I have confirmed with Principals that Orchard Ridge Elementary and Toki
Middle School have implemented the policy without modification and I
informed the pertinent neighborhood list serves.  Hopefully, we shall see
more bikes at school.

 

Larry D Nelson

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Robbie Webber
Sent: Thursday, September 26, 2013 12:16 PM
To: Sonia Dubielzig
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Bikies] Updated MMSD policy

 

Thanks, Sonia!

 

I know this has been discussed for many years. here on the list, at Bike
Fed, and even at BOE meetings - although the current BOE may not remember or
may not have been in office. 

 

It was always a silly policy and not in line with trends to encourage more
physical activity, less driving to school, and active transportation in
general. 

 

Now, maybe we can work on the sorry state of bike racks, especially at high
schools. As an alder attending meetings at West High, in my district, I once
asked staff why the school - in a very bike-friendly neighborhood just
blocks from the SW Path - had such terrible racks. I was told, "We don't
really want to encourage kids to ride to school." Why? Because they were
afraid the kids would get hurt or the bikes would get stolen or vandalized. 

 

These kids are or will be driving soon!!! And they are worried about them
getting hurt riding their bikes? (At the same time, students would show up
at the neighborhood association meetings and ask for more lax parking in the
neighborhood, because they were getting parking tickets. Not much sympathy
from the neighborhood association or the alder.)




Robbie Webber
Transportation Policy Analyst
State Smart Transportation Initiative
 <http://www.ssti.us> www.ssti.us
608-263-9984 (o)

608-225-0002 (c)

[email protected]

 

On Thu, Sep 26, 2013 at 11:09 AM, Sonia Dubielzig
<[email protected]> wrote:

I guess I should toot my own horn here.

Previously, the policy stated:

A pupil under the age of ten shall not ride a bicycle to school. 

a.    The PRINCIPAL may make exception upon written request of a parent. 

b.    The PRINCIPAL may forbid bicycles on school grounds. 





I started in my position at MMSD in August 2012, and changing this policy
was one of the first things I started working on.

Surveys and conversations with parents and Principals at the school level
showed that there was widespread awareness of the policy, and most thought
it should be changed.  At the District level, most administrators were
unaware of the policy and/or not sure why it was there in the first place.
Most other school districts in Dane County don't have any language on
student bicycle use in their board policies at all.

I would have preferred eliminating the policy altogether from MMSD's
policies, but some of the administrators wanted Principals to have a policy
they could enforce if they saw very young children riding who were obviously
not ready to ride by themselves. 

The process to change it was very slow, but at no point did I really
experience any resistance to changing it. In fact, when the Board of
Education operations committee approved the change (unanimously and without
discussion), they told me, "Thank you for what you are doing!" This blew my
supervisor's mind, because she was not used to getting that warm reception
from the BOE herself.  

Sonia


-- 

Safe Routes to School Coordinator
Madison Metropolitan School District
608-663-5454
[email protected]
https://tnlweb.madison.k12.wi.us/saferoutes


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