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Walk this way: how Michigan launched the Safe Routes to School program.


Michigan may be home to the American automotive industry The automotive industry is the industry involved in the design, development, manufacture, marketing, and sale of motor vehicles. In 2006, more than 69 million motor vehicles, including cars and commercial vehicles were produced worldwide. , but lately the state has been pushing new ideas "New Ideas" is the debut single by Scottish New Wave/Indie Rock act The Dykeenies. It was first released as a Double A-side with "Will It Happen Tonight?" on July 17, 2006. The band also recorded a video for the track.  for transportation. State initiatives under the federal Safe Routes to School program have been popping up nationwide and Michigan was one of the first to take action.

The state is helping kids become more active by walking or biking to schools in their communities. Taking this mission seriously, Michigan initiated a pilot program in 2003. Now with a full-fledged program and out of the pilot stage, Michigan's Safe Routes to School expects to receive about $19 million through the next five years from federal funding. Supporters say Michigan is ready to engage and motivate school-aged children to be more physically active and to be aware of non-motorized transportation options.

Michigan's Pilot Program

The Governor's Council on Physical Fitness, Health and Sports, a non-profit organization A non-profit organization (abbreviated "NPO", also "non-profit" or "not-for-profit") is a legally constituted organization whose primary objective is to support or to actively engage in activities of public or private interest without any commercial or monetary profit purposes.  located in the Lansing Capitol Capitol, seat of the U.S. Congress
Capitol, seat of the U.S. government at Washington, D.C. It is the city's dominating monument, built on an elevated site that was chosen by George Washington in consultation with Major Pierre L'Enfant.
 area, develops and disseminates initiatives which address promotion of a physically active lifestyle through education, environments and policies. After receiving a grant from the Michigan Department of Transportation The Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) is a government agency in the U.S. state of Michigan. History
The first State Highway Department was created on July 1, 1905.
 to fund a pilot project on safe routes to elementary schools elementary school: see school. , the council assembled a group of advisors from local and state agencies which represented transportation, education, community health, law enforcement and land use.

Michigan State University Michigan State University, at East Lansing; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1855. It opened in 1857 as Michigan Agricultural College, the first state agricultural college.  researchers were chosen as evaluators of the pilot project and six elementary schools were selected to participate in the first year of the pilot program. The following year, five more schools were selected for a total of 11 schools located in urban, suburban and rural areas.

Serious Issues Need Solutions

Dr. Lee Kokinakis, director of Active School Environments and Safe Routes to School for the Governor's Council on Physical Fitness, Health and Sports and the Michigan Fitness Foundation says that Safe Routes to School is a program with important social repercussions repercussions nplrépercussions fpl

repercussions nplAuswirkungen pl 
. "I've always thought of the program as a powerful intersection intersection /in·ter·sec·tion/ (-sek´shun) a site at which one structure crosses another.

intersection

a site at which one structure crosses another.
 between a number of missions" she explains. These missions include getting away from motorized mo·tor·ize  
tr.v. mo·tor·ized, mo·tor·iz·ing, mo·tor·iz·es
1. To equip with a motor.

2. To supply with motor-driven vehicles.

3. To provide with automobiles.
 transportation, a more aware public health agenda and an increase in safety for students walking to school.

Research and recent news is telling the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  that its youth are leading a less healthy lifestyle than their parents or grandparents grandparents nplabuelos mpl

grandparents grand nplgrands-parents mpl

grandparents grand npl
. During the past 20 years, the Years, The

the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109]

See : Time
 levels of obesity obesity, condition resulting from excessive storage of fat in the body. Obesity has been defined as a weight more than 20% above what is considered normal according to standard age, height, and weight tables, or by a complex formula known as the body mass index.  among children and adults in the country have grown to staggering numbers. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), agency of the U.S. Public Health Service since 1973, with headquarters in Atlanta; it was established in 1946 as the Communicable Disease Center. , only four states had obesity prevalence rates of 15 to 19 percent and no state had obesity prevalence rates above 19 percent in 1991. However, by 2004, the obesity prevalence in seven states rose to 15 to 19 percent and 42 states had rates of higher than 19 percent.

Today's youth, on average, are less active at home and many schools offer less physical education than previous generations of school children received because of funding cuts and demands on teaching more math, science, reading and language arts language arts
pl.n.
The subjects, including reading, spelling, and composition, aimed at developing reading and writing skills, usually taught in elementary and secondary school.
.

Mike Eberlein, coordinator of the Safe Routes to School program for the Michigan Department of Transportation explains that at a local level, the obesity problem could be addressed with an infrastructure made more inviting for exercise. He argues that the state had not previously been thinking ahead for foot and bicycle traffic. "Michigan was developing around the assumption that people were driving everywhere," he says.

At the Michigan Land Use Institute, the issue of where schools are being located is considered part of a large and serious land use and sprawl agenda. A 2004 report, titled "Hard Lessons: Causes and Consequences of Michigan's School Construction Boom," reports that Michigan outpaced the country in new school construction, with most new schools located outside the city or town boundaries where land is harder to reach by foot or bike.

About the time the report was issued, Governor Granholm commissioned a land-use leadership council to identify serious land use concerns and make recommendations for action. Under the category "Directing Development to Existing Communities and Revitalizing re·vi·tal·ize  
tr.v. re·vi·tal·ized, re·vi·tal·iz·ing, re·vi·tal·iz·es
To impart new life or vigor to: plans to revitalize inner-city neighborhoods; tried to revitalize a flagging economy.
 the Urban Areas," the council included Safe Routes to School programs as a means of creating and maintaining livable liv·a·ble also live·a·ble  
adj.
1. Suitable to live in; habitable: a livable dwelling.

2. Possible to bear; endurable: livable trials and tribulations.
 urban areas.

Kokinakis says that the initiative solves yet another concern, which is beyond getting students to walk themselves to school. "There are kids who are already walking to school," she says. "Some are walking to school in difficult circumstances CIRCUMSTANCES, evidence. The particulars which accompany a fact.
     2. The facts proved are either possible or impossible, ordinary and probable, or extraordinary and improbable, recent or ancient; they may have happened near us, or afar off; they are public or
. Safe Routes to School increases safety for school children who walk or bike already."

Michigan's Safe Routes to School Initiative

Under the leadership of the non-profit Governor's Council on Physical Fitness for Michigan, other states' programs that existed in 2004 were reviewed and adaptations were made to construct Michigan's program. Created by a group of professionals, the recently completed training manual shows the lessons learned and resulting tools that the eleven pilot program schools inspired. Lessons and tools were developed while visiting school grounds as children left to go home or by walking around neighborhoods and sidewalks or trails on foot or on bicycles.

The professionals then employed five "E" strategies to organize these lessons learned from students, parents and school administrators that would make a Safe Routes to School program both successful and sustainable. Engineering, Education, Encouragement, Enforcement and Evaluation are characteristics that are the foundation of the Michigan program, as well as the national focus areas. Researchers were asked to design an evaluation program that would provide baseline data to each school so they could formulate formulate /for·mu·late/ (for´mu-lat)
1. to state in the form of a formula.

2. to prepare in accordance with a prescribed or specified method.
 initiatives for the other four "E's" in the early years of their efforts.

Some of the programs developed by the urban schools included a number of coverage areas. For engineering, programs were developed that would add new crosswalks and pedestrian A pedestrian is a person travelling on foot, whether walking or running. In modern times, the term mostly refers to someone walking on a road or footpath, but this was not the case historically. History
Walking is the primary means of human locomotion.
 islands and no-turn on red signal signs, locate new sidewalks and curb cuts curb cut
n.
A small ramp built into the curb of a sidewalk to ease passage to the street, especially for bicyclists, pedestrians with baby carriages, and physically disabled people.
 for bike riders, install flashing light Flashing Light is a rhythmic light in which the total duration of the light in each period is clearly shorter than the total duration of the darkness and in which the flashes of light are all of equal duration.  school zone lights and renovate parking lots for safer bus zones and vehicle drop offs.

The education and encouragement program created a kid-tested branding and marketing campaign with promotions such as banners and backpack jewelry jewelry, personal adornments worn for ornament or utility, to show rank or wealth, or to follow superstitious custom or fashion.

The most universal forms of jewelry are the necklace, bracelet, ring, pin, and earring.
 and would encourage hosting walk-to-school days and add more safety patrols from the student body. The enforcement program included working with local traffic and crime officers, slowing traffic in school areas with signs and patrolling and encouraging neighbors to be watching out for the welfare of elementary school students. Some of the urban schools began recruiting and encouraging other schools in their districts to consider joining the program.

Evaluation of the programs was designed for schools to efficiently and cost-effectively collect data from students on their attitudes toward walking or biking to school and their current and preferred ways of getting there.

In selected spring or fall weeks, classrooms also tallied the number of students walking, biking, riding the bus, or being dropped off or picked up by a parent or older sibling sibling /sib·ling/ (sib´ling) any of two or more offspring of the same parents; a brother or sister.

sib·ling
n.
. Parents of these elementary students were also asked to complete a questionnaire to gauge their attitudes toward walking and biking opportunities for their elementary-aged child. For the pilot schools, data entry and analysis was completed by university faculty and students, with funding provided by Michigan Department of Transportation. Results from these surveys are in the tables that follow.

States and Communities Getting on Board

State transportation departments are currently responding to and organizing to implement the new federal legislation. Many states, including Michigan, have named a state coordinator. Texas, Colorado, Florida and California, are already prepared to move Safe Routes to School programs further along, particularly with the necessary financial resources to make infrastructure improvements around schools. Communities can begin to study the federal legislation and the state program guidelines guidelines,
n.pl a set of standards, criteria, or specifications to be used or followed in the performance of certain tasks.
 to prepare for grant opportunities to fund local and statewide efforts.

Eberlein explains that communities appreciate that the initiative overlaps a number of issues. "As I go around talking to Noun 1. talking to - a lengthy rebuke; "a good lecture was my father's idea of discipline"; "the teacher gave him a talking to"
lecture, speech

rebuke, reprehension, reprimand, reproof, reproval - an act or expression of criticism and censure; "he had to
 people, I'm proud to say that it's a unique program in that it affects societal so·ci·e·tal  
adj.
Of or relating to the structure, organization, or functioning of society.



so·cie·tal·ly adv.

Adj.
 problems that are not necessarily related to transportation."

That kind of overlap is getting more people on board. Administrators of school districts, bus and transportation departments in school districts, community planners, road commissions, park and recreation managers, parents of kindergarten kindergarten [Ger.,=garden of children], system of preschool education. Friedrich Froebel designed (1837) the kindergarten to provide an educational situation less formal than that of the elementary school but one in which children's creative play instincts would be  to eighth grade, and students can begin to consider future efforts to increase public awareness and encouragement for more walking or biking to school.

Community-based coalitions may also find that Safe Routes to School fits nicely with other initiatives promoting physical activity such as programs initiated by Congress that target youth health issues.

Eberlein says that communities can get started by reading Michigan's handbook, which is a step-by-step document that can lead a school through the process.

Now that the Safe Routes to School program is out of its experimental phase, 25 other schools have joined in and are proceeding at the local level, Kokinakis says. "They're all at different points on the continuum," she adds. Those furthest along, particularly the original pilot schools, are thinking about applications for federal funding.

Kokinakis sees a successful future for Safe Routes to School. "This program has the potential for community development and safety, to build neighborhoods and revitalize re·vi·tal·ize  
tr.v. re·vi·tal·ized, re·vi·tal·iz·ing, re·vi·tal·iz·es
To impart new life or vigor to: plans to revitalize inner-city neighborhoods; tried to revitalize a flagging economy.
 the lives of people."

A younger generation of our society is eager to walk or ride a bike to places near their home or schools, and Safe Routes to School can benefit communities and produce a better transportation option, even for high school students, college students or working adults. Programs like Safe Routes to School, along with other community trails projects, can have communities realize that destinations really are a hop, skip or a jump away.

NRPA NRPA National Recreation and Park Association
NRPA Natural Resources Protective Association (Staten Island, NY)
NRPA Niagara Regional Police Association (Canada)
NRPA National Rifle and Pistol Association
 Connects Schools and Parks

Local park and recreation departments are one of the best untapped potential partners for the Safe Routes to School program, and could help enable not only better neighborhood connections to schools, but also connections to after-school activities, parks, trails, recreation programs and organized youth sports.

Informal surveys by NRPA of local and municipal park and recreation agencies during the past year indicate that there are a very large number of local park and recreation agencies that own or manage much of the land surrounding local schools and connecting to local neighborhoods. Park and recreation directors have expressed keen interest in Safe Routes projects, and seem especially willing to partner with local non-profits, school districts and other government agencies.

Park and recreation agencies bring some extraordinary resources to Safe Routes projects including environmental and technical knowledge, trail planning assistance, new volunteers, and more.

For more information about Safe Routes partners, contact Richard Dolesh, director of Public Policy for NRPA at rdolesh@nrpa.org or call (202) 887-0290.

GET YOUR COMMUNITY READY

Additional resources for the Safe Routes to School programs:

Walk to School Day www.walktoschool-usa.org

Michigan's Walk to School Program www.saferoutesmichigan.org.

National Federal Highway Administration The Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) is a division of the United States Department of Transportation that specializes in highway transportation. The agency's major activities are grouped into two "programs," The Federal-aid Highway Program and the Federal Lands Highway  

http://safety.fhwa.dot.gov/safer outes/statecontacts.htm
Insights from Parents: Walking or Biking to School

                Enhancers                     Inhibitors

Urban Schools   * Creates opportunities to    * Cars going too
                  enjoy the outdoors--72%       fast--55%
                * Develops a healthy          * Strangers--54%
                  lifestyle--70%              * Too many cars near the
                * Develops self-reliance        school--40%
                  in cleared children--66%    * Sidewalks/pathways not
                * Increases independent         in winter--34%
                  thinking in children--62%   * Scary dogs
                * Trains children to walk
                  or bike safely--52%

Method of Commuting to and from School
by Rural/Suburban and Urban Schools

                                                     No. of
Method of Commuting             Community Type     classrooms   % Mean

Morning Walking                 Rural/Suburban         51         5.8%
                                Urban                  45        17.1%
Morning Biking                  Rural/Suburban         51         1.4%
                                Urban                  45         0.9%
Morning School Bus#             Rural/Suburban         51        55.0%
                                Urban                  45        37.0%
Morning Parent's Car#           Rural/Suburban         51        33.8%
                                Urban                  45        38.3%
Morning Someone Else's Car#     Rural/Suburban         51         3.9%
                                Urban                  45         6.2%
Morning Other Means             Rural/Suburban         51        10.0%
                                Urban                  45         0.2%
Afternoon Walking               Rural/Suburban         51         6.6%
                                Urban                  45        20.1%
Afternoon Biking                Rural/Suburban         51         1.2%
                                Urban                  45         0.9%
Afternoon School Bus#           Rural/Suburban         51        60.9%
                                Urban                  45        37.5%
Afternoon Parent's Car#         Rural/Suburban         51        27.7%
                                Urban                  45        34.4%
Afternoon Someone Else's Car#   Rural/Suburban         51         3.3%
                                Urban                  45         6.4%
Afternoon Other Means           Rural/Suburban         51         0.3%
                                Urban                  45         0.5%

Bold = significantly different (p < .05)

Note: Figures in bold inidcated with #.
COPYRIGHT 2006 National Recreation and Park Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Safe Routes to School program,
Author:Jordan, Evan
Publication:Parks & Recreation
Geographic Code:1U3MI
Date:May 1, 2006
Words:2011
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