Thursday, April 16, 2015
YOLO COUNTY NEWS
99 CENTS

DAVIS BICYCLES: Try traveling by Ôbike busÕ to school

By
October 1, 2010 |

Special to The Enterprise

ItÕs back-to-school, bike-to-school time again. I am seeing more bikes on the road, heading for my neighborhood elementary schools, and on to the university. I have seen more children and parents on bikes than in previous years. All this is good.

Studies have shown there is safety in numbers. Truly, the more people walk and ride their bikes, the safer those walkers and bicyclists are.

Before school starts each day at my neighborhood school, I see bicyclists and pedestrians escorted across the street by the crossing guard, and they proceed across the school grounds to bike parking and classrooms. The drop-off cars maneuver for space in an unchoreographed dance: One or two drivers pull in perpendicular, rather than parallel to the curb, and often block the bike lane for UCD students bicycling to class. How do they see clearly to back out?

For elementary school students being driven to school due to distance, wouldnÕt it be easier and safer for all concerned to drive to a nearby business parking area with plenty of room for maneuvering and, from there, join a Òwalking busÓ to school?

Wednesday is International Walk to School Day. Celebrate it with your elementary student by finding a way to walk or bike at least the last quarter-mile to school. See if it makes a difference in the traffic congestion around your school. If you want to organize a neighborhood Òwalk busÓ or Òbike bus,Ó you can download ÒI WALKÓ stickers, badges, certificates and puzzles at http://www.walktoschool.org/register.

This year, Davis Bicycles! is working on starting a Safe Routes to Schools program for Davis. This outstanding national safe bicycling and walking program relies on the five EÕs: educate, encourage, engineer, enforce and evaluate.

LetÕs focus on what parents can do for the first two EÕs: educate and encourage. (WeÕll discuss engineering, enforcement and evaluation in a later article.) Parents and caregivers can give students a big boost to healthy living and a responsible lifestyle by teaching them bicycle and pedestrian safety, and encouraging them to walk and bike.

Parents can teach their kids that bicycles must follow the same basic rules as vehicles: riding on the right side of the road, signaling before turns, stopping at stop signs and showing courtesy to pedestrians. As pedestrians, students heading to school need to know how to cross a street safely, using crosswalks, and understand how vehicles including bicycles move across their pathway.

Davis Bicycles! is working with the schools and the Police Department to put on Wednesday after-school rodeos at elementary schools. We would like to hear from parents what other bicycle education activities theyÕd like to see and how theyÕd like to help.

Parents also can encourage students to ride more. Through fourth grade, the Safe Routes to Schools program recommends that parents walk or ride with their students to school, using the opportunity to educate and then test studentsÕ competence in safe riding and walking. Once parents are confident of their bicycling and walking skills, students can be encouraged to ride or walk on their own.

Around this age, students also are involved in after-school activities that take them outside their neighborhood. Parents pick them up after school to deliver them to activities, or succumb to their complaints that ÒitÕs too hotÓ or ÒI have too much homework.Ó

This is a time when parents can consider giving the student both more independence and more responsibility. They can say, ÒI know you can get where you need to go safely within the city. You figure out how to get there. IÕm not driving you.Ó This gives the student the knowledge that he or she is trusted to act responsibly. That first sense of independence is a wonderful thing.

Seems harsh? Then sweeten the rule a bit with the Saveagallon contest. Join the contest and keep track of the mileage, CO2 emissions and money saved when the car is not used to transport students. Consider giving the student the money he or she saves by bicycling, walking or using public transit. One contestant saved enough in a year to purchase a fancy new bike.

The contest is open only to Davis public school students, no adults; itÕs easy to register and log in. Contest rules and sign-up instructions can be found at http://www.saveagallon.org/Davis_School_Contest. (Anyone may register and log their miles on saveagallon.org; the contest is just for Davis K-12 students.)

Please send any ideas for encouraging bicycling and walking. We also need volunteers for the Davis Bicycles! School Committee, bike rodeos or other bike encouragement programs. Contact me at [email protected] We really can use your help!

Ñ To offer a Davis Bicycles! column, write to Matt Biers-Ariel or Mont Hubbard at [email protected] or log on to http://www.bikedavis.info to see instructions for authors.

Comments

comments

Christal Waters

  • Recent Posts

  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this newspaper and receive notifications of new articles by email.

  • .

    News

     
    Experts move us toward better transportation solutions

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A1 | Gallery

    Test-taking goes digital next week

    By Jeff Hudson | From Page: A1 | Gallery

     
    California’s cycles of drought

    By New York Times News Service | From Page: A1 | Gallery

     
    Small aircraft lands on Capitol lawn

    By The Associated Press | From Page: A2

     
    Winters man sentenced in child pornography case

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A2

    Two jailed after burglary, police chase

    By Lauren Keene | From Page: A2

     
    Per Capita Davis: A gusher of water conservation news

    By John Mott-Smith | From Page: A3

    AAUW hosts Yamada speech

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A3

     
    Bike clinic set May 17 at I-House

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A3

    Fujimoto receives Ag Sustainability Leadership Award

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: B4 | Gallery

     
    Davis plans for next steps with electric vehicles

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: B4 | Gallery

    Support network

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A4 | Gallery

     
    .

    Forum

    Feeling like a sucker

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: B5

     
    Provide more metered parking

    By Letters to the Editor | From Page: A6

    Tom Meyer cartoon

    By Debbie Davis | From Page: A6

     
    College applications and criminal records

    By New York Times News Service | From Page: A6Comments are off for this post

     
    Free speech in Israel

    By Letters to the Editor | From Page: A6

    Thanks for the support!

    By Letters to the Editor | From Page: A6

     
    .

    Sports

    Critical home stretch at hand for UCD lacrosse team

    By Bruce Gallaudet | From Page: B1

     
    DHS girls win big, now look ahead to Franklin

    By Evan Ream | From Page: B1 | Gallery

    Blue Devil swimmers win everything against Grant

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: B1 | Gallery

     
    Tough stretch continues for Davis baseballers

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: B1

    Devil golfers use some new faces in victory

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: B1 | Gallery

     
    Youth roundup: Diamonds dominate recent championship meets

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: B2 | Gallery

    Pro sports briefs: Lopez lifts Republic FC over Vancouver

    By Staff and wire reports | From Page: B3

     
    Sports briefs: Blue Devils get a wild softball win

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: B3

    JV/frosh roundup: Two big wins for younger DHS boys lacrosse

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: B8 | Gallery

     
    .

    Features

    Wine and beast: the vegetarian version

    By Susana Leonardi | From Page: A7

     
    .

    Arts

    Croatian film featured at I-House series

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A7Comments are off for this post

     
    DMTC to present ‘Wizard of Oz’

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A7

    Gurf Morlix will take root at The Palms

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A7 | Gallery

     
    ‘Mary Poppins’ auditions set at WOH

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: A7

     
    .

    Business

    Pollinate Davis opens creative and communal working space

    By Felicia Alvarez | From Page: A3, 1 Comment | Gallery

     
    .

    Obituaries

    Herman Timm

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: A4

     
    .

    Comics

    Comics: Thursday, April 16, 2015

    By Creator | From Page: A5

     
    .

    Picnic Day 2015

    UC Davis hosts the 101st Picnic Day

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: PND2

    Picnic Day 2015 notable events

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: PND4

    Not your typical Paint Horse

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: PND5

    Chemistry Club does a bang-up job with magic show

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: PND6

    A winner of a wiener: Nibbles, ’09 Grand Champion

    By Daniella Tutino | From Page: PND10 | Gallery

    Schedule of 2015 Picnic Day bands around campus

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: PND14

    Picnic Day parade marshals give direction and give back

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: PND21

    A great day for a parade

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: PND22

    More than 70 parade participants

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: PND23

    UC’s only design majors show off Signature Collection

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: PND24

    Working like a dog

    By Enterprise staff | From Page: PND27

    Picnic Day 2015 animal events schedule

    By Special to The Enterprise | From Page: PND28

    Battle of the Bands is Picnic Day at its best

    By Tanya Perez | From Page: PND31