Walk, Bike, or Roll to School this May! 🍎 📚 🚲

Photograph of two children and an adult woman riding their bikes on a street with a roundabout.
A bike train en route to school on The Coral St. Neighborway

Register your local event to create national impact

Next month (May!) is National Bike Month and with it tons of opportunities to celebrate active transportation in your school community. Forms of active transportation like walking, biking, and rolling give students an opportunity to be physically active, enjoy the outdoors, make friendships, and develop a sense of independence and ownership of their neighborhoods. Nationally, Bike and Roll to School Day will be celebrated on Wednesday, May 8th this year with events across the country to get young people out of cars and buses and into the fresh air.

Don’t worry if that date isn’t the best for your school, you can participate any time throughout the month of May. Register your own event to encourage walking, biking, or rolling to school in your community:

Photography of a group of children and  adults biking down a neighborway.
A bike train or walking school bus makes getting to school fun

City of Pittsburgh’s Walk & Roll to School Day

Locally, the City of Pittsburgh Department of Mobility and Infrastructure Safe Routes to School program will be celebrating Walk & Roll to School Day also on Wednesday, May 8th. Register your school and encourage walking, biking, or rolling to campus for a chance to win the coveted Golden Sneaker Award for the most participants! 

Get inspired

Need ideas on ways to encourage or celebrate active transportation to your school? We recommend hosting a Bike Train or Walking School bus led by parents, school staff, and volunteers in your community! Check out our informative blog with tips to start your own and you can always reach out to education@bikepgh.org for more advice! 

This blog is made possible thanks to the support we receive from BikePGH members and donors. Join us!


Getting to school shouldn’t be an uphill battle

Lastly, as we’ve written before, we’d be remiss not to mention that inequitable access to safe streets for walking, biking, and rolling can be a barrier to active transportation for the most vulnerable in our community. Many neighborhoods with high proportions of walkers may lack safe and wheelchair-accessible sidewalks, safe bike infrastructure, traffic-calmed streets, crossing guards, or all of the above. Fortunately, the school community can be a real force for change, even more so when working alongside neighborhood bike-pedestrian committees to demand safer streets for all especially our children.

Photograph of several students walking to West View Elementary School at the cross walk while crossing guard assists them.

Take Action

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