When I spoke to McSpirit, Denver was gray, wintry and downright gloomy. Even so, she counted 53 bikes and scooters parked around the school. It was Wednesday, or bike bus day, when a segment of the student body commutes to school on two wheels, instead of in the backseat of mom’s minivan.
She saw fewer kids than usual, which she attributed to the weather, but there were still enough to remind her that Denver is changing. The way people want to get around is changing. And consequently, the way people see the built environment is changing. The bike bus, still in its infancy, is so popular that the school is scrambling to figure out bike parking.
“You know, I've been lucky that the school has been incredibly supportive of everything I've done,” McSpirit reiterated. If Park Hill Elementary serves as a testing ground and a precedent for other schools in the city, then so be it. Though, she wishes safety weren’t up to one crossing guard’s tenacity and ingenuity. “This is not something that gets taught to crossing guards,” she laments. “Right now we're literally just saying, ‘here's the drop-off time and the pickup time. Figure it out from there!’”
McSpirit is stationed on a neighborhood street. Not every crossing guard and school is so lucky in their location. Many are left to fend for themselves on some of the city’s most dangerous roads, roads that could benefit more from McSpirit’s low-cost tactical approach than another flashing sign. Then there are the schools without crossing guards. They might actually be the strongest candidate for cones.
“I think it’s kind of funny that crossing guards are needed at all. We are needed, but we shouldn’t be needed,” she told me. “That's the ultimate goal, right? To not have someone [making you] stop for this child walking, but to have a safe way for that child to walk across where they're visible and for [drivers] to slow down [by design]. So yeah, that's what I'd like to see happen.”
Until then, McSpirit will continue to keep kids safe, one cone at a time.