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Haumarutanga rori - taiohi

Road safety - young people

The Travel Safe team work alongside schools and communities to increase active travel and keep students safe on their way to and from school.

Young Driver Workshop

Free young driver workshops are aimed at road users aged between 16 and 24, who hold a current learner or restricted driver licence. Participants will leave with improved knowledge, confidence, and skills.

Each workshop includes:

  • A 60-minute one-on-one driving lesson with a certified instructor
  • Waka Kotahi NZTA roadworthy vehicle check (what to check to ensure your vehicle is safe and roadworthy)
  • Driver behaviour awareness (speed, impairment, restraints, distraction, and fatigue 
  • Awareness session on sharing the road with heavy vehicles

Parents/caregivers are strongly encouraged to attend but it’s not compulsory. The four-hour workshops are held during school term holidays, usually between 9am and 1pm.

Drive has everything you need to prepare for your learner, restricted and full licence tests.

Visit the Drive website

Kids Can Ride 

Kids Can Ride is Travel Safe’s year 5-6 cycle skills programme. It is based on the BikeReady curriculum, an established initiative by Waka Kotahi. 

Experienced cycle skills instructors visit schools to help students learn to navigate local streets and intersections with structured learning outcomes. 

Kids Can Ride consists of two grades: Grade 1 (year 5) – Preparing for on-road riding, and Grade 2 (year 6) – Introduction to on-road riding. Students will complete grade 1 learning before being able to undertake grade 2.  

Grade 1 is held at school, usually in a field or on a court and is designed to encourage and develop basic bike control skills. The session also covers how to check and fit a helmet, and a basic bike safety check. 

Grade 2 takes place on quiet local roads and is designed to give students real cycling experience to build skills and confidence for making short journeys on local roads. Grade 2 covers how to see and be seen, communication, road positioning and cooperating with other road users. 

It’s Travel Safe’s goal to see Kids Can Ride delivered in every school in Tauranga and the Western Bay of Plenty.

For more on Kids Can Ride contact travelsafeschools@tauranga.govt.nz.

 

Young driver workshop


 

Kids can ride

School Travel Safe Action Plans

School Travel Safe Action Plans are community led and embedded in neighbourhoods across Tauranga and the Western Bay of Plenty.

  • Educating with in-school programmes
  • Encouraging different ways to get to and from school like walking, biking, busing, and scootering
  • Engineering better routes to school with improved crossings, school speed zones, and shared paths
  • Enforcing parking regulations around schools.

Parking Behaviour 

Drop off and pick up are busy times that pose a safety risk at the school gate. Travel Safe help schools to communicate things like parking time limits, drop off and pick up zones, parking over the kerb and other safety risks at the school gate. 

We deliver an in-school parking and safety programme named Peaceful Parker, and partner with council parking officers to do school visits when requested by schools or the community. 

Travel Smart and Travel Safe Leaders

For more than 15 years our Travel Smart (Primary) and Travel Safe (Intermediate) leaders have been supporting the action plan by helping to deliver programmes at school and doing important voluntary work like monitoring crossings. 

Student leaders know what’s happening in and around their schools and address any safety issues they see. 

Intermediate Schools' Bike Safety

The Intermediate Bike Safety programme is a natural progression from Kids Can Ride and focuses on ‘real time, real environment’ on-road cycling. 

It involves a road rules refresher, bike and helmet safety checks, school cycle safety procedures, and how to navigate intersections. The programme includes a practical skills assessment and sees students riding in their local area with an instructor.

Design Your Own Helmet Competition

Five Tauranga school students received a huge surprise in May when they were presented with their winning helmets as part of Travel Safe’s ‘Design Your Own Helmet’ competition, while filming a video about the importance of wearing one. Read the full media release.

The competition will reopen again in October this year.

Feet First

The Feet First programme encourages active travel to and from school to support reduced congestion around schools and associated health, social, environmental, and economic benefits.

The programme is based on healthy fun competition through the collection travel data, celebrating healthy ways to travel, and student-led initiatives for promotion. The programme is flexible and can easily be adapted to meet the needs of the school community.

Kids on Feet

A Kids on Feet walking school bus is a fun, safe and active way for children to travel to and from school with adult supervision. It involves students walking together with at least at least one adult ‘driver’ and picking up children at designated stops on the way to and from school.

Walking school buses are flexible to meet the needs of schools and supported by Travel Safe with guidance and resources for students and parent/caregiver volunteers.

For help with Kids on Feet contact travelsafeschools@tauranga.govt.nz

Car Restraints

Looking for Support around car seat restraints? Contact one of our local car seat technicians at travelsafeschools@tauranga.govt.nz. We offer free car seat installations, checks, and will help answer any questions or concerns regarding your car restraint. 

Ruben the Road Safety Bear

Ruben the Road Safety Bear visits pre-school and younger children with his minder to talk about keeping safe around roads and traffic.

Ruben has his own song and dance – The Ruben Rock, and his focus lies in four key areas:

  • safe passenger (child seats, seat belts and booster seats)
  • safe pedestrian (crossing the road)
  • playing on the street and sneaky driveways, and
  • supervised cycling and helmet use.

For more on Ruben the Road safety bear including some fun resources visit his website.

Register for Ruben the Road Safety Bear

 

Ruben the Road Safety Bear

Related news

Let’s give less to landfill this Christmas

Let’s give less to landfill this Christmas

We generate an estimated 30% more waste during the festive season in New Zealand. We'll get through 1.6million kilogrammes of wrapping paper alone, that's equivalent to 10,000 trees. But it doesn’t have to be this way.

The Tauranga community has made an impressive effort reducing the amount of waste going to our landfills since the launch of the new kerbside collections in 2021, nearly halving the amount of household waste going to landfill each year. And to help reduce the amount of festive flare ending up in our landfills, Tauranga City Council's Sustainability and Waste team has some practical tips for reducing waste without compromising on the Christmas magic.

Get started early

Much of what we enjoy using for Christmas that ends up in our landfill can be made at home with existing materials or reused for years to come. Make sure you have enough time to plan and gather the materials to make your sustainable decorations, Christmas crackers, gifts, and cards to prevent a mad rush to the mall on Christmas Eve for their plastic or unrecyclable alternatives. Click here for how to make Christmas crackers.

If crafting isn’t your thing, select your purchases with the environment in mind, making sure the products and their packaging are made from natural resources and can be recycled. You can find out more about what can be recycled at tauranga.govt.nz/recycle.

Real or artificial trees?

If you already have an artificial tree, the best thing you can do is to continue using it for many years to come, as the PVC plastic (or plastic #3), commonly used in artificial tree manufacturing, can’t be recycled here in Tauranga.

If you prefer a real tree in your home at Christmas time, consider composting, chipping, or using the tree as firewood after the holidays instead of sending it to landfill. The most sustainable option is a potted, living tree that can be replanted and reused each year. Alternatively, you can rent a living Christmas tree from a local business, returning it after the holiday season to be nurtured until the next year.

Waste-free decorations

If your tree is looking a little bare and would benefit from a decoration refresh, home-made decorations are more creative and sustainable than buying new plastic ones. You can make decorations from everyday items like shells, cinnamon sticks, dried orange and apple slices, or fallen leaves and pinecones.

Gifting experiences

Gift cards, dining experiences, massage vouchers, memberships, or donations to charity are a great way to avoid more traditional and sometimes unwanted gifts that can end up forgotten in the back of a cupboard or in our landfills.

Waste-free wrapping

Old maps, newspaper, recycled textiles, magazines, children’s drawings or recycled brown paper bags are great options to use for wrapping gifts instead of conventional gift wrap (especially glossy and metallicized types, which mostly can’t be recycled).

Reusable gift bags are a smart option. Sew up some of your own or find New Zealand-made gift bags online, they come in packs of different sizes and shapes to suit most gifts and can be used year after year.

Conscious food shopping

Careful planning and preparation helps us enjoy our kai over the busy festive season while also reducing our food waste. Simple things like creating a shopping list before visiting the supermarket helps us avoid overbuying, while serving meals in stages and refrigerating leftovers promptly between courses means leftovers can be saved for later. Giving leftovers to guests to take home means you won’t be left with more than you can get through yourself, and making the most of leftovers on Boxing Day is a great way to cut down your food waste while also taking a well-deserved break from preparing meals. Check out Love Food Hate Waste for more ideas.

Changes to kerbside collections this Christmas

Kerbside collections continue throughout the summer holiday period, but if your kerbside bins are usually collected on a Wednesday, Thursday or a Friday, your collection day will be one day later than usual for two weeks over the Christmas and New Year’s holidays – from Wednesday, 25 December (Christmas Day) to Friday, 3 January. This is to give our kerbside collections team a well-deserved break on Christmas and New Year’s Days. To those households impacted by this change, please place all bins at the kerbside before 7am the day following your regular collection day during this time, for example, if your usual day is Friday, please place bins before 7am on the Saturday.

If you have extra glass, recycling or rubbish that won’t fit into your bins on collection day, you can either save it for future collections or take it to Te Maunga Transfer Station (as bins with lids that won’t close, or overfilled glass recycling bins, can’t be collected). Extra recycling or glass can be dropped at the transfer station free of charge, and you can drop up to four 60L bags of rubbish for $5.50 each bag (maximum weight of 10kg per bag). Anything over the four bags will revert to standard charges based on weight.

Te Maunga Transfer Station will operate regular hours over summer (Monday-Friday 7.30am-5pm, Saturday-Sunday 8.30am-5pm) except on these days:

  • Wednesday, 25 December: Closed for Christmas Day
  • Thursday, 26 December: Open 8.30am-5pm for Boxing Day
  • Wednesday, 1 January: Closed for New Year’s Day
  • Thursday, 2 January: Open 8.30am-5pm for the Day after New Year’s public holiday

Thanks for another year of sending less to landfill Tauranga.

Posted: Dec 4, 2024,

Related information

Staying safe on scooters. Information about staying safe on your scooter.

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