Students getting out of cars, onto sidewalks
Communities revive walking to school

ARLINGTON, Virginia (AP) --Every weekday, 10-year-old Madeleine
Greenfield sidesteps puddles where the sidewalks aren't and braves a
dangerous intersection under her mother's supervision.

She's just trying to get to school, all of three blocks away.

"I can't cross at the crosswalk without a light, so it's sort of a pain,"
the fifth-grader said last week, grabbing her lunch and backpack as her
mother picked up her baby sister and herded her out the front door.

Madeleine is in the minority: Fewer than one in 10 children walk or bike
to school now, according to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention. Thirty years ago, more than two-thirds did.

That's changing in Arlington and in more than 50 cities and towns trying
to get their children out of cars and van pools and onto the sidewalks.

Three years ago, parents pressured Arlington County to come up with money
and a plan for walkable routes to its 26 schools. Soon, Madeleine will
have a sidewalk outside her house and a safer intersection to cross by
herself.

Each year, about 175 children are killed by motor vehicles while walking
or riding bicycles between home and school, according to a Transportation
Research Board report. Per mile, bicyclists have the highest rate of
injury or death. Kids on foot are the next highest.

Marin County, California, started a "Safe Routes to School" project in
2000 because of massive traffic jams near schools.

Wendi Kallins, the program director, said Marin County did the easy
things first: adjusted traffic lighting, put up new signs and painted
crosswalks and bike lanes. Kids got prizes when they kept track of miles
walked or ridden.

"One of the biggest obstacles we have to overcome is the fear factor,"
said Kallins. "Parents think if they keep their child attached at the hip
nothing will happen to them."

So Marin County parents started "walking school buses," where they convoy
groups of kids to school. It's a concept used in Chicago city schools
where gang crime is the biggest threat to children.

After two years, the number of children walking or biking to school in
Marin County rose to 38 percent from 21 percent. No one was injured or
killed.

Tax dollars needed
Elizabeth Stevens, an environmentalist, organized a successful Safe
Routes to School program at her daughter's elementary school in
Arlington, Massachusetts.

When snow discouraged pupils from walking in February, Stevens formed a
polar bear club. Despite 40 inches of snow and subfreezing temperatures,
she shepherded about 45 kids walking and talking about polar bears to
school every day.

Ingenuity can help get children walking safely, but in the end tax
dollars are needed to build speed bumps, extend curbs or install walk
signs that indicate how many seconds people have left to cross the
street.

When the state of Texas set aside $3 million for Safe Routes to School
last year, 277 communities came up with $45 million for projects.

Rep. James Oberstar, D-Minnesota, recently filed a bill that would spend
$1.5 billion over the next six years for Safe Routes to School. Oberstar
argues the money will end up widening highways if it isn't set aside for
specific safety programs.

The Bush administration rejects that approach, preferring to let states
decide how to spend $15 billion for traffic safety over the next six
years. That's double the $7.6 billion spent in the past six.

Federal Highway Administrator Mary Peters said the administration is
making safety a priority.

"We trust state and local officials," Peters said, suggesting it doesn't
make sense to promote pedestrian safety for South Dakota's wide-open
spaces or drunken-driving programs in largely teetotaling Utah.

Advocates say walk-to-school programs are gaining new momentum from
parents and teachers concerned about a childhood obesity epidemic. With
fewer children than ever getting enough exercise, 13 percent of kids
between 6 and 11 are overweight.

"Our society is waking up and smelling the lard," said Peggy DaSilva,
executive director of Walk San Francisco, an advocacy group.

Teachers say the program has unintended consequences: Children who walk
to school are more alert and better behaved than those who ride the bus.

Nancy Burns said she noticed a significant difference in her students who
participated in the Safe Routes to School program at the Northstar
Elementary School in Minneapolis. "Healthy, alert children would be my
No. 1 thing," she said.

Madeleine Greenfield's mother, Star Lanman, said walking makes her feel
more connected to her community. "When you're able to walk to school, you
feel like it's part of the family," she said.

Find this article at: 
http://www.cnn.com/2003/EDUCATION/06/23/walk.to.school.ap  
http://danenet.danenet.org/bcp/shp.html

mtn



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