Community Active Travel Grants has reopened. Grants are available for communities to develop, deliver and promote their own community led active travel projects including to travel by car less.
The grant aims to empower communities to make changes to paths in their area that will make it easier for people to make every day journeys by active travel such as cycling and walking. They will give priority to projects that: improve paths so itβs easier for people to use them and be more physically
active; show people where active travel routes are; provide opportunities and encourage people in communities to work together. The grant will fund active travel routes to schools, to places of work, other popular places within towns and routes that help connect communities.
Funding can be used to:
- develop new paths and upgrade existing paths making them more suitable for active travel
- hire a contractor, plant and machinery
- purchase tools and equipment that volunteers can use to maintain active travel routes within their communities
- install signage and way markers to promote active travel routes
- produce new leaflets or promotional materials focusing on active travel routes
- produce interpretation panels that promote active travel routes
The next deadline is on the 6th of July 2018. For more information or to apply visit
http://stirling.fundingscotland.com/Funds/Fund/a0Rb000000J2ny7EAB-paths-for-all-community-activetravel-grants
While not against reduction of very muddy bits of path,the wholesale construction of hard core paths in this area has gone far enough.The countryside is being tamed and becoming very suburban.
Both new paths and cycle-ways really are the way forward. Once constructed and maintained they encourage everyone to get out of their cars and get some much needed exercise. You will always get people opposed to change but it is time for more paths, cars are well catered for. Maybe a start could be made in the Mine Wood, the paths and steps are deteriorating fast. Maybe funds could be diverted from unnecessary strimming of verges and destroying wild flowers, plus grass cutting in this dry spell when there was no grass to cut!