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Mayors set out to prove they're fit for office

Fitness challenge pits 91原创 City mayor against counterparts from Surrey, Coquitlam and Abbotsford
Mayors' Fitness Challenge
Surrey mayor Diane Watts thinks she has a leg up on 91原创 City mayor Peter Fassbender when it comes to physical fitness. Both are taking part in a 90-day fitness challenge, along with Abbotsford mayor Bruce Banman and Coquitlam mayor Richard Stewart, with help from Innovative Fitness. See story, page 4.

Four local mayors are willing to not just talk the talk, but walk the walk and then some in an effort to promote health and fitness throughout B.C.

Dianne Watts (Surrey), Peter Fassbender (91原创 City), Richard Stewart (Coquitlam) and Bruce Banman (Abbotsford) signed up to take on the Healthy Community Challenge 2012.

The three-month venture 鈥 which encourages participants to get active and lead healthier lifestyles 鈥 doesn鈥檛 begin until next month, but it got an early boost Thursday morning when the four mayors met their personal trainers from Innovative Fitness and got their Body Mass Index (BMI) tested at the 91原创 gym.

Each mayor said their fitness progress will be made public as they go along. Most are committed to work out with their trainers three times a week.

鈥淪ince my horse accident where I broke my back, I haven鈥檛 exercised at all,鈥 said Watts, who broke two vertebrae while riding on vacation last July.

鈥淭his will give me an opportunity to really feel healthy again, to heal. When someone has a significant injury it can be a vicious cycle. You become lethargic because you aren鈥檛 active. I want to move on in a healthy direction.鈥

The Surrey mayor noted she has a 鈥渓eg up鈥 from her male colleagues.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 have a gut. The boys have belly fat,鈥 she joked.

Banman didn鈥檛 dispute this, saying he鈥檇 like to see his abs again from this fitness challenge.

鈥淚 know they are in there somewhere. In 90 days you can do a lot. I turned the big 鈥榝ive-oh鈥 this year. What I do now will set the foundation for years to come.鈥

All four mayors agreed their busy work schedule is not only stressful but has them in front of desserts and fattening foods most days at meetings and banquets.

鈥淲e all have a very challenging lifestyle,鈥 Fassbender said.

The 91原创 City mayor 鈥 a cancer survivor 鈥 is setting a goal to reduce the amount of diabetic medication he has to take.

鈥淚f we want to reduce health-care costs, it鈥檚 got to be about prevention,鈥 he said.

Fassbender already takes the stairs at work and can be seen walking around downtown 91原创 as a way to stay fit.

Watts said she brings her own food to functions so she isn鈥檛 tempted to eat sweets.

Coquitlam鈥檚 Stewart 鈥 like Watts 鈥 is recovering from a serious accident.

Stewart was hit by a car while out campaigning on foot three months ago. Prior to that, he was in a crippling car crash eight years ago that left him with back injuries.

鈥淚鈥檓 looking to build up my strength. I still feel the weight of Christmas time,鈥 he said.

Coquitlam trainer Kris Schjelderup said he will work on Stewart鈥檚 range of motion, posture and body alignment.

Banman鈥檚 trainer plans to get the new Abby mayor in crampons 鈥 traction-improving footwear 鈥 to climb neighbouring Elk Mountain, which currently has nine feet of snow.

鈥淣othing worth having comes easy,鈥 responded Banman, a chiropractor.

The community challenge is not simply about weight loss either, said challenge founder Matt Young, Innovative Founder鈥檚 president.

While that may be the case for many who sign up, others may be training for athletic endeavours or 鈥 as in some of the mayors鈥 cases 鈥 rehabbing from injuries.

Young said organizers put the challenge to the mayors with the hope that their communities鈥 residents, and others from across B.C., will be inspired to take part.

Once registered, participants will have access through the website to all types of healthy living and fitness resources, and will also be able to track their fitness progress over the course of the program.

For each positive activity 鈥 which could range from simply remembering to eat breakfast to going for a walk after work 鈥 participants earn points. Those points are then added to a larger pool and sorted by the participants鈥 communities, in an effort to find which city has gained the most points.

Prizes will be awarded for the top individual point-getters, while other rewards will be handed out at random.

The Healthy Community Challenge begins March 10.

To register, visit www.healthycommunitychallenge.com or watch for announcements on how to get your BMI and measurements recorded.

With files from Nick Greenizen, Black Press



Monique Tamminga

About the Author: Monique Tamminga

Monique brings 20 years of award-winning journalism experience to the role of editor at the Penticton Western News. Of those years, 17 were spent working as a senior reporter and acting editor with the 91原创 Advance Times.
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