Peninsula students learn rules of the road
CHERYL SCHWEIZER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 9 years, 10 months AGO
Senior Reporter Cheryl Schweizer is a journalist with more than 30 years of experience serving small communities in the Pacific Northwest. She began her post-high-school education at Treasure Valley Community College and enerned her journalism degree at Oregon State University. After working for multiple publications, she has settled down at the Columbia Basin Herald and has been a staple of the newsroom for more than a decade. Schweizer’s dedication to her communities and profession has earned her the nickname “The Baroness of Bylines.” She covers a variety of beats including health, business and various municipalities. | May 5, 2016 1:45 PM
MOSES LAKE — Peninsula Elementary students rassled their bikes through the bike rodeo and rode off to school – following the rules of the road, of course – on National Bike to School Day Wednesday.
The bike rodeo was presented with support from the Grant County Health District. The El Sendero Life Center church donated the use of its parking lot, which was filled with bikes and scooters.
The Moses Lake Police Department was there to register bikes for children and their parents. The police department also donated four bikes to school to be given as prizes in an essay contest. Winners will be announced.
Members of the school’s Watch Dogs program and other parent volunteers were on the course also.
Kids got their bikes checked, got their tires checked, got their helmets checked and rode the course. Bike rodeoers were asked to show they knew traffic signals – that right turn signal was a little tricky – and rode around the cones, although some kids missed the cones and had to return for a second try.
Fifth-grade teacher Mark Radocaj cautioned them about running over the teachers, and only one or two adults had to get out of the way. Kids rode bikes with training wheels, bikes with sparkly paint jobs, pink, green and black bikes. Pretty much everybody had a helmet too, pink or blue helmets, red and black helmets, helmets with a mohawk, pink ponies, even a unicorn.
The bike rodeoers signaled and turned left and followed the course all the way to the stop sign, observing the rules of the road. Reinforcing those rules of the road for bike riders is the point of a bike rodeo, and all the kids followed the rules when they rode to school. With a MLPD officer in the lead, kids walked their bikes across the street at the crosswalk, just like they’re supposed to, and rode down the sidewalk to school.
Bike to School Day is an offshoot of Walk to School Day, held each October. The idea is to encourage physical fitness – and because bike riding is fun, according to the group’s website.
ARTICLES BY CHERYL SCHWEIZER
New Samaritan Hospital opens its doors
MOSES LAKE — The tarp covering the “Emergency” sign at the new Samaritan Hospital could be removed a few minutes early, but it wasn’t officially open until the sign’s lighting was turned on. The timing had to be precise. “I’ve got to wait until 6:59 (a.m.),” said Jason Wilbur of Graham Construction.
Coolidge Rd. extension to improve access to Moses Lake Community Health
MOSES LAKE — Construction is scheduled to be completed in late April on a project to extend South Coolidge Street to connect it with East Wheeler Road. The goal, said Moses Lake Community Health Center Sheila Berschauer, is to improve access MLCHC.
With fewer applicants, Grant PUD trying to fill what’s left
EPHRATA — A steep increase in application fees for Grant County PUD customers has reduced the number of pending applications dramatically. Andy Wendell, vice-president of customer experience, said that was one of the goals, but there were others. “There were a number of things that we wanted to do. We wanted to become contemporary. What I mean by that is that we (want to) have application processes that are providing certainty in our queue,” Wendell said. “(We wanted to ensure) that when we dedicate engineering and planning staff to reviewing applications, we want to increase the probability that we're working on applications that are going to come to fruition as much as possible. So yes, we did achieve results that we had hoped for, which is to have applicants in the queue that are more certain (to) come to fruition.”