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Headteacher slams parents who knocked cyclist off bike

Parents insisting on driving into the school against the rules 'endangering children'...

A headmistress has slammed parents who she says caused a cyclist to be knocked off his bike at the school gates.

Andrea Letcher, head teacher at St Monica’s RC High School in Bury Old Road, Prestwich, wrote to parents in the school newsletter, saying that parents were already aware that they were not to drive into the school.

But ignoring the rules, one parent knocked over a cyclist while turning, according to the Prestwich and Whitefield Guide.

Mrs Letcher wrote: “Could we remind all parents who drop off or collect children at the start or end of the school day not to drive into the school entrance gates?

“Our worst fears have been realised because some parents refuse to stay clear of the car park.

“One such parent, on turning their car in the car-park entrance, knocked a cyclist off his bicycle.

“If parents persist on coming onto the car park, staff will take registration numbers and report these to the police.

“It is bad enough a cyclist was hit by a car, it could so easily have been a child.”

Just this summer we reported how safe cycling and walking routes to schools are key to tackling childhood inactivity, according to sustainable transport charity Sustrans’ new chief executive.

Xavier Brice, who took over the role from Malcolm Shepherd in January, said there need to be linked routes from existing cycle networks to primary and secondary school gates and homes so more children can cycle or walk to school.

Recent research from Sustrans shows children spend almost half the amount of time playing that their parents did, and Brice says the rest of the country needs to follow London’s lead in creating a safe cycling network.

Brice, who joined Sustrans from Transport from London (TfL), said: “London has made fantastic progress in building Cycle Superhighways and development of the Quietways network is helping more people to feel confident to get on their bikes and cycle to school or work. The more these routes link up to schools and communities, the more likely children and their parents will choose to leave their cars at home and walk or cycle.

“Parents today are the first generation of computer gamers, yet our research shows that children play outside almost half as much as their parents did and more time playing on computer games or mobile devices. We know that inactive children are much more likely to be inactive as adults and this puts them much more at risk of developing chronic health problems such as obesity, diabetes and heart disease in later life.”

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12 comments

Avatar
Shades | 8 years ago
2 likes

On the bike or in the car, the school run drivers are a scary bunch.  Usually up against the clock, they usually drive with a single-mindedness that neglects all other road users.  I had 2 near misses in less than a minute outside one school.  It's the aggressive looking parent and primped kids, all with their head stuffed into 'devices', that gets me; at that age I was cycling to school!

Avatar
grumpyoldcyclist | 8 years ago
3 likes

I challenged one bloke not so long ago who drove through the 20 mph zone using his hand held mobile then turned into the school car park to pick up his kids, still on his phone. He got out the car and immediately started 'I was nowhere near you mate', I said, 'Could I just point out you were on your phone'. He walked away no

Avatar
Yorkshire wallet | 8 years ago
2 likes

Most of the parents at my lads school seem to forget about child safety once they've dropped theirs off. 

Avatar
wycombewheeler replied to Yorkshire wallet | 8 years ago
3 likes
Yorkshire wallet wrote:

Most of the parents at my lads school seem to forget about child safety once they've dropped theirs off. 

Only an issue until their child gets into their 2 tonne safety box in wheels. Protecting their child but easing the risk to all others.

Avatar
Leviathan | 8 years ago
1 like

We need all the children we can raise to fight the Drone Wars of  2027. Ready your tennis racquets

Avatar
A V Lowe | 8 years ago
2 likes

For the past 30 years - following through from the first Sustrans Safe Routes to schools work in 1983, Lothian and now Edinburgh Council bans mpotor vehicekl movements in school grounds, and protects chil;dren's movements public road space outside the school. Edinburgh now has an over-subscribed scheme to ban car movements on the roads outside several primary schools, clearly this measure is needed elsewhere.

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tritecommentbot | 8 years ago
6 likes

Why wasn't the incident reported to the police?

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Dnnnnnn replied to tritecommentbot | 8 years ago
1 like

unconstituted wrote:

Why wasn't the incident reported to the police?

It was only a cyclist - luckily. It could so easily have been a child! kiss

Avatar
bendertherobot | 8 years ago
5 likes

What's the value scale? Cyclist-child on bike-child pedestrian?

Avatar
bobbinogs replied to bendertherobot | 8 years ago
10 likes

bendertherobot wrote:

What's the value scale? Cyclist-child on bike-child pedestrian?

 

Yes, thank god it was only a cyclist injured, it could have been far worse...

Avatar
multimodal replied to bobbinogs | 8 years ago
5 likes

Bobbinogs wrote:

bendertherobot wrote:

What's the value scale? Cyclist-child on bike-child pedestrian?

 

Yes, thank god it was only a cyclist injured, it could have been far worse...

 

I'd give the Head the benefit of the doubt. Probably mentioning kids because some parents might pay attention if it's their children in danger.

Avatar
vonhelmet replied to bobbinogs | 8 years ago
0 likes

Bobbinogs wrote:

bendertherobot wrote:

What's the value scale? Cyclist-child on bike-child pedestrian?

 

Yes, thank god it was only a cyclist injured, it could have been far worse...

Get over yourselves. It's child vs adult, not child vs cyclist. It's just badly phrased, is all.

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