A snow job on why kids don’t walk to school
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Added to the growing list of things that kids can no longer do is
the news that American children are walking or bicycling to school in
far fewer numbers. This, in turn, has contributed to the increase in
childhood obesity.
The report issued by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention listed four main reasons why kids aren’t walking or biking
to school: traffic, weather, crime and distance.
But my not-so-scientific research has revealed another reason, one
that trumps all the excuses offered by the CDC. First, however, let’s
tackle CDC’s list as it pertains to our local kids and schools.
Traffic: Anyone who has tried to drive from one end of town to the
other knows that parents should not use traffic as an excuse to drive
their kids to school. This area has more signals and stop signs than
Heinz has pickles. Not only do we have plenty of lights and signals
to make traffic safe, many of our schools have crossing guards at
intersections controlled by signals. Go figure.
Weather: Not an issue in these parts. The worst weather most of us
have seen in Mesa-Newport was El Nino a few years ago, and even that
winter was just a little splash. Kids today have it easy, unlike our
parents who had to walk 10 miles to school in the snow, uphill each
way, even in the summer.
Crime: I’m not sure what the CDC meant by this one. Did they find
that parents were afraid their kids would be victim of a crime or
commit one? I’ve read enough news reports to know that parents are
unnecessarily frightened of their kids being snatched off the street
by a total stranger but not one that stated that kids who walk or
bike to school become third-strikers by the time they’re 14. Either
way, fear of crime is no reason to drive kids to school.
Distance: The Mesa-Newport area is chock full of schools. For most
kids, distance is not an issue, although I will make one concession.
The parents of many kids on the Westside of Costa Mesa need to plan a
week ahead and pack survival gear to get their kids over to TeWinkle
Middle School on time.
These four reasons are not even close to the real reason that kids
are not walking or biking to school much anymore.
The real reason -- supported by my major poll of three other
parents -- is that no one has time to get them ready to walk to
school in the morning. Getting kids of on a bike or by foot requires
some planning and a lot more time than simply tossing them and their
100-pound backpacks in the minivan.
Cay and I both get up about 6 a.m. During that time, we are
getting ourselves ready to leave the house, as well as preparing two
meals -- breakfast and lunch -- for our two kids. Many times, there
are baths to take and clothes to wash or iron. As 6 a.m. quickly
becomes 7 a.m., we’ve got one eye on the clock, barking out orders
like drill sergeants and struggling to keep ahead.
This is a race against time that most parents deal with five days
a week. Oh yes, I know that there are some parents out there who fix
lunches at night and lay out the next day’s school clothes before
they go to bed, but those people are also the ones who alphabetize
their spices and vacuum under the sofa once a week. They don’t count.
I’m referring to Mr. and Mrs. (usually Mrs.) Smith, Jones or
Johnson, the people who do most of the living and dying around here,
the ones who trust their meager 401(k) to other people only to have
those in charge take them for a ride. These people pay their taxes,
play by the rules and go about their business quietly.
They go to bed at midnight not because they’re watching Jay Leno
or surfing the Internet but because the kids are finally in bed and
sleeping by 10 p.m. and the next two hours is the only time they can
do a couple of loads of laundry or replace the washer in the leaky
faucet.
These parents are the ones trying to juggle five balls at one
time, and they have simply run out of the minutes they need to get
their kids ready to walk or bike to school. They are overloaded,
sleep-deprived and cranky.
At that point, something had to give and they found that they can
steal an extra 15 minutes if they drive their kids to school on their
way to wherever it is they have to go.
The next time the CDC or any other agency wants to determine the
cause of something, they should stop polling and start looking. In
this case, all they had to do was visit any local school and notice
that about 80% of the students arrive in the last 10 minutes before
the bell.
That’s no way to rush off a kid to school, but I suppose it beats
having to walk 10 miles in the snow uphill both ways.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
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