Active transport relates to physical activity undertaken as a means of

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INTEGRATION OF ACTIVE
TRANSPORT AND ROAD SAFETY
FOR CHILDREN
Road Safety Education Workshop
Friday 19 October 2007
Overview
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Physical Activity Unit & ‘Go for your life’ Overview
Policy Context
Active Transport for Children – current landscape
Active Transport and Road Safety
Challenges
Physical Activity Unit
Sport & Recreation Victoria
• ‘Go for your life’ Walk Together Grants
• ‘Go for your life’ Physical Activity Grants
• ‘Go for your life’ Active Connections
Program
• Flagship Projects
‘Go for your life’ Overview
• Cross-governmental funding
initiatives designed to actively
increase physical activity
participation, healthy eating &
community engagement
• Promotion through active public
campaign
DPCD
DHS
DSE
DEECD
DPC
‘Go for your life’ Strategy Plan
Longer term vision
Victoria will be a world leader in the development of healthy and active
communities.
Medium term goal
To improve the health and wellbeing of Victorian through healthy eating
and increased participation in physical activity.
Objectives
• Healthy Eating
• Physical Activity
• Structural changes to support healthy eating and physical activity
Policy Context
• ‘Go for your life’ 2006-10 Strategy Plan
– Physical activity & obesity
– Structural supportive changes (infrastructure,
environment)
– Commitment to regular physical activity for children
• A State of Walking (DPCD)
– Walking for transport
– Safe and accessible transport system –
Connected, Comfortable, Convenient, Convivial,
Conspicuous?
Policy Context
• Meeting Our Transport Challenges (DOI)
– Biggest commitment to bicycle and pedestrian
paths in the state’s history
– Extending & improving walking options by
increasing number of pedestrian signals, refuge
islands, fencing etc.
– Improving cycling routes in regional Victoria
• Arrive Alive! - Vicroads
– 5-year road safety strategy
– Focus on speed limits/zones
– Education resources & pedestrian training for
children
Policy Context
• Growing Victoria Together (GVT)
– Increase in walking/cycling will contribute to GVT
goals of community participation, lowering
greenhouse emissions, decreasing motorised trips
and improving the health and quality of life for all
Victorians
• Victorian Greenhouse Strategy (DSE)
– A need for change in travel behaviour
– Reduced dependency on car
– Increase in non-motorised modes of transport
What is Active Transport?
“Active transport relates to physical activity undertaken
as a means of transport. It includes travel by foot,
bicycle and other non-motorised vehicles. Use of public
transport is also included in the definition as it often
involves some walking or cycling to pick-up and from
drop-off points. Active transport does not include
walking, cycling or other physical activity that is
undertaken for recreation.”
Be Active Australia: A Framework for Health Sector Action for Physical Activity
2005-2010
Active Transport
• Active Transport: Walking or cycling to and from a
destination
• An effective way of building the “30 minutes a day” of
physical activity into daily routine
• Changing the environment (schools, routes) to make
it more conductive for children to walk/ride to school –
and changing the behaviours of children, parents &
teachers
Active Transport – environmental benefits
• If 60 per cent of children were walking or cycling to school
annually, Victorian children would have walked 45 million
kilometres – that’s 60 trips to the moon and back!
• Based on these figures, there would be a reduction of 8,500
Tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions in Victoria – that’s equivalent
to taking almost 2,000 cars off the road for an entire year. Over
time the tool will also measure the economic benefits of reductions
in traffic congestion and pollution and increased road safety
benefits.
VicHealth
‘Go for your life’ Ride2School Program
• To increase the number of students walking or riding to
school
• 530 schools have joined (21% of all Victorian schools)
• Breaks down barriers to riding and walking to school
through BikeEd, quiet neighbourhood routes etc.
• Advocacy role
• Infrastructure – bike sheds
• www.ride2school.com.au
‘Go for your life’ Ride2School Program
Safety Elements
• BikeEd
• Quiet Neighbourhood Routes
• Linking schools with police
• Curriculum materials
VicHealth Walking School Bus
• A VicHealth initiative to give
communities an effective and easy way
to get children walking to school
• 60 Victorian local councils have
implemented WSB
• 6584 children walked to school in May
2007 as a result of the WSB Program
• Infrastructure & advocacy
Other Programs
• TravelSmart Schools – Department of
Infrastructure
Aims to reduce people’s dependency on cars and persuade them to
choose sustainable travel alternatives, i.e. public transport, walking
and cycling – School Travel Planning
• Arrive Alive – Kids on the Move
Victoria’s new traffic safety education resource for primary schools,
targeting a minimum level of traffic safety education for Prep-Year 2
students and transitional Years 6-7 students.
Other Programs
• Kids Go for your life – Stride & Ride
KGFYL is a statewide initiative to create healthier Victorian
children through healthy eating & physical activity. Stride &
Ride aims to increase active transport for primary school
children – implemented Jan-June 2008
Integration of Programs
Ride2School
Arrive Alive!
TravelSmart
Pedal Pods
Walking School Bus
BikeEd
Green Light Project
A Local Snapshot – Latrobe City Council
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2 Ride2School schools
4 Walking School Bus schools
6 schools in Walk to School Challenge
6 schools in Kids GFYL
26 schools have BikeEd
1 TravelSmart school
Integration of Walking and Cycling
• DPCD-led initiative to integrate Walking & Cycling agencies
and priorities to develop a cooperative approach to Walking &
Cycling in Victoria
• A key avenue to addressing safety risks – combining walking
& cycling strategies enables safety risks to be addressed
• Wide range of stakeholders
• Facilitator will be brought in to develop a long-term integrated
approach and round table series
Active Transport and Road Safety
International experience indicates that an increase
in the levels of cycling does not automatically
translate into an increase in crash rates. In fact, in
many areas, more people riding bikes has
contributed to greater awareness amongst other
road users and reduced crash rates”
Queensland Cycle Strategy 2003
Children Bicyclists – some statistics
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< 1 death per annum on average
753 hospital admissions
2,407 Emergency Department presentations
6% of all child injuries
Preventing Unintentional injury in Victorian children aged 0-14 years: a call to action
Monash University 2007
Preventive Measures & Recommendations
• Safety training courses
• Support evidence-based training programs to teach
bicycling skills and safe cycling
• Provide safe and accessible bike routes
• Promote measures to increase the visibility of child
cyclists
• Consider road safety regulations that set a lower
age limit for on-road bicycle riding
Challenges
Parents
• Parents allowing their children to walk/ride
to school
• Deakin Uni survey (Ride2School) – 28% of
parents cited safety as a major reason they
drove their children to school
Challenges
Focus of Schools
• Approach schools with a suite of programs
rather than multiple approaches from
independent programs = streamlined
programs
Challenges
Conflicting Agendas
• Large number of agencies involved in
Walking & Cycling with individualised
agendas
• Challenge is to coordinate these agendas
and emerge with an integrated approach
Challenges
Infrastructure
• Do we have adequate infrastructure to cope
with the increase of walkers and cyclists?
• The Greenlight Project – redirecting
pedestrian priority at signalised crossings
The Way Forward …
• Integration of Walking and Cycling
• Funding programs
• Focus on the benefits of active transport
and creating supportive environments
• Closer collaboration between agencies
Brent Phillips
Senior Project Officer – Physical Activity
Sport and Recreation Victoria
Department of Planning and Community
Development
brent.phillips@dpcd.vic.gov.au
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