Safe Routes to School

Updated October 2024

What We Do

Safe Routes to School (SRTS) is a national movement to make it easier and safer for students to walk and bike to school. Seattle’s Safe Routes to School program builds walking and biking infrastructure around schools and supports programming and activities that encourage more students to walk and bike with a focus on equity.  

Graphic showing children crossing the street to school, with a crossing guard and kids on bikes.  In the clouds are the words Safe and Welcoming Schools, Clean Air, Safe Streets, Independent Youth, Connected Communities

Graphic developed by Seattle Public Schools in partnership with SDOT

2023-24 Annual Report

Check out our 2023-24 Annual Report. Highlights include:

  • 21% reduction in speeds on arterials where we installed speed cushions
  • 137+ walking and biking packages distributed to 48 schools with free supplies like walking lights, school patrol flags, helmets, and more. A 92% increase from last year!
  • 11 middle schools added to the Let’s Go program bike education program. Last year Let’s Go reached over 14,000 students with over 1,100 students learning to ride. 

2024 School Travel Tally Report

We work with Seattle Public Schools to conduct an annual travel tally in all elementary and K-8 schools, and the 2024 School Travel Tally Report is out! On average, students reported an active transportation rate of 28% which is 10% higher than the rate when the tally was first conducted in 2005.  

A sign that says 'how did you get to school today?' with four hearts representing walking, bus, cars, or bikes and kids signatures inside each heart.

5-Year Action Plan 

The SRTS Program is guided by a 5-Year Action Plan that lays out actions we'll take toward our goal of making it safer and easier for kids to walk and bike to school. It recommends specific, near-term strategies built around our program's seven E's: Equity, Environment, Education, Empowerment, Encouragement, Engineering, and Evaluation. Equity is infused into each of the other six categories as we continue our committment to taking a racial justice-driven approach to promoting more active commuting among students.

The Action Plan guides our investments by ranking all public and most private schools in Seattle. The rankings are based on where people walking or biking have had collisions, the races and ethnicities of students at each school, and numerical scores from the Pedestrian Master Plan that measure how inviting the streets around each school are for walking.

All children have the right to health, happiness and academic success regardless of race. For more detail, view the Safe Routes to School Action Plan Prioritization Process. To see how your school ranks, view the School Rankings for Walkway Projects and Crosswalk Projects.

Education: Ensure Everyone Learns How to Travel Safely

Empowerment: Provide Resources to School Champions

Engineering: Design Streets for Safety and Predictability

Environment: Reduce The Impact of School Travel

Encouragement: Promote Walking and Biking

Evaluation: Track Progress Toward Our Shared Safety Goals

Safe Routes to School Projects

North

  • School Street upgrades at Whittier Elementary (upgrades completed in 2024 – student art expected in 2025) 

  • Install wheelstops and pave section of pathway on NE 110th St leading to Jane Addams Middle School (completed in 2024)

  • Install speed humps and all way stops near Olympic View Elementary (completed in 2024)

  • Install push button flashing beacon and marked crosswalk at 62nd Ave NE and NE 65th St by Sandpoint Elementary (expected in 2025)

  • Install speed humps on NW 105th St and repair and complete a walkway gap on the north side of 105th by Viewlands Elementary (completed in 2024) (walkway repair is paused pending funding)

  • Daylight the crosswalk (i.e., install paint and post curb bulbs) on 45th Ave NE just south of 73rd by View Ridge Elementary (pending funding)

Central

  • Curb ramps at 7th/Wheeler at Coe Elementary (pending funding)

  • Install a push button flashing beacon at 11th Ave E and E Aloha St near Lowell Elementary (pending funding)

  • Vision Zero partnership to retime signals and install no turn on red signs near schools across the city to prioritize people walking (ongoing)

  • Walking School Bus support for Bailey Gatzert Elementary (ongoing)

South

 

  • Bike to Books Student Art leading to Dunlap Elementary and South Shore PK-8 (completed in 2024)

  • School Street upgrades at Emerson Elementary (upgrades completed in 2024 - student art expected in 2024 or 2025)

  • School Street upgrades at Genesee Hill Elementary (upgrades completed in 2024 - student art expected in 2024 or 2025)

  • Curb ramps/marked crosswalks at 7th/Henderson and ramps/bulbs/marked crosswalks at 8th/Henderson near Concord Elementary (expected in 2024 or 2025)

  • Walkway and trees on S Henderson St between 12th and 14th near Concord Elementary (expected in 2024 or 2025)

  • Marked crosswalk at 26th Ave S/SW Trenton St and speed cushions on SW Trenton St for Denny Intl’ Middle School and Chief Sealth High School (completed in 2024)

  • All way stop and student-designed crosswalk at Denny Intl’ Middle School (expected in 2024 or 2025)

  • Walkway and trees on 23rd Ave S at Louisa Boren K-8 (expected in 2024)

  • Speed humps and all way stops on SW Myrtle St, SW Frontenac, and California Ave SW near Gatewood Elementary (completed in 2024)

  • Remark crosswalks on SW Lander St and California Ave SW by Lafayette Elementary (paused pending funding)

  • Install speed humps and an all way stop on S 115th St leading to Lakeridge Elementary (expected in 2025)

  • Install push button flashing beacons and painted bulbs at California/Hinds & California/Spokane near Madison Middle School (paused pending funding)

  • Install all way stops and speed humps near Orca K-8 (expected in 2024)

  • Build curb ramps on 19th and Genesee at Pathfinder K-8 (paused pending funding)

    • Install all way stops near Schmitz Park – SPS interim site (completed in 2024)

    • Walking Wednesdays support for Wing Luke, John Muir, and Dunlap elementaries (ongoing)

    • Bike bus support for South Shore PK-8 and Dunlap Elementary (ongoing)

    "I bike to school because biking relaxes me and

    prepares me for a day of learning." - Yasi, Student

    A school age child smiles with her bike on a pedestrian street. A group of young students wearing brightly colored backpacks walks down the sidewalk

    A young man helps a student with a bike helmet fitting A student wearing a yellow safety vest and holding a stop flag volunteers to monitor the crosswalk at his school

    Transportation

    Greg Spotts, Director
    Address: 700 5th Ave, Suite 3800, Seattle, WA, 98104
    Mailing Address: PO Box 34996, Seattle, WA, 98124-4996
    Phone: (206) 684-7623
    684-Road@seattle.gov

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    The Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) is on a mission to deliver a transportation system that provides safe and affordable access to places and opportunities for everyone as we work to achieve our vision of Seattle as a thriving, equitable community powered by dependable transportation.