Shona M Smith
Shetland Islands
Ian McDiarmid
South Ayrshire Gus Collins
South Lanarkshire Gordon Cameron
Stirling Gillian Taylor
West Dunbartonshire Antony McGuiness
West Lothian Joanna Anderson
Area Name
Loch Lomond & TNP Susan Brooks
Cairngorms NP Katie Crerar
38. Place Standard – How Good is Our Place?
NATIONAL CONTACTS
Area
National Lead
Contact
Aberdeen City Darren Rocks
Aberdeenshire Johnny Cadell
Angus John Howie
Argyll & Bute Johnny Cadell
City of Edinburgh
Johnny Cadell
Sandy Robinson
Comhairle nan Eilean
Siar
Kat Hasler
Clackmannanshire Kat Hasler
Dumfries and Galloway Johnny Cadell
Dundee City Etive Currie
East Ayrshire Matt Lowther
East Dunbartonshire Louise Rennick
East Lothian Jamie Combe
East Renfrewshire Etive Currie
Falkirk
Fife Darren Rocks
Glasgow John Howie
Highland Darren Rocks
Inverclyde Kat Hasler
Midlothian Sandy Robinson
Moray Irene Beautyman
North Ayrshire Irene Beautyman
North Lanarkshire Louise Rennick
Orkney Sandy Robinson
Perth & Kinross John Howie
Renfrewshire Etive Currie
Scottish Borders Sandy Robinson
Shetland Islands Johnny Cadell
South Ayrshire Johnny Cadell
South Lanarkshire Etive Currie
Stirling John Howie
West Dunbartonshire Etive Currie
West Lothian Sandy Robinson
Area
National Lead
Contact
Loch Lomond & TNP Irene Beautyman
Cairngorms NP Kat Hasler
39. Place Standard – How Good is Our Place?
Early Lessons
PLACE
STANDARD
PROCESS
EVALUATION
MAY 2017
44. The Proposal
• The CAFS Governance Group - Place
Standard to support the aims of CAFS.
• Work with Place Standard Implementation
Team to adjust the Place Standard to test
fuller consideration of air quality issues
• Glasgow, Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Dundee
but ideally beyond to all local authorities with
Air Quality Management Areas (AQMAs).
45. The Intended Outcomes
• Provide a robust method to look at the ‘big picture’ on air
quality
• Facilitate better engagement on air quality between and
within different communities of interest , professionals and
organisations.
• Be used to ‘benchmark’ an area before and then compare
perceived impact after implementation of an LEZ
• Identify innovative air quality actions over and above ‘hard’
transport interventions/ Low Emission Zones;
• Generate actions to improve local air quality that can be
used to inform other relevant local plans and proposed
legislation and policy
• Support first LEZ in 2018, and in the four cities by 2020
46. Conclusion
• Product translates public health and place making
theory into accessible tool
• Places people at heart of decision making
• Highly reputable product and process
• Commitment to Improvement & extending
relevant application
• Test it’s potential to progress Cleaner Air For
Scotland
• Free!
Remit for the presentation – Place Standard, in play context
Scotland's new policy statement on architecture and place
Pretty consistent and compelling are the inequalities that arise due to income and area deprivation across a wide range of health outcomes.
Not only can people from more deprived communities expect to live shorter lives, but a greater number of years in poor health. Healthy Life Expectancy is an estimate of how many years a person can expect to live in good general health. It is a key summary measure of a population's health, taking into account self-perceived health which is shown to be a good predictor of mortality and indicates how crucially how well health and health conditions are being managed.
Those living in the 10% most deprived areas could expect to live between 22 and 24 years fewer in good health compared to those living in the 10% least deprived areas. This means 10% of men in Scotland can expect to live for only 46 years in good health. This is an average for all men in the 1% most deprived areas, with variation above and below that figure, so men in the very most deprived communities can expect to live an even shorter healthy life.
Similar inequalities exist and are reported annually by ourselves on coronary heart disease, cancer, alcohol hospital admissions and mortality and mental wellbeing. This is all very important for health and social care services to understand- the leaders, planners and practioners
Remit for the presentation – Place Standard, in play context
GPBH was one key component underpinning the Place Standard project
The other was SG policy statement “Creating Places”
All work presented here has been developed in partnership – a good example of pooling efforts towards shared goals
Remit for the presentation – Place Standard, in play context
Remit for the presentation – Place Standard, in play context
When to use
The place standard tool can help you to achieve a number of aims and is appropriate for the following sets of circumstances:
Individuals or communities can use the tool to assess what works about their place and where it needs to improve. This may be part of a wider discussion about the regeneration of an area, or it might be to inform a new place or development which is planned nearby.
Local authorities and Community Planning Partnerships can use the tool to help plan their activities and prioritise appropriate action.
The development sector can use the tool to establish to the needs of communities and create good places where people want to live.
This sets out the considerable ambition of the Place Standard: it should work for a range of users across a range of scenarios
By doing so it should help these user groups to work together and speak the same language
This sets out the considerable ambition of the Place Standard: it should work for a range of users across a range of scenarios
By doing so it should help these user groups to work together and speak the same language
This sets out the considerable ambition of the Place Standard: it should work for a range of users across a range of scenarios
By doing so it should help these user groups to work together and speak the same language
Remit for the presentation – Place Standard, in play context
Remit for the presentation – Place Standard, in play context
Remit for the presentation – Place Standard, in play context