Entries tagged: Oklahoma

Tulsa Hub Teaches Students Bike Riding is Safe and Fun

Blog contributed by Alliance intern Adam Levine

Students in Tulsa, Oklahoma, are learning that biking and walking are fun, easy ways to get to school.

Thanks to a recent Safe Routes to School grant, Tulsa Hub is teaching bike-skills workshops in five elementary schools throughout the city. Over the course of the 6-week class, students learn safe cycling skills such as helmet fitting, tire repair, signaling, and riding techniques. Taught by League Cycling Instructors, these classes leave the students with a brand new bicycle, helmet, and lock to get them on their way. Through such education, Tulsa Hub hopes to see more students walking and riding to school.

Watch the video below to learn more from Tulsa Hub advocate Ren Barger, and see the program in action.

 

Posted by Carolyn S on August 11, 2010
Tags: tulsa hub, safe routes to school, oklahoma, bicycle education
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Complete Streets Movement Adds a Flurry of New Policies

imageThe complete streets movement kicked off summer in sizzling fashion, with a handful of policies passing in places you might not imagine.

In recent weeks, measures to make roadways safe and accessible for all users, from cyclists to pedestrians to transit riders, won approval all over the map. A number of those victories are outlined in the latest newsletter from the National Complete Streets Coalition this week.

-  In Pascagoula, Mississippi, the city council passed a resolution on May 18 that “calls for the inclusion of bicycle and pedestrian ways in new construction and reconstruction projects undertaken by the city.” The resolution made Pascagoula the third city in the state to adopt complete streets language.

- The hard work of Alliance member Active Transportation Alliance paid off when the Northwestern Indiana Regional Planning Commission became the third, and largest, metropolitan planning organization in the state to adopt a complete streets policy on May 20.

- Also spurred by local advocates, Edmonton captured the distinction of being the first city in the state of Oklahoma to officially embrace complete streets. On May 24, the city council unanimously approved a resolution to provide accommodation for all users on the city’s roadways in a “balanced, responsible, and equitable way.”

- On May 25, the planning commission in Midland, Michigan, unanimously approved a complete streets policy that specifically calls for attention to safe, accessible intersection design and will apply to any new or reconstructed streets.

- In the Show-Me State, residents of St. Louis will be seeing better access for cyclists and pedestrians after the city council passed a complete streets policy on June 11. Chalk that up to the determined efforts of Trailnet, a group of advocates who pressed for the measure for several years.

- Just last week, Colorado Governor Bill Ritter signed a bill that added complete streets language to state statute. The Colorado Department of Transportation already had an internal policy of “accommodating bicycle and pedestrian use of the highways in a safe and reliable manner for all highway users.” But the new measure puts that policy into law.

- And finally, a group of advocates in Alaska kicked off a new complete streets campaign in the city of Spenard by drumming up more than 100 supporters on Facebook in advance of their first meeting with city officials last week.

For more information about the movement, visit the National Complete Streets Coalition.