65 schools across Portland set for ‘Walk and Bike to School Day’

Trillium Charter School bike train-17-14


(Photo © J. Maus/BikePortland)

Tomorrow morning over 60 schools throughout Portland will make an extra effort to walk and bike school as part of International Walk + Bike to School Day. The event helps kick off the City of Portland’s annual Safe Routes to School program which has seen impressive growth since its start just eight years ago.

According to PBOT’s Gabe Graff, Safe Routes to School is taught and implemented in 82 schools — that’s up from just eight since the program started and represents 98 percent of every K to 8th grade school in the city. And the program has made a real difference in travel habits. PBOT reports that the percentage of walking and biking trips to Portland schools has increased from 31 to 42 percent since 2005.

Tomorrow morning, Graff and other PBOT officials will join community leaders and Commissioner Steve Novick for a special event at Maplewood Elementary School in southwest Portland. The City expects 150 students to walk and bike to Maplewood tomorrow. That’s quite an accomplishment, says Graff: “Maplewood has been a real leader in southwest in showing that walking and biking is possible there. Families lead walking school buses (and the occasional bike train) every month.”

At tomorrow’s event, Commissioner Novick plans to say that, biking and walking to school is important because, “When we get our young people walking and biking, we start them on a path that results in healthier lives, a healthier city, a city with less congestion, cleaner air, and lower health care costs.”

In addition to helping school communities build safer streets and make good travel choices, the City’s Safe Routes program is also continuing their data collection efforts. Back in March we shared how PBOT was taking part in a pilot program to automatically count how many kids bike to school. This year, Graff says PBOT is using a grant from the Oregon Department of Transportation to begin gathering data on how middle school students with a parent survey this spring. This will mark PBOT’s first ever expansion of the program into middle school.

Events like Walk + Bike to School day can be excellent catalysts for promoting healthy transportation cultures at our schools. Graff says Astor Elementary in North Portland has been one such bright spot. Tomorrow they’ll have a bike train leading to school, a raffle of three complete bikes and other prizes, and will have a bike obstacle course for students to try.

Is your kids’ school taking part? Check the full list of participants at WalkNBike.org.

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Founder of BikePortland (in 2005). Father of three. North Portlander. Basketball lover. Car owner and driver. If you have questions or feedback about this site or my work, feel free to contact me at @jonathan_maus on Twitter, via email at maus.jonathan@gmail.com, or phone/text at 503-706-8804. Also, if you read and appreciate this site, please become a supporter.

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Kiel Johnson / Go By Bike
Kiel Johnson
10 years ago

hey, thats my bike!

drew
drew
10 years ago

Good to see this! Biking to school is what we did in grade school in the 1960s in Pasadena, CA. There was a huge area for bike parking which was almost full most days. I would say that a majority of us biked or walked to school. I went back to my 1st-8th grade school last year and found all the bike racks gone. There was not a single bike, or place to park one. Children today are taught that it’s too dangerous to ride bikes around town, which makes taking up biking when they become an adult much less likely.

jthiessen9
jthiessen9
10 years ago

My sad bike and walk to school day experience was that both my kids were excited to do this. But we got out to the garage only to find my daughters bike had been STOLEN! She was in tears. But a neighbor came to our aid and loaned a bike to us. Credit to my daughter (8 years old) who was flexible enough to use a bike that did not really fit her. But we made it happen and in the end, both kids were all smiles.

2nd bike to be stolen from my garage in less than a year. 1st time, shame on them, 2nd time…shame on me.

So it happens. And I suggest bikes be kept in the house/basement, or locked tightly in the garage.

GlowBoy
GlowBoy
10 years ago

Sorry to hear about your stolen bike. And still, shame on the thieves. It is an unfortunate reality that we have to lock them up even inside at home. My own experience with this, years ago, was when we accidentally left our garage open one night. My bike was locked up inside, but my wife’s unlocked bike disappeared.

My neighbor told me that the next night the thief came back for our barbeque, which was next to the garage. Fortunately, after the bike theft I had acted quickly and locked it up. So be on guard because the thief may have used their time in your garage to case your home for other valuables!