There’s a lot of hardworking people who love the city who want to make it better.
Enio Lopez, city councilor
2017 RWJF Culture of Health Prize Winner
With Grit and Determination, a City Comes Together For Health
To begin to understand Chelsea, Massachusetts, take a drive from the McArdle Bridge down Marginal Street, past major industries that block views and access to the Chelsea River, known locally as the Chelsea Creek.
Along the water’s edge, you’ll find remnants of industries past transformed into urban beauty. In a swath of green, children are playing in view of tugboats coming up the river. The kids are darting about beneath a metal canopy made from material reclaimed from the oil tanks that used to sit here.
Beauty in the midst of industrial grit. It’s an apt metaphor for a city that was bankrupt two decades ago and nearly annexed by nearby Boston, yet now is tackling urban challenges with innovation and heart. Grassroots activists and policymakers, police officers and business owners, health care officials, and high school students—all are working together to make inroads against substance abuse, pollution, obesity, homelessness, and violence.
To address such a wide gamut of issues, they’re changing policy through activism, forward-thinking policies like an aggressive trans-fat ban, sanctuary city protections for undocumented immigrants, and the inclusion of affordable housing in new developments. Though everyone may not agree on everything, there is strong coordination here between city government, health providers, nonprofits, and businesses.
Pocket-sized Chelsea—just 1.8 square miles—is one of the nation’s most densely populated places, with about 39,000 people squeezed into the one-third of the city that is zoned for housing. Sixty-three percent of people who live here are Hispanic and 44 percent are foreign-born, with 35 languages spoken.
Residents share their city and waterway with the largest privately owned wholesale produce market in the nation, road salt piles, and terminals storing the majority of New England’s heating fuel and all of Logan International Airport’s jet fuel.
That proximity means everybody has to pull their weight over the long haul to make health better for all. “There’s a lot of hardworking people who love the city who want to make it better,” City Councilor Enio Lopez says.
There’s a lot of hardworking people who love the city who want to make it better.
Enio Lopez, city councilor
Slide Show
Beauty in the Midst of Industrial Grit
Lifelong Chelsea, Massachusetts, resident Roseann Bongiovanni, the daughter and granddaughter of Italian immigrants, envisions an “emerald necklace” of parks, trails and salt marshes one day adorning the coastline of this city bounded on three sides by water.
She challenges the perception that Chelsea is just a gritty, densely populated, urban locale being choked by its industry and traffic and the health effects that go along with them.
To be sure, two busy thoroughfares cut through the city, which sits just across the Tobin Bridge from Boston. The Chelsea Creek waterfront is home to seven bulk petroleum storage terminals as well as salt waiting to be trucked to 300-plus municipalities in the region. And straddling the border of Chelsea and Everett, Massachusetts, is the New England Produce Center, whose 35 tenants sell fruits and vegetables that are distributed to stores throughout New England and beyond.
All of this activity means pollutants in Chelsea’s air exceed by 20 percent levels the EPA deems safe. The city has the highest asthma hospitalization rates in Massachusetts, and among the highest hospitalization rates for heart attacks and stroke.
But Bongiovanni, executive director of the environmental justice group GreenRoots, and others in the city are tackling these challenges collaboratively and aggressively, working to make Chelsea a greener place, and, therefore, a healthier one. Among the successes to date:
Bridgeport, Connecticut has improved the health and the economy of the city by "going green."
Today, this city with considerable and long-standing environmental challenges is seeing all such issues as pressing. Now, government, nonprofit and private partners in Chelsea are looking into green infrastructure projects, such as rain gardens and permeable streets that would reduce rainwater runoff into its waterways.
They’re also studying the feasibility of a green-energy powered micro-grid that could give the city energy independence and protect the produce center from a large-scale power outage, Bongiovanni says.
And ECO youth are working with members of the Board of Health and Boston University’s School of Public Health to map the city’s methane leaks and study the effects on tree health.
“I would like to see a better future for this community,” says Cristian Garcia, a 17-year-old ECO member. “More parks, more places for people to go outdoors and enjoy and be a community.”
I would like to see a better future for this community.
Cristian Garcia, 17, GreenRoots' Environmental Chelsea Organizers team
There’s a box of hot coffee in the back of the community room at the Chelsea Police Department on this Thursday morning.
About 20 people are gathered around the conference table for a meeting convened by the police department and The Neighborhood Developers, a community development nonprofit.
Police officers, child protective services and city code enforcement agents, substance abuse counselors, social workers, substance-use recovery coaches, and medical center staff all fuel up on coffee and mingle.
They talk through the city’s most difficult cases of people who have come in contact with the police and whose lives have been influenced—and too often upended—by drugs, violence, and homelessness.
This is the Hub, established in Chelsea, Massachusetts, just outside Boston, in 2015 to help the community’s most vulnerable people. The group emulates a successful approach developed by the government of Saskatchewan, Canada, to cut crime and boost well-being by using data to pinpoint who most needs help. Social services resources are then mobilized to provide assistance. The group has coordinated 250 cases among them since January 2015.
Participants in Chelsea’s Hub say the weekly meetings—and many phone calls and texts in between—enable them to keep parolees out of jail, protect children from violence, and get people dealing with drug addiction into treatment. The meetings also exemplify how Chelsea works: All together.
“What makes Chelsea most unique is the level of collaboration that exists among the city and its community-based organizations,” says City Manager Tom Ambrosino. “It’s unmatched. It makes getting things accomplished here so much easier.”
Michael Caine, a recovery coach for North Suffolk Mental Health Services, is one of two community health navigators contracted by the City of Chelsea to connect teens and adults at risk of overdose and other health issues to a range of resources.
The city also contracts with CAPIC, a local social services nonprofit, to provide wrap-around services such as housing, food, and transportation. Clients’ outcomes are tracked, and Ambrosino reviews data quarterly to assess progress and recalibrate resources. The Hub is integral in coordinating these efforts.
Cain estimates he’s gotten 20 cases this year because of the Hub meetings. “I’m honored to work with this team,” says Cain, who is in recovery himself and lost his 24-year-old son to an opioid overdose in 2015. “It’s remarkable.”
The Hub is just one part of Chelsea Thrives, a cross-sector coalition launched in 2014 to reduce crime by 30 percent over 10 years. The Neighborhood Developers leads the coalition and involves two dozen partners, including Chelsea’s schools, its housing authority, and the Chamber of Commerce. The total number of crimes in Chelsea dropped 12.5% from 2014 to 2016, according to police department data.
Santa Monica, California, has tackled problems similar to Chelsea's while building an inclusive, equitable, and diverse community for more than 40 years.
Chelsea’s city government and the police department have good avenues for building trust with residents because of the existence of deeply rooted organizations that have developed strong ties to the community over decades.
The social justice nonprofit Chelsea Collaborative, for example, partners with the police to publicize Chelsea’s sanctuary city policy, understand the needs and experiences of immigrant residents, and help them acclimate. The department also collaborates closely with Roca, a nonprofit that works with young men at risk for incarceration and with young mothers.
“We knock on doors together,” says Roca founder and CEO Molly Baldwin of her organization’s partnership with police.
“Law enforcement is 10 percent of what we do,” says Chief of Police Brian Kyes, who grew up in Chelsea and has been with the department for 30 years. “The community sets the agenda for us to do our jobs. We listen to their concerns and work together.”
Algoma, Wisconsin–Making Health Improvement Everyone’s Business
Chelsea, Massachusetts’ Wednesday Lunch Marketplace is a small, yet lively affair.
On a recent August afternoon just outside City Hall, there’s something for everyone: a sandwich vendor, a chocolatier, a cooking demo, a booth with information about free summer lunches for kids and other social services, and an impressive guitarist covering The Rolling Stones and X Ambassadors.
Energizing the downtown and boosting public safety is the mission of Chelsea Prospers, an initiative launched by the city manager this spring. This city just outside Boston also has plans to make Broadway, its main thoroughfare, more pedestrian and bike-friendly and revitalize business.
The city’s new Downtown Task Force includes four police officers tasked with building relationships with businesses, reducing loitering and public drug use by connecting people to services and treatment, and making the area feel safer.
“Though [Chelsea Prospers] has a goal of economic development, we’re using public health strategies,” says Mimi Graney, who coordinates the city’s efforts. For example, she says, “If you have a more walkable downtown, it fosters both economic development and health.”
There’s a strong understanding here that health touches every aspect of people’s lives and that citywide policies can have a big impact.
A few ways Chelsea is working to become healthier:
We’re trying to look at the whole person. It’s all about increasing resilience and reducing risk factors.
Jennifer Kelly, director, Healthy Chelsea