Sunday Star-Times

Children put best feet forward

- MARIKA HILL

Children overwhelmi­ngly prefer to walk or cycle to school rather than travel by car, according to a new study.

It is the first time researcher­s have asked children how they felt about the morning commute.

The AUT University survey revealed a staggering 96 per cent of children preferred active modes of travel, even though the majority go by car.

Many of the Auckland children surveyed said they liked socialisin­g, being outdoors, playing games and talking ‘‘Star Wars and Lego’’ on their way to school.

Mum Ruth Larsen said her children Grace, 6, and James Larsen, 5, loved seeing the pohutukawa trees in blossom, getting the occasional icecream and using umbrellas on rainy days on their walk to school.

The Larsens walk 15 minutes from their Northcote home to St Mary’s School in Auckland.

‘‘It would have been obscene if we drove because it’s so close,’’ Ruth Larsen said.

‘‘It’s made life easier. We don’t have to think about car seats and traffic.’’

The children bump into friends along the way so it’s a social trip, she said. Her family is in the minority. The proportion of primary aged children commuting by car almost doubled to 55 per cent in the past 25 years, according to the Ministry of Transport.

In February the Sunday Star-Times launched a Foot It campaign, promoting initiative­s to boost the number of children walking and cycling to school.

AUT study author Erica Hinckson said all schools should have active transport programmes to encourage people out of cars.

‘‘We ned to get our children active and make our cities childfrien­dly,’’ she said.

‘‘There are so many benefits to it. The kids want to be out there, not sitting in the car.’’

Increasing the number of children who walk and cycle would reduce congestion and make roads safer, Hinckson said.

She was frustrated that some schools did not have active travel programmes, such as the walking school bus, even though these measures were effective.

Auckland Transport’s Travelwise programme has been encouragin­g more children to walk to school and improving road safety since 2005.

Threequart­ers of all Auckland school-aged students now attend a Travelwise School.

The programme has reduced cycling and walking accidents around schools and removed 12,736 car trips from the morning peak hour.

These programmes are starting to have an effect on the urge to commute.

The proportion of primary aged children walking to school increased from 22 to 29 per cent between 2007 and 2014.

 ?? BEVAN READ / FAIRFAX NZ ?? Grace and James Larsen get to enjoy the outdoors – and the occasional icecream – instead of being stuck in a car.
BEVAN READ / FAIRFAX NZ Grace and James Larsen get to enjoy the outdoors – and the occasional icecream – instead of being stuck in a car.
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