-
New day of taxi protests planned for September in France
Drivers threaten airport and station blockade amid incoming medical transport fee changes
-
Retiree asks for church bells in French village to stop at night so she can sleep
The lady claims the bells ring over 100 times a night, locals say this is part of local heritage
-
Outreach event to assist Americans in south of France with social security queries
In-person appointments will be held in Marseille over two days next month
Cycling to be taught to all
Primary school education could soon include cycling
A leading cyclists’ body has welcomed a government statement that it wants all primary school children to be taught cycling.
However the chairman of Fédération des Usagers de la Bicyclette, Olivier Schneider, said it needs to be budgeted for properly and children must learn how to ride safely in urban conditions so parents feel able to let them go to collège (age 12-15) by bike.
FUB says sedentary lifestyles mean the average collège pupil has 40% of the cardio-vascular capacity of schoolchildren 40 years ago.
This comes as the Bordeaux metropolitan area announces another year on year leap in numbers using bikes – up 12% in 2017, partly linked to closing the Pont de Pierre to cars (measured by sensors in the streets). It has set a target of increasing the proportion of daily journeys taken by bike from 7.7% to 15% (which has already been reached in the city of Bordeaux itself). Car use dropped under 50% for the first time but was still the most popular way to get around.