Rep. Elaine Nekritz

Filed: 3/19/2015

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 2623

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 2623 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Safe
5Routes to School Program Act.
 
6    Section 5. Findings and purpose. Childhood obesity has more
7than tripled over the past 30 years, creating a youth obesity
8epidemic. Nearly 18 percent of children, and 21 percent of
9adolescents, are obese, and 31.9 percent are obese or
10overweight. Obese children are likely to become obese adults;
11in fact, an obese older teenager has up to an 80 percent chance
12of becoming an obese adult. Obesity causes, or is closely
13linked to, numerous serious health conditions including heart
14disease, stroke, diabetes, high blood pressure, unhealthy
15cholesterol, asthma, sleep apnea, gallstones, kidney stones,
16infertility, and as many as 11 types of cancers, including

 

 

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1leukemia, breast, and colon cancer. In addition to harming
2individual health, obesity also negatively impacts the economy
3by contributing to higher health care costs, higher
4transportation costs, and lost labor market productivity. High
5obesity rates can also impact military readiness.
6    The purpose of this Act is to improve the public health and
7safety of children and communities through a reduction in
8childhood obesity and collision injuries by supporting the
9successful implementation of Safe Routes to School projects.
10Safe Routes to School projects aim to improve children's health
11and reverse the decline in walking and bicycling by funding
12local projects that support biking and walking to school
13through education, encouragement, and safer infrastructure,
14such as new and improved crosswalks, sidewalks, and traffic
15lights. The need for Safe Routes to School projects is
16especially strong in low income areas, which typically have the
17highest obesity rates, inferior pedestrian and biking
18infrastructure, and higher traffic injury rates for people
19driving, bicycling, and walking.
20    Safe Routes to School projects are having a significant
21impact where implemented. The percentage of students actively
22traveling to school by walking or biking, as estimated by
23school administrators, is 60 percent higher overall in schools
24participating in Safe Routes to School compared with schools
25that do not participate, and in some schools, the number of
26students walking or bicycling to school doubled in 3 years.

 

 

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1Safe Routes to School projects make it safer and more
2convenient for everyone to walk and bike to destinations,
3encouraging a more active and healthier lifestyle that
4contributes to lower health care costs for the whole community.
5    Nothing in this Act is intended to prevent local or
6regional jurisdictions from establishing additional or more
7rigorous requirements consistent with the purpose of this Act.
 
8    Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
9    "Demonstrated high need area" means either (1) a school or
10project area in which at least 50% of the children are eligible
11to receive free and reduced priced meals under the National
12School Lunch Program; or (2) a census tract in which the median
13household income is less than 80% of the statewide average
14median based on the most current census tract level data from
15the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey.
16    "Department" means the Department of Transportation.
17    "Safe Routes to School" or "SRTS" means programs and
18initiatives that aim to increase the number and safety of
19students walking or bicycling to school through education,
20encouragement, and infrastructure improvements.
21    "Safe Routes to School infrastructure projects" means
22planning or engineering projects, located within 2 miles of a
23school, that support bicycling and walking to the school, such
24as sidewalk improvements, traffic calming and speed reduction
25improvements, pedestrian and bicycle crossing improvements,

 

 

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1on-street bicycle facilities, off-street bicycle and
2pedestrian facilities, secure bicycle parking facilities, and
3traffic diversion or calming improvements.
4    "Safe Routes to School non-infrastructure projects" means
5projects that are designed to encourage children to walk and
6bicycle to school, including public awareness campaigns and
7outreach to press and community leaders, traffic education and
8enforcement in the vicinity of schools, student education
9sessions on bicycle and pedestrian safety, health, and
10environment, and funding for training volunteers and managers.
11    "Safe Routes to School projects" means both Safe Routes to
12School infrastructure projects and Safe Routes to School
13non-infrastructure projects.
 
14    Section 15. Establishment of Safe Routes to School Fund.
15There shall be established in the State treasury a Safe Routes
16to School Fund into which the Department of Transportation
17shall deposit funds for use by the Safe Routes to School
18Program and Safe Routes to School projects.
 
19    Section 20. Establishment of the Safe Routes to School
20Program; staffing and technical assistance.
21    (a) The Department shall establish and administer a Safe
22Routes to School Program, which will support increasing the
23safety and convenience of school children walking or biking to
24school and fund Safe Routes to School projects in local

 

 

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1jurisdictions.
2    (b) The Department shall allocate funds to maintain a
3full-time position of Safe Routes to School Program
4Coordinator.
5    (c) The Safe Routes to School Program shall:
6        (1) provide outreach, education, and technical and
7    application assistance relating to the Safe Routes to
8    School Program to local jurisdictions and schools; and
9        (2) ensure the timely award and obligation of funds to
10    Safe Routes to School infrastructure projects and Safe
11    Routes to School non-infrastructure projects.
12    (d) The Safe Routes to School Program shall develop and
13periodically revise program guidelines for administration of
14the Safe Routes to School Program that establish:
15        (1) a clear application process, including project
16    selection criteria;
17        (2) schedules and procedures;
18        (3) performance measures;
19        (4) student travel data collection procedures;
20        (5) program evaluation measures and procedures; and
21        (6) any other matters relevant to administration of the
22    Safe Routes to School Program.
 
23    Section 25. Mix of infrastructure and non-infrastructure
24projects. The SRTS Program shall fund both Safe Routes to
25School infrastructure projects and Safe Routes to School

 

 

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1non-infrastructure projects with no less than 10 percent and no
2more than 30 percent of funds authorized in the Safe Routes to
3School Fund reserved for Safe Routes to School
4non-infrastructure projects each funding cycle.
 
5    Section 30. Demonstrated high needs areas.
6    (a) The Safe Routes to School Program shall develop a plan,
7with specific goals and benchmarks, which are designed to
8ensure that demonstrated high need areas receive technical
9assistance, resources, and funding for Safe Routes to School
10projects consistent with their need.
11    (b) The Safe Routes to School Program shall provide
12demonstrated high need areas with pre-application assistance,
13including application preparation assistance, planning grants,
14and engineering consulting services, as needed.
15    (c) The Safe Routes to School Program shall identify
16barriers experienced by demonstrated high need areas in
17implementing Safe Routes to School projects and seek to
18alleviate those barriers through procedural changes and
19provision of resources and technical assistance.
 
20    Section 35. Non-state funding sources. Nothing in this Act
21shall be construed to limit, restrict, or otherwise discourage
22the allocation of federal or other non-State funds to the Safe
23Routes to School Program or Safe Routes to School projects.
 

 

 

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1    Section 40. Report to General Assembly. The Secretary of
2Transportation, in consultation with the Safe Routes to School
3Program Coordinator, shall submit to the General Assembly, no
4later than 20 days prior to convening of each annual session of
5the General Assembly, an annual report of the state and
6progress of the Safe Routes to School Program, which shall
7include but not be limited to:
8        (1) an accounting of all funds appropriated, awarded,
9    and obligated;
10        (2) a summary of all projects funded;
11        (3) an estimation of the benefits conferred by the
12    Program;
13        (4) a progress report on the plan, goals, and
14    benchmarks for demonstrated high need communities required
15    under subsection (a) of Section 30 of this Act; and
16        (5) any recommendations for legislative changes,
17    including proposals to improve program effectiveness.
 
18    Section 100. The State Finance Act is amended by adding
19Section 5.866 as follows:
 
20    (30 ILCS 105/5.866 new)
21    Sec. 5.866. The Safe Routes to School Fund.".