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Governor Corzine awards pedestrian safety grants

December 22, 2008

These towns received the Safe Routes to School grants and participate with the MWC.   All in all, MWC participating towns received a total of $888,000:  East Greenwich Township ($15,000), Clinton ($225,000), Little Egg Harbor ($300,000), Elmer ($300,000), Garwood (two separate grants -one for $18,000 and one for $22,000), Oxford ($8,000).

For Immediate Release                                             
Contact: Erin Phalon
December 22, 2008                                                  
Phone:    (609) 530-4280   

New Jersey will invest $6 million in local pedestrian safety improvements
 
(Trenton)–Reiterating his commitment to improving pedestrian safety, Governor Jon S. Corzine today announced that the New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT) will award $4 million in Safe Routes to School grants and $2 million in Safe Streets to Transit grants.
 
“These programs are critical components of New Jersey’s five year pedestrian safety program.”Governor Jon S. Corzine said. “Providing kids and commuters with safe facilities to walk and ride their bikes can encourage mass transit use, improve quality of life and prevent childhood obesity.”
 
NJDOT’s 2008 Safe Routes to School initiativewill provide grants for projects in 33 municipalities in amounts ranging from $8,000 to $300,000. The grants will be used for local projects designed to encourage children to walk and bike to school, including the creation of safer walkways, bikeways and street crossings near schools.
 
New Jersey’s Safe Routes to School Program helps communities develop and implement projects that encourage walking and bicycling to school while enhancing the safety of these trips.  The program increases pedestrian safety awareness among motorists and schoolchildren. Safe Routes to School also improves environmental health and quality of life by reducing traffic jams and air pollution. In addition, Safe Routes to School improves pediatric health by providing regular physical activity.

The Safe Streets to Transit program helps counties and municipalities improve access to transit facilities and all modes of public transportation.  The initiative will provide grants to 15 municipalities statewide that will help install and upgrade sidewalks, pedestrian barriers and improve lighting and drainage on roadways upon which transit facilities are located.
 
In 2006, Governor Corzine created a five-year, $74 million initiative to improve pedestrian safety throughout New Jersey by encouraging motorists to share the road with pedestrians through engineering, education and enforcement. The initiative included $15 million over five years for the Safe Routes to Schools program and $5 million for the Safe Streets to Transit program.
 
The Safe Routes to School grantees: safe-routes-report
 
The Safe Streets to Transit grantees:  safe-streets-to-transit-list
 
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Elise Bremer-Nei, AICP/PP
Safe Routes to School Program Coordinator New Jersey Department of Transportation Office of Bicycle and Pedestrian Programs P.O. Box 600 Trenton, NJ 08625-0600
   609-530-2765   
fax  530-3723
elise.bremer-nei@dot.state.nj.us
www.state.nj.us/transportation/community/srts/
www.saferoutesinfo.org

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