NewsUSA mayors commit to ‘evidence-based building solutions’ in the fight against COVID-19

The U.S. Conference of Mayors has passed a resolution encouraging communities all over the USA to take action by advancing integrated solutions to support a healthier and more equitable recovery.
Content Team4 years ago7 min

In a sweeping show of support for public health and wellbeing, mayors from all over the USA have approved a healthy buildings resolution to better position buildings in the fight against COVID-19 thereby underpinning the leading role buildings and their indoor spaces play in charting a path to healthier and more equitable communities.

The United States Conference of Mayors (USCM), a non-partisan organisation which represents mayors in over 1,400 cities with populations of 30,000 or more, passed the resolution at the conclusion of its 88th annual meeting.

Buildings can play a leading role in supporting human health and wellbeing

“Now, more than ever, we need to understand and advance comprehensive and integrated solutions that will deliver the benefits of healthy buildings to everyone, particularly those in vulnerable communities and high-priority settings, such as senior and assisted living facilities, affordable housing, healthcare facilities, hospitals, and our schools,” said Mayor Steve Benjamin of Columbia, South Carolina, who introduced the resolution alongside fellow mayors from Miami, Florida; Chicago, Illinois; Parkland, Florida; Sunrise, Florida; and St. Petersburg, Florida. “The places where we live and work have a profound impact on our health. But that connection has never been clearer than it is today, and as mayors, we are heeding the challenge to support better buildings that will help people thrive.”

Buildings can play a leading role in supporting human health and wellbeing, including how communities prepare for and respond to this global pandemic. A growing body of research demonstrates that better building design and management practices can help to reduce respiratory issues, such as asthma and allergies, and mitigate the transmission of viruses, including COVID-19.

“Mayors have always been innovators. In 2013, the USA’s mayors passed a seminal healthy buildings resolution, recognising the important action we can take to improve people’s health through better buildings and acknowledging specifically the role of the emergent WELL Building Standard (WELL),” said Rick Fedrizzi, Chairman and CEO of the International WELL Building Institute (IWBI). “Today, as we take on the defining global health crisis of our time, mayors have once again stepped up to embrace integrated, evidence-based building solutions that are absolutely critical in the fight against COVID-19.”

Leading by example

The resolution, “Advancing Healthy Buildings in the Fight Against COVID-19,” encourages communities to lead by example by taking action through the adoption of healthy building strategies and tools for public buildings, citing the WELL Building Standard, the WELL Health-Safety Rating for Facility Operations and Management and Green Communities 2020. The resolution also encourages city leaders to utilize these tools in affordable housing and private building projects receiving public funding or support.

“Through the vehicle of WELL, we have the means to position our buildings, and those who tend to them, as front-line caregivers in COVID-19 response and recovery,” said Rachel Gutter, President of IWBI. “By finding ways to deploy WELL and the recently launched WELL Health-Safety Rating, cities can ensure they are at the forefront of combating COVID-19 and advancing public health for all.”

Earlier this month, IWBI announced the WELL Health-Safety Rating for all building and facility types, an evidence-based, third-party verified rating focusing on operational policies, maintenance protocols, stakeholder engagement and emergency plans to address a post COVID-19 environment. The WELL Health-Safety Rating is one of the earliest outcomes of IWBI’s Task Force on COVID-19, a group of nearly 600 public health experts, virologists, government officials, academics, business leaders, architects, designers, building scientists and real estate professionals, which was established in late March to help guide IWBI’s response to the pandemic.

For more content from the IWBI, click here

Content Team

Work in Mind is a content platform designed to give a voice to thinkers, businesses, journalists and regulatory bodies in the field of healthy buildings.

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