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Tuesday, 02 Dec 2008

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Road Safety - Cycling and Walking to School

The mode of travel chosen for a child's journey to school is recognized as having an impact not only on their safety but their health and personal development and of course the environment in which they live.

The Government has empowered Local Authorities to assist schools in developing School Travel Plans and Safer Routes to School programs. Together we can make a difference to the journey children make to get to and from school by making it safer, healthier, sustainable and more interesting.

Safer Routes to School

The Safer Routes to School initiative aims to promote safer, more environmentally sustainable and healthier ways of getting to and from school with particular emphasis on walking and cycling. To achieve this, we need to improve conditions (both in safety and the environment) on the main walking and cycling routes to school. Schemes can include physical measure such as safer crossing points and may involve work within the school grounds.

Projects involve the investigation of school travel patterns usually carried out with the commitment to a School Travel Plan. This often identifies engineering and educational measures to improve safety and reduce car use on the route between home and school. These measures can be considered as part of a Safer Routes project and may include:

  • pedestrian crossings, improved pavements
  • school zones, traffic calming, parking restrictions
  • cycle routes and cycle parking
  • road safety education, training and publicity
  • health information
  • personal security advice

Walking

If you live close enough, encourage your children to walk to school. It will help them keep fit, be alert and become more street-wise:

  • Provide bright and reflective clothing, supportive shoes and a back pack.
  • For younger children, either walk with your children (it's a good opportunity to have a chat), or get together with other parents and take it in turns to accompany other children (a "walking bus")

Walking Bus

A Walking Bus is an initiative to encourage more children, accompanied by adults, to walk to school and by doing so reduce traffic and congestion outside schools.

Walking as a group and using an agreed route the children are under the supervision of at least 2 responsible adults - a 'driver' and 'conductor' - who are known to the school. Any volunteers involved with a Walking Bus have to complete a police criminal background check.

Some walking buses operate every school day while others operate one or two days a week - this depends on the number of adult volunteers involved.

The Council's Road Safety staff will risk assess routes and provide necessary training for all volunteers. Children and adults involved in a Walking Bus must wear reflective tabards which are supplied free of charge by the Road Safety Office.

Cycling

Encourage your children to cycle:

  • Provide bright and reflective clothing, supportive shoes and a back pack.
  • Buying a bike: It's better to buy the right size rather than get one which is too big that the child can "grow into". An oversized bike could be dangerous and is likely to put your child off cycling. It's advisable to choose a bike without a crossbar so that the child can fall through the bike and not off it.
  • Provide bright, fluorescent and reflective clothing
  • Buy a well fitting cycle helmet. You should only buy a helmet if it carries a CE mark and one of the normal safety standards e.g.. BS683:1989, AS.2063, ANSI, IZZ 90.4 SNELL, B90 or B95.
  • Consider enrolling them on a cycling proficiency course to develop their cycling skills and help them to become more confident.

Your Car

If you have to drive:

  • Park well away from school entrances and yellow zig-zags;
  • Find a location some distance from the school so that you can "park and stride". This will help your children to experience some of the benefits of walking to school and reduce school gate congestion.
  • Talk to other parents about sharing lifts to reduce congestion and pollution.
  • Make sure that you child gets out on the pavement side when you are dropping them off.
  • Don't leave your engine running when waiting to collect children.  An idling engine produces 80% more pollution than when a vehicle is in motion. 1 in 7 children have asthma. Medical evidence suggests that this is related to traffic fumes.

For further information on walking and cycling to school, please contact the Road Safety team.




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Last updated : 26.11.2008, 11:44:44