28 Jun 2018
Leeds pupils bring 400 mile Yorkshire school cycle relay to a close
Children and young people from 27 Leeds schools will be taking part in the final stage of the 400 mile cycling relay which has made its way through Yorkshire over the past month.
The Schools Yorkshire Tour relay began on Tuesday 5 June as part of national Bike Week, and saw hundreds of pupils from primary, secondary and special schools in Yorkshire pass a baton over 400 miles from the start in Pickering to its final destination in Leeds.
On Tuesday 3 July the final leg of the tour will see pupils from Brownhill Primary School and St. Augustine’s Catholic Primary School ride into Millennium Square to hand over the baton to the Lord Mayor of Leeds Councillor Graham Latty.
Media opportunities:
1. When: Friday 29 June at 2pm
Where: Broomfield South SILC, Broom Place, Leeds, LS10 3JP
Members of the media are welcome to come along to Broomfield South SILC where pupils with additional needs will be taking part in cycle skills training, provided by Herd Farm. Some pupils will be riding adapted cycles around the local area as part of the tour.
2. When: Tuesday 3 July 10.30am
Where: Brownhill Primary Academy, Torre Drive, Leeds, LS9 7DH
Members of the media are welcome to come along to Brownhill Primary Academy where the final two schools will set off towards Millennium Square. The school has organised a celebration party to welcome the incoming schools and to give the departing pupils a good send-off on the final leg of the tour.
3. When: Tuesday 3 July 11.15am (final school expected to arrive around 11.30am)
Where: Millennium Square and Leeds Civic Hall
Members of the media are welcome to attend the celebration event for the pupils who have taken part in the Schools Yorkshire Tour. Pupils representing the twelve local authority areas will be in attendance. The final schools are expected to arrive around 11.30am at Millennium Square where they will hand the baton to the Lord Mayor of Leeds and Sir Gary Verity.
The tour started in North Yorkshire and passed through East Riding, York, Doncaster, Rotherham, Sheffield, Barnsley, Wakefield, Kirklees, Bradford and Calderdale before ultimately finishing in Leeds with a massive celebration event at Leeds Civic Hall which will be attended by representatives from each school which has taken part, The Lord Mayor of Leeds and Welcome to Yorkshire’s Sir Gary Verity. The young cyclists will also be able to meet Brian Robinson BEM who was the first Briton to finish the Tour de France and the first to win a Tour stage. The winners of a ‘bling a bike’ competition will also be attending the celebration event at the end of the tour.
The final stage of the Schools Yorkshire Tour will see pupils travel down City Connect’s new section of the Cycle Superhighway, providing a cycle route protected from traffic between Seacroft and the city centre.
The tour has been organised by 12 Yorkshire local authorities in partnership with Welcome to Yorkshire, West Yorkshire Combined Authority Sustrans and PWLC Projects, and supported by YPO, Streetbikes, The Works Skate Park, Child Friendly Leeds and Active Schools Leeds.
Councillor Lisa Mulherin, Leeds City Council’s executive member for children and families said:
“The Schools Yorkshire Tour welcome event will give the children who’ve taken part a chance to meet and celebrate what they have achieved.
“As well as gaining valuable cycling and road safety skills, being part of an event like this shows the children and young people that cycling is a fun, healthy and accessible mode of travel, and will hopefully encourage everyone to cycle more often.”
Councillor Richard Lewis, Leeds City Council’s executive member for regeneration, transport and planning said:
“Our sustainable travel team have done a fantastic job pulling this tour together with all our partners from across the region. By working together we can encourage more young people to take up cycling both as a fun activity but also as a way to get to school. Increasing the number of pupils who cycle safely to school is a key priority and helps to reduce congestion outside the school gates, which in turn helps improve air quality for all our residents.”
Sir Gary Verity DL, Chief Executive at Welcome to Yorkshire, said:
“These young cyclists deserve a celebration after playing their part in a fantastic event which has brought together children from right across the county. I’ll be delighted to see them cross the finish line and am really looking forward to judging the imaginative entries of the ‘bling a bike’ competition.
“I hope the Schools Yorkshire Tour – as well as races like the Tour de Yorkshire and 2019 UCI Road World Championships - will inspire children to keep riding and enjoy the many health, social and environmental benefits cycling brings.”
ENDS
For media enquiries contact:
Leeds City Council Communications team
communicationsteam@leeds.gov.uk