Archive for the ‘Major Taylor Project’ Category

2013 to be a big year for walk and bike to school programs

Tuesday, January 15th, 2013 by

Using money from the Bridging the Gap Levy, the Seattle Department of Transportation will fund 28 mini grant projects this year to help get kids walking and biking. This is the biggest year ever in terms of the number of schools participating and the amount of funding dispersed, according to Walk. Bike. Schools, as SDOT will disperse $27,700 among various projects and events that range from encouragement programs to smaller infrastructure improvements.

Among the projects funded are some of our own programs.

We'll be hosting two workshops on starting your own bike trains.

In 2013, the Cascade Bicycle Club Education Foundation will hold two workshops entitled “Bike Training – How to Run and Ride Your Bike Train” to help parents and children organize their own bike trains on the road.

We will organize these workshops at community locations in the north and south end of Seattle and they will be open to the public. Each workshop will include a short lecture for parents in bike train organization and safe route choices, a supervised bike rodeo for children, a skill-building course for parents and a short ride on neighborhood streets.

Meanwhile, Denny International Middle School in West Seattle will be using the funding to establish a new program that uses creative incentives to support and encourage more Denny students to choose alternative ways to school. The grant funding will pay  for signage around the school grounds to make a designated route, along with promotional materials and prizes  to reward regular ridership. Denny also has an opportunity to collaborate with the co-located Chief Sealth International High School and its Major Taylor program.

Another funding recipient, Loyal Heights Elementary in Ballard, is looking to establish an after-school urban cycling club for fourth and fifth graders.  The club will provide students with a strong foundation of bike safety education as well as applied bike skills. The program is still under development, and grant funding will be helpful to pay for professional instruction by Cascade Bicycle Club instructors as well as to purchase supplies.

It’s shaping to be a great year for bike and walk to school programs, and we look forward to seeing more kids discover the joy of bicycling!

Turn trash into treasure by donating your old bikes to Earn-a-Bike programs

Wednesday, January 9th, 2013 by

Need to find a new home for your old bike after receiving a new bike for Christmas? Are your children’s BMX bikes, long ago outgrown, still collecting dust in your garage? How about the commuter bike you haven’t touched since the early 2000s? Consider turning your trash into their treasure by donating your lightly-used bicycles to the Cascade Bicycle Club Education Foundation today.

A Major Taylor Project student poses proudly with her earned bike.

The number of kids and teens we engage is projected to grow again in 2013 – and along with it, the number of bikes necessary to run our camps, clubs and maintenance classes. By donating your old bikes, your gift will support our  Earn-a-Bike programs.

While the Major Taylor Project is perhaps best known for leading after school bike rides in south King County high schools, the fun does not end during the cold, dark winter months. The onset of colder, darker weather means the transition into the Major Taylor Project’s Earn-a-Bike program.

Students who do not have their own bikes and who have shown a dedication to the club in the past receive a bike that leaves something to be desired. Over the course of the five-week curriculum they learn to fix its quirks and at the end of the course, the bike is theirs to take home along with a helmet, a u-lock and front and rear lights.

In the 2012-13 school year Major Taylor will run a total of five Earn-a-Bike classes in four schools. All participating students will leave the program with the skills to diagnose and fix the most common problems that occur while riding including how to fix flats, adjust brakes, replace chains and tweak derailleurs.

So consider donating your old bike to the Major Taylor Earn-a-Bike today!

Drop off your gently-used bike at our office, 7400 Sand Point Way NE, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. For questions, please email our  Major Taylor Project Assistant at mtpa@cascadebicycleclub.org.

Imagine 200 miles of smiles

Sunday, December 30th, 2012 by

In July, some of the brightest smiles could be found on the faces of the many youth who proudly crossed the finish line of the 200-mile Seattle to Portland Classic.

Whether they’re riding for fun or riding to school, our youth programs teach safe riding to more than 25,000 kids annually through events in schools and around the community.

Every year, our Group Health Basics of Bicycling program reaches 14,000 elementary students in four school districts, teaching them the skills they need to ride safely for the rest of their lives.

Meanwhile, the Major Taylor Project brings together over 200 teenagers from underserved communities at four south King County high schools. Through a year-round youth development program, the project promotes cycling as a form of exercise, recreation, and transportation, while integrating the importance of, leadership, community activism, bicycle maintenance, safety, and working toward individual goals. For many, the program culminates in reaching the finish line of the STP.

Thousands more are reached through events such as Bike to School Month, summer camps,  and riding classes.

Your gift helps create daily exercise habits, teach safe biking skills, and foster the lifelong joy of bicycling. http://www.cascade.org/give

“Biking was one of the first things that made me feel empowered….when I was riding, I felt free.”

Monday, December 17th, 2012 by

Cyclist of the month: Roberto Ascalon
Age: 38
Wheels: Trek 520 with fenders, racks and a radio.
Occupation: Teaching artist/youth worker. Major Taylor facilitator and Bike Club leader at Chief Sealth High School.

New York City in the early 1990s with its subway and taxi culture and lack of bicycle infrastructure might seem like an odd place to fall in love with bicycling, but to a then high school-age Roberto Ascalon, none of that mattered. What mattered is that he could get away from his crowded home and go wherever he wanted to go.

“I really fell in love with biking when I was 15 and took a [bike] trip from New York City to Montreal with a group of friends. It was one of the best experiences of my life. But I rode all the time when I was in high school. It gave me independence and freedom and took me to places in New York City that I wouldn’t have gone had I not had a bike,” Ascalon said. “Biking was one of the first things that made me feel empowered. We often had eight people in a three-bedroom place. Biking allowed me to get away and ride to Central Park. When I was riding my bike, I felt free.”

Now, years later, Ascalon is trying to introduce that sense of empowerment, freedom and adventure to the youth he works with at Chief Sealth High School. As a Major Taylor facilitator and Bike Club leader, Ascalon is part of a year-round youth development program, produced by the Cascade Bicycle Club Education Foundation, that introduces youth from diverse communities to the recreation and health benefits of cycling while teaching them about the importance of working toward individual goals.

“I found that having a bike makes everything accessible,” Ascalon said. “It keeps me in touch with the essentials of feeling good physically, stopping, and making time for adventures every day. That sense of sensibility is especially accessible by bike. That is something I want to bring to youth, and youth of color in particular.”

Ascalon is a man who wears many hats. He’s a poet, a cook, a teaching-artist, a youth worker. He’s involved with the King County Food and Fitness Initiative, Food Education Empowerment and Sustainability Team (FEEST), the Major Taylor Program and the Youngstown Cultural Arts Center. If you’re a Delridge or White Center resident, chances are you or your child has heard of him.

“I had always wanted to be a teacher, but took a roundabout way to do it,” said Ascalon, who’s passionate about youth leadership development. “I love cooking, bicycling, and poetry. And those are great vehicles for dialogue with youth.”

The bicycle is one of his favorite tools of education, and he dreams of one day opening up a “full-fledged, fully-accredited high school on bicycles”. He envisions a school that’s centered around the bicycle with time set aside for daily bike rides and each module of the curriculum would culminate in a long-distance ride like the Lewis and Clark Trail or a ride that follows the local salmon migration.

“The bike for me represents adventure and freedom,” Ascalon stated. “But it’s also about fun and style for me. I love the human ingenuity that went into creating such an amazing machine.”

Ascalon’s bike is a Trek 520 touring bike complete with a little radio. “It makes running around town and going to the grocery store more fun. And on the STP I bring a full-on boombox that you can hear half-a-mile away,” he said.

“The bike culture should be an open culture but in Seattle, I find it to be a closed culture – you’ve got the hardcore road bikers and the hipsters on fixies. Neither of them are open,” he said.

The test to see if a culture is open and welcoming is simple, Ascalon said. “When you ride, do you smile, nod or wave at your fellow riders? And do they smile or nod back?”

Ascalon said the biggest obstacles faced by the youth he works with is inaccessibility and closed cultures and communities.

“The cost of bicycles alone is inaccessible and then there is this cultural understanding of needing all this fancy bike gear. A lot of the immigrant youth I work with come from cultures where they see the bicycle differently than we do. It’s their main form of transportation,” said Ascalon.

One of the goals of the Major Taylor Program is to empower youth by giving them the means to explore their neighborhoods and the neighborhoods beyond. MTP promotes bicycling as a form of exercise, recreation, and transportation.

“Major Taylor is about opening up possibilities and show these kids that they can be any kind of rider they want to be,” Ascalon said. “We’re not afraid of putting our kids in spandex even though we know there’s a culture clash for a black kid to hang out in spandex in the Rainier Valley. Major Taylor is very much about creating a community – a supportive, empowering, and safe community. That is the very thing I try to do in all my youth work.”

If Ascalon were to run into one of his Major Taylor students ten years from now, he’d like to see them “physically, emotionally and spiritually healthy.”

“I want them to have reached the goals they’ve set with us [in the MTP], I want them to be biking in some kind of way, but as long as they feel empowered, I don’t care what they’re doing,” he said.

Know a cyclist who deserves some special recognition? Nominate them for cyclist of the month! Send your ideas to Anne-Marije Rook at amrook@cascadebicycleclub.org.

SAVE THE DATE! Major Taylor Project Spinathon will be held Thursday, Feb. 21

Tuesday, December 11th, 2012 by

The Major Taylor Program introduces the joy of bicycling to underserved communities and empowers the next generation of rider

Come spin your legs to support a great cause!

On Thursday, Feb. 21, 2013, Cascade Bicycle Club Education Foundation and Allstar Fitness will host the third annual Major Taylor Project Spin-A-Thon to benefit the Major Taylor Project.  All proceeds will support our efforts to introduce the joy of bicycling to underserved communities in South and Southeast Seattle and empower the next generation of riders through the Major Taylor Project.

Registration opens Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2013 and you can show your support in the following ways:

 

- Spin for 1, 2, or all 3 hours! 

$30/hour minimum donation

 

- Personal Pledge Challenge 

Collect donations from your supporters and increase you chance to win great prizes!

Raise $250 and receive two additional premium drawing tickets!

Raise $500 and receive a Major Taylor Project jersey and five additional premium drawing tickets!

Raise $1000 and receive a Major Taylor Project jersey and 10 premium drawing tickets!

 

- Sponsor a Major Taylor Student Spinner

Support a student on the bike for 1, 2 or 3 hours.

 

- Match a Spinner

Work for an organization that will match your support?  Pledge your support and have your organization match your efforts.