Skip to Content
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Streetsblog Los Angeles home
Log In
Streetsblog.net

Safe Routes to School Needs Funding in Pennsylvania

Today we bring you a call for action from Pennsylvania network member Bike PGH, which is asking Pennsylvania Gov. Edward Rendell to release funds for the state's Safe Routes to Schools program:

1627979622_0b4f1a5309_m.jpgPhoto by pawpaw67 via Flickr.

[One] measure of bike and pedestrian friendliness is the level to which Safe Routes to Schools are funded. Well, we have bad news… PA ranks 49th in the nation on Safe Routes to School spending.

If
you look at the Safe Routes to School programs map below you’ll notice
an enormous hole where PA is filled with only a handful of orange dots.
This is shameful.

Pennsylvania has received $21 million
over five years (FY05 – 09) for the federal Safe Routes to School
program. So far it has only released $2 million of that money to date.
Of this $2 million only $55,000 has actually made its way into our
communities. This leaves an overwhelming majority of that $21 million
collecting dust that is earmarked for making our streets safer so kids
can walk and ride bikes
to school. We want Governor Rendell to release this money for its
intended use—to make our communities safer for kids to walk and bike to
school.

Safe
Routes to Schools, a national program that "assists communities in
enabling and encouraging children to safely walk and bike to school" is
one of the most promising avenues out there for changing attitudes
toward walking and cycling at the generational level. Gov. Rendell is a
traditional ally of sustainable transportation advocates, so
-- presumably -- he'll be glad to hear from his constituents on this
issue. If you're one of them, you can reach the governor's office at
(717) 787-2500.

In a related item from the network, The Overhead Wire
picks up a New York Times story about a "piedibus," or "foot-bus," in a
small Italian town -- an organized group of students, led by adults,
that walks safely to and from school each day. Kaid Benfield on NRDC Switchboard
looks at a recent slideshow on TIME magazine's website about shuttered
big-box stores, and the accompanying article about "recycling
suburbia." And The Bus Bench delivers another tough-minded analysis of the way class differences play out on the buses of Los Angeles.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog Los Angeles

Thursday’s Headlines

ICE, River path, Melanie Winter, Westlake, Pasadena, LAX, Culver City, car-nage, rain, and more

November 20, 2025

Pomona North Metro Station to get Protected Bike Connection

The two-way cycle track will run a little under two miles, and also link with bike facilities in Claremont.

November 19, 2025

Wednesday’s Headlines

ICE, Vermont Ave. rail, 710 Freeway stub, LAX, Long Beach, SB79, Studio City, Boyle Hts, car-nage, rain, and more

November 19, 2025

L.A. City Fiscal Year 24-25 Bikeway Mileage Buoyed by Completed Paths

This year L.A. City added 35.6 lane-miles of new or improved bike facilities - about half of that was new bike/walk paths

November 18, 2025

Tuesday’s Headlines

ICE, ESFV rail, TAP-to-Exit, ULA, L.A. River, Glendale, rain, OC Streetcar, car-nage, and more

November 18, 2025

This Week In Livable Streets

The War on Cars, Burbank-Chandler bike path, Long Beach backbone bikeway, Metro meetings, CicLAvia Things get Stranger, and more.

November 17, 2025
See all posts