Around £6m is set to be spent on creating new walking and cycling routes for pupils in Barnsley. They will be for a number of new secondary schools which are being built over the next four years, reports The Yorkshire Post.
The routes, which would be well-lit, clearly signposted and safe for children to use, are being designed to persuade more parents to ditch the car run and travel to school by greener means, and they would be created at 11 new schools being developed under Barnsley's £1bn Building Schools for the Future (BSF) scheme.
BSF is the country's biggest-ever school buildings investment programme and the aim is to rebuild or renew nearly every secondary school in England. It brings together significant investment in buildings and in ICT over the coming years to support the Government's educational reform agenda.
Over the next four years, 13 secondary schools will be replaced with nine Advanced Learning Centres (ALCs) and two special schools will either be rebuilt or refurbished. The first of Barnsley's new ALCs are set to open in 2011 and the rest will open in 2012 or 2013.
In total, just under £6m will be spent on creating the new routes and a further £176,000 will be spent on automatic counters to gauge how many people are using them to monitor the success of the scheme.
A report is set to go before a Barnsley Council cabinet meeting next Wednesday, and with councillors set to agree to go ahead with the scheme, work on the new routes would need to begin soon to ensure that they are completed by the time the new schools open.
That's not true of identifiable public spending. For balance, you'd have to note the much greater contribution to the Exchequer made by London too ...
Driving is a right embedded in the Maggie Carter (sic)...
I will confess to not having watched the programme yet but I don't think it helps that this article keeps referring to some of these bikes as ...
Perhaps the batteries on his e-clubs and e-caddy ran out while on the course, and he had to drag an 80kg trolley with him?
Once again vehicles take priority. Hardly surprised these days and only goes on to highlight how little the council's and gvt genuinely care for...
I think it will help - the second fixing point is a sleeve, and the bracket then clamps to it. This means the bracket can still define itself...
They can be remarkably honest about the consequences of using their vehicles though https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8GHiY6jmR8
There appears to be a bollard at a 45º angle mostly obscured by the bins - presumably they were able to remove that and then drive through the gap.
Have to say as a long time and multiple (7 bikes) user of Camapg - I have about half the fleet on genuine rivetted Campag chains and half on SRAM...
There is also the BBC's own complaints process, which is utterly useless, but it might be good to submit a complaint there to show Ofcom that you...