San Francisco Chronicle

California­ns’ well-being starts in the neighborho­od

- Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.

California is a state of large things: a 1,100-mile coastline, giant mountain ranges, big cities. In such a sprawling place, how much could people care about their own little neighborho­ods? Answer: an awful lot. This is a state of neighborho­ods. And California­ns are very devoted to their own. We identify ourselves as residents of neighborho­ods more frequently than as residents of towns and cities.

While surveys show we are mostly satisfied with our communitie­s and our lives, we also want more from our neighborho­ods. Much more. California­ns’ hunger for neighborho­ods that offer more opportunit­y is demonstrat­ed in an extensive “Advancing Wellness” poll of California­ns from the California Wellness Foundation and the Field Research Corp. That love, and that hunger, bind the 30-some stories, including this column, that comprise a Zócalo series on California and the health of its neighborho­ods.

If you consume national media, you might think America is an especially anxious and pessimisti­c country now. But in the Advancing Wellness poll, about 90 percent of California­ns are at least somewhat satisfied with how things are going in their lives; 91 percent of us are at least somewhat hopeful about the future.

Such hope and optimism begins at home. Majorities of us see our own communitie­s as healthy places to live, where people of diverse background­s get along and where we can find the parks, schools, public safety, groceries and race relations we want.

But the picture is far from golden, particular­ly if you’re light on gold.

It is not news that California, by some measures, is our most unequal state.

We lead the country in billionair­es and are home to America’s richest region (the Bay Area), but we also have the nation’s highest poverty rate (when we measure the value of public assistance and the cost of living).

These difference­s are most intimately felt at the neighborho­od level. California­ns worry that the problems of their neighborho­ods will determine their own fates.

If your neighborho­od is polluted and you don’t know your neighbors, will you have health problems and be disconnect­ed from the institutio­ns — in education, in health, in the economy — that might change your circumstan­ces?

There are big income-related difference­s in how California­ns see neighborho­ods, the poll suggests. Seventythr­ee percent of upper-income California­ns describe their community as at least very good on being a safe place to live; among low-income California­ns, that figure is only 40 percent.

The poll also shows that people’s ambitions for their neighborho­ods are high across the spectrum. Among the highest ambitions: California­ns desperatel­y want their neighborho­ods to help them find jobs.

That’s not convention­al wisdom. Public conversati­on about jobs tends to link employment to the national or internatio­nal economy, and to trends outside the control of your neighborho­od, from technology to trade. But millions of California­ns have become unhappily accustomed to stagnant incomes and long commutes — from the places where we live to the places where we work. “Can your neighborho­od get you a job?” is a fresh question.

It’s a question California­ns want answered. Fewer than half of those in the survey — 44 percent — rated their own community as a good or excellent place to get a good job; 52 percent offered a negative rating.

California­ns see community health as fundamenta­lly economic. And they’re right. And if our state can find answers to their concerns, we’d also be building a more cohesive California with higher incomes, better and more affordable housing, more accessible education, and smarter treatment of chronic health problems.

Of course, California­ns don’t all want exactly the same jobs or other amenities from their neighborho­ods. Other rankings of the most popular California­n places to live are striking for the variety of cultures, economies and climates people prefer, from Folsom to Poway.

But the Advancing Wellness data show a strong correlatio­n between how people feel about their own health and the level of opportunit­ies they see in their very own neighborho­ods.

We California­ns want a rich mix of offerings — from schools to parks to jobs — and we want them close by.

These days, the biggest California dreams begin at home.

 ?? John Overmyer / NewsArt ??
John Overmyer / NewsArt

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