This infographic highlights the health and community benefits of Safe Routes to School.
This brief provides an overview of the unique considerations in implementing Safe Routes to School in tribal communities.
Information from a workshop held in Vancouver, WA, on January 6, 2017.
This brief profiles four MPOs, each of which used a thoughtful and innovative approach to TAP that was ultimately beneficial to the safety of children and families on the trip to and from school.
This infographic features evidence on the barriers of walking and biking to school and the positive impacts of SRTS programs on physical activity levels and safety. Findings presented in this infographic come from a related ALR research review.
This fact sheet is a companion to Taking Back the Streets and Sidewalks: How Safe Routes to School and Community Safety Initiatives Can Overcome Violence and Crime.
In over 17,000 schools around the country, these programs are making it easier and safer for students to be healthy by walking or bicycling to school.
The rate of childhood obesity has increased four-fold over the past forty years, leading to serious health risks for children.
This fact sheet provides an overview of how Safe Routes to School programs can help improve health and phsyical activity in Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities.
As the fastest-growing racial group in the U.S., Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders have a key stake in the transformation of American streets.
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