Active and Healthy Communities | Vermont Department of Health
Source: http://healthvermont.gov/local/white-river-junction/active-and-healthy-communities
Archived: 2026-04-23 17:12
Active and Healthy Communities | Vermont Department of Health
Skip to main content
MENU
x
CLOSE
Translations for you
Active and Healthy Communities
White River Junction
WIC (White River Junction)
Family and Child Health
Active and Healthy Communities
Worksite Wellness
School Health
Immunizations
Infectious Disease
Community Prevention Programs
Tobacco Prevention
Emergency Preparedness
Healthy Homes and Lead Poisoning Prevention
When the place where we live makes it easy for everyone to exercise and eat well, fewer people will suffer from injury, cancer, diabetes, stroke, heart and lung disease. Our goal is to help shape our communities to support health and well-being. To do this we:
promote safe, pleasant and accessible places for all people to walk, roll or bicycle
promote use of public transit
ensure access to healthy and affordable food
ensure safe, quality housing
We work with community organizations, municipal and regional planners, schools and health care providers. We begin with conversations to learn what is important to our community. From there, we find ways to weave in health and wellness improvements that fit the priorities of our towns, such as economic development. All Vermonters will thrive when our living conditions help to eliminate differences in health for different groups of people.
Use the
Public Health Data Explorer
to learn about health and wellness where you live.
How We Can Help
There are many ways that the White River Junction office can help shape a healthier community. We can:
share examples of language that promotes health with cities and towns in order to strengthen regional plans.
provide a Safe Routes to Schools Regional Expert to provide support to schools.
provide public health data and information to inform planning.
provide education about why sidewalks and healthy foods options in local markets are important.
connect you with useful resources and provide examples of similar work done in other communities to help you on your way.
look for funds to help town officials and organizations support health-promoting efforts
Local Highlights
Building Health into Woodstock's Town Plan
Our staff helped the town of Woodstock to draft a Health Section of their
town plan
that included language about healthy community design and
Health Impact Assessments
. We also worked to support inclusion of that language in the transportation and development sections of the plan, where the requirements of health-promoting activities also need to be considered.
Making the Healthy Choice the Easy Choice
We chaired the Health and Society subcommittee for the
East Central Vermont Sustainability Consortium
, which developed a comprehensive community strategy called "What We Want" for our region to be sustainable in the future. This plan included language on using local policy and organization to promote health by making the healthy choice the easy choice.
Community Partners
Two Rivers-Ottauquechee Regional Commission
Public Health Council of the Upper Valley
Hartford Community Coalition
Dartmouth Hitchcock Community Benefits
Alice Peck Day Community Health
3-4-50 Prevent Chronic Disease
What does 3-4-50 mean?
3 behaviors
– lack of physical activity, poor diet, and tobacco use – lead to
4 chronic diseases
– cancer, heart disease and stroke, type 2 diabetes, and lung disease – that are the cause of more than
50 percent of all deaths in Vermont
.
This understanding inspires us to take action. Communities that are built to support physical activity, safe walking and biking, use of public transportation, and easy access to fresh foods are essential for good health.
See how Vermont Cities & Towns support health
Related Resources
Upper Valley Trails Alliance
Vermont Healthy Community Design Resource
Health Impact Assessments
Human Impact Partners
Supporting Healthy Communities: What Can Towns Do
Learn More
Physical Activity & Nutrition in Vermont Communities
Plans, Publications & Reports in Vermont
Contact Us
[email protected]
Phone: 802-295-8820
Last Updated:
February 21, 2025
Skip to main content
MENU
x
CLOSE
Translations for you
Active and Healthy Communities
White River Junction
WIC (White River Junction)
Family and Child Health
Active and Healthy Communities
Worksite Wellness
School Health
Immunizations
Infectious Disease
Community Prevention Programs
Tobacco Prevention
Emergency Preparedness
Healthy Homes and Lead Poisoning Prevention
When the place where we live makes it easy for everyone to exercise and eat well, fewer people will suffer from injury, cancer, diabetes, stroke, heart and lung disease. Our goal is to help shape our communities to support health and well-being. To do this we:
promote safe, pleasant and accessible places for all people to walk, roll or bicycle
promote use of public transit
ensure access to healthy and affordable food
ensure safe, quality housing
We work with community organizations, municipal and regional planners, schools and health care providers. We begin with conversations to learn what is important to our community. From there, we find ways to weave in health and wellness improvements that fit the priorities of our towns, such as economic development. All Vermonters will thrive when our living conditions help to eliminate differences in health for different groups of people.
Use the
Public Health Data Explorer
to learn about health and wellness where you live.
How We Can Help
There are many ways that the White River Junction office can help shape a healthier community. We can:
share examples of language that promotes health with cities and towns in order to strengthen regional plans.
provide a Safe Routes to Schools Regional Expert to provide support to schools.
provide public health data and information to inform planning.
provide education about why sidewalks and healthy foods options in local markets are important.
connect you with useful resources and provide examples of similar work done in other communities to help you on your way.
look for funds to help town officials and organizations support health-promoting efforts
Local Highlights
Building Health into Woodstock's Town Plan
Our staff helped the town of Woodstock to draft a Health Section of their
town plan
that included language about healthy community design and
Health Impact Assessments
. We also worked to support inclusion of that language in the transportation and development sections of the plan, where the requirements of health-promoting activities also need to be considered.
Making the Healthy Choice the Easy Choice
We chaired the Health and Society subcommittee for the
East Central Vermont Sustainability Consortium
, which developed a comprehensive community strategy called "What We Want" for our region to be sustainable in the future. This plan included language on using local policy and organization to promote health by making the healthy choice the easy choice.
Community Partners
Two Rivers-Ottauquechee Regional Commission
Public Health Council of the Upper Valley
Hartford Community Coalition
Dartmouth Hitchcock Community Benefits
Alice Peck Day Community Health
3-4-50 Prevent Chronic Disease
What does 3-4-50 mean?
3 behaviors
– lack of physical activity, poor diet, and tobacco use – lead to
4 chronic diseases
– cancer, heart disease and stroke, type 2 diabetes, and lung disease – that are the cause of more than
50 percent of all deaths in Vermont
.
This understanding inspires us to take action. Communities that are built to support physical activity, safe walking and biking, use of public transportation, and easy access to fresh foods are essential for good health.
See how Vermont Cities & Towns support health
Related Resources
Upper Valley Trails Alliance
Vermont Healthy Community Design Resource
Health Impact Assessments
Human Impact Partners
Supporting Healthy Communities: What Can Towns Do
Learn More
Physical Activity & Nutrition in Vermont Communities
Plans, Publications & Reports in Vermont
Contact Us
[email protected]
Phone: 802-295-8820
Last Updated:
February 21, 2025