During a recent government meeting, Jeremy Spalding from the local school district presented an initiative aimed at enhancing safe routes to school for students in Moab. The program, which encourages children to walk, bike, or roll to school, is set to take place on the 8th of this month. Spalding emphasized the importance of community involvement, inviting parents, faculty, and local officials to participate in neighborhood observations to identify safety issues such as potholes and inadequate sidewalks.
The initiative is particularly crucial in Moab, where a major highway runs through the town, complicating school transportation logistics. Spalding noted that the school district is legally required to update its state route map annually, and this year, there is funding available for sidewalk improvements. He urged community members to join in the effort to assess the safety of routes used by students, highlighting the need for collaboration with public works and city engineering departments.
In addition to the observational component, the event will feature activities for students, including a chance to win prizes for reporting unsafe conditions they encounter on their way to school. Spalding pointed out specific intersections that pose risks, such as the crossing near Desert Oasis and the area across from Suwanee Park, which have been flagged as particularly hazardous.
The meeting underscored the ongoing challenges of maintaining safe routes for students, especially given that the only officially recognized safe route, the Mill Creek pathway, often becomes unusable due to flooding. Spalding's call to action aims to foster a proactive community approach to improving student safety and accessibility in Moab.