In 2005, George W. Bush signed into law the “Safe Routes to School” (SR2S) program and the Congress granted it $612 million over a period of five years to implement its objectives and was recently renewed to receive 2009’s funding of $183 million dollar for 2010. The objectives of SR2S are to improve safety and encourage more children, including children with disabilities, to safely walk and bicycle to school.
http://www.saferoutesinfo.org/
In mid-June Eric Cantor’s (R- Virginia, House Minority Whip) Youcut project (a project designed to defeat the permissive culture of runaway spending in Congress by having people vote on which of five federal programs to cut spending on) chose the SR2S program as one of the five. Once the people decide which one to cut, the minority party tries to bring it to the floor of the house for a vote http://republicanwhip.house.gov/Youcut/
It did not ‘win’, but it brought out a spirited defense of the SR2S project by a host of varied groups across the web. I couldn’t find any site that openly advocated abolishing this federal program. After all, it’s for the safety of our kids on their way to and from school, and to see that they don’t get more obese from inactivity…
The Youcut blurb said the federal SR2S program is duplicative of what has been traditionally local responsibilities, and has a bit of added administrative and bureaucratic costs. Sounds logical; filtering money from the feds to the states and then to local governments would put less cents on the dollar to the problems.
I checked out some of the projects the SR2S have in Michigan coming up and this is some of what I found (http://www.michigan.gov/som/0,1607,7-192--184423--,00.html):
Bay County
Christa McAuliffe Middle School will collaborate with the Bangor Charter Township School District and the Bay County Road Commission. The funding will be used to install new sidewalks on Kiesel and Two Mile roads to connect local subdivisions with existing sidewalks, pedestrian signals on Euclid Avenue, LED pedestrian signs on school property, and a bike rack at the school, and to provide educational materials to encourage biking and walking. The project budget is $389,312.
Eaton County
Winans Elementary School, one of Michigan's pilot schools, will collaborate with the Waverly School District and the Eaton County Road Commission to construct sidewalks on Snow Road and Chanticleer Trail that will improve connections between the school property and existing sidewalks. The funding also will create a refuge island in the crosswalk at Snow Road, add bike racks and fencing, and provide educational and encouragement items such as pedometers, pamphlets, and safety equipment for crossing guards. The project budget is $456,394.
Installing some sidewalks, pedestrian signals, bike racks, providing fencing, pamphlets, pedometers and safety equipment. All for under $850,000. Could be a bargain, I guess.
Elementary and Middle Schools also have the option to apply for mini-grants. The local Ludington Planning Commission recently applied and got these $1000 grants for Foster, Lakeview and P.M. According to Commissioner (and Dog Park Committee spokesman) Joe Moloney on 3-2-2010: “Most of the issues that will be looked at will not involve any money spent. Children will be taught to walk on certain sidewalks and certain streets during the winter and avoiding congested areas.” At $3000, all this could be a bargain too, I guess.
I truly have a dilemma. On the one hand, I agree with the goals and objectives of SR2S and believe more money should be spent to accommodate kids to walk or bicycle safely to school and back. On the other hand, I feel the federal SR2S program is very inefficient, and may actually draw away local money from being put towards their cause, as communities try to show why they need these grants.
How about you—SR2S: of great use or a great waste?
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