Schools
Streetsblog Basics
The Unintended Consequences of Michigan Students’ Bike-to-School “Prank”
Tuesday morning, a group of intrepid high schoolers in the western Michigan city of Walker got onto their bikes and into a heap of trouble.
May 24, 2012
Braving Double-Parked Parents, MS 51 Students Bike to School in Droves
Based on this picture of rows of temporary bike racks, all filled, it looks like MS 51's Bike-To-School Day was a big hit (photo via Lara Lebeiko of Bicycle Habitat, which provided volunteers for the event). Escorted rides, or "bike buses," took students from Sunset Park, Carroll Gardens and Windsor Terrace/Kensington to the Park Slope school and back. During the day, a bike skills and safety course helped teach the students how to ride on their own.
May 23, 2012
DOT Launches Walk-to-School Program, Koch Calls Bike Lanes “Glorious”
DOT today launched a new initiative to help students stay physically active by walking to school.
November 2, 2011
Tennessee Mom Threatened With Arrest For Letting Daughter Bike to School
It’s back-to-school time, and along with it, the requisite crackdown over kids getting to school by bike. A few years ago, we highlighted cases from Mississippi to British Columbia where authorities stopped kids from walking alone.
September 1, 2011
One More Push Can Preserve Federal Safe Routes to School Funding
This week, the Safe Routes to School National Conference convenes in Minneapolis, a progressive city determined to become the most bicycle friendly in the nation. But even here, far from the nation’s capital, in a region celebrated for its massive greenway system, drama inside the Beltway has instilled an air of urgency to the event.
August 18, 2011
Bronx Teenagers Continue Two-Year Fight For Pedestrian Safety
Two years ago, the Bronx Helpers decided to take action about a dangerous intersection in their neighborhood. The team of middle and high-schoolers, participants in a community service group run by the New Settlement Apartments, routinely crossed the street at 172nd and Townsend. They all could recount traffic crashes they'd seen at the corner, with some cars coming dangerously close to hitting their friends. The intersection sits between two schools, an afterschool program, and the students' homes, but doesn't even have a visible crosswalk, much less a design prioritizing safety. With another school under construction at Jerome and 172nd, the need for safety is only going to get more urgent.
May 23, 2011
Senate Introduces a Narrower Bill for Wider Sidewalks
Like everyone else, Safe Routes to School advocates are scaling back. Last year, a bill introduced in the Senate asked for $600 million to enhance pedestrian and bike safety near schools. “We were working in a pretty different environment,” said Margo Pedroso, deputy director of the Safe Routes to School National Partnership. “Everybody was talking about a $500 billion transportation bill. So we figured, we don’t know what the full bill will be in the end, but let’s go for the funding we feel like we need.”
April 15, 2011
Fourth Graders Start Spreading the News: Stop Speeding Today
Students at Brooklyn's PS 261 have clocked motorists traveling on Atlantic Avenue at an average midday speed of 38 mph -- and as high as 50 mph. While the city's 30 mph speed limit is a mystery to most New Yorkers, the students knew they were watching people break the law and put others in danger.
November 17, 2010
Driver Hits And Kills 13-Year-Old Crossing Street in Front of High School
A driver struck and killed a 13-year-old girl this morning, apparently as she tried to walk to school. The driver, a male in his 40s, hit the victim on Rockaway Parkway at 7:50 this morning, according to the NYPD. She was pronounced dead at Brookdale Hospital.
November 1, 2010