| Bike delight on 
			offer for disabled kids AN urgent appeal has been 
			launched to find disabled children in Merseyside who could benefit 
			from having a specialist adapted tricycle.
 National charity, Caudwell Children, has launched the appeal to find 
			disabled children who would benefit from having their own specially 
			adapted therapy tricycle after receiving funding to help support 
			youngsters in the area.
 
 Caudwell Children have received funding to help local disabled 
			children receive the tricycles, which can cost families between £800 
			and £1,500. The tricycles are individually designed to specifically 
			meet the needs of each disabled child and help provide 
			physiotherapy, build muscle tone, aid independence and promote 
			social inclusion through play.
 
 However, the charity needs more applicants from the Merseyside area 
			to benefit from this generous offer. By launching the appeal, the 
			charity hopes some of the estimated 20,000 families in the region 
			caring for a disabled child will come forward and contact the 
			charity.
 
 Caudwell Children provide family support services, equipment, 
			treatment and therapies for disabled children and their families. In 
			their 13 year history the Charity has supported thousands of 
			children from across the Merseyside region and now hope to expand 
			their services within local communities.
 
 Trudi Beswick, Chief Executive of Caudwell Children, said:- 
			"We donate hundreds of these therapy tricycles to disabled children 
			throughout the UK each year, but we currently have no applicants in 
			the Merseyside area. 
			Disabled children get huge physical and emotional benefits from 
			having the specially adapted tricycles, which are each custom made 
			to suit the individual child's needs.  As well as providing 
			regular exercise and physical therapy, the tricycles give children a 
			renewed sense of inclusion which improves self-esteem and 
			confidence. We would love to hear from anyone caring for a disabled 
			child who would like to find out more or knows their child will 
			benefit from such a donation."
 
 Anyone wishing to find out more should contact Helen Brandley at 
			Caudwell Children on:- 01782 600854 or via
			
			email.
 
 All applicants will be required to meet the charity's standard 
			application criteria to be successful.
 
			Join the Manchester to Liverpool 
			bike ride and help raise funds for children THE NSPCC are calling on 
			people in Southport to get on their bikes and hit the open road for 
			this year's Manchester to Liverpool Bike Ride 2013. 
 The 39-mile bike ride on Sunday, 26 May 2013, will begin at Salford 
			Watersports Centre at the Quays from between 8am to 10am. Riders 
			will follow a flat, mostly traffic free route through Manchester via 
			Old Trafford and Stretford, and join the Trans-Pennine Trail through 
			beautiful scenery riding to Otterspool Park in Liverpool.
 
 This year, as well as the usual 39 mile route, we have added a 
			fantastic new 55 mile road route for all those riders seeking a 
			challenge. There will be refreshments, music and fun for all when 
			you reach the finish line by the banks of the Mersey.
 
 Helen Gazzola community fundraising manager for the NSPCC said:- 
			"The Manchester to Liverpool Bike Ride is one of the NSPCC's 
			biggest annual fundraising events in the north west. It is a great 
			way to have fun, get fitter or simply enjoy the great outdoors so we 
			hope many more riders will join the fun, which will hopefully mean 
			we'll be able to raise even more money for children and families 
			across the region."
 
 A coach service run once to take riders from Liverpool to the 
			Manchester start line in the morning, and will return riders from 
			Liverpool to Manchester in the afternoon. Booking is recommended to 
			guarantee a seat and the cost is an additional £23 for one rider and 
			a bike.
 
 Helen continued:- "The bike ride will be a fabulous day out in 
			the great outdoors and a valuable opportunity to help the NSPCC 
			raise money to support its projects and services across the North 
			West and across the UK, so why not think about taking part with 
			family, as a group of friends or maybe enter a corporate team."
 
 The money raised from this year's cycle ride will go towards 
			supporting the charity's ground breaking new ChildLine Schools 
			Service. Particularly focused on nine to 11 year olds, the ChildLine 
			Schools Service aims to help them understand what abuse is, 
			including bullying, how to protect themselves and where to get help 
			and support if needed. The service is led by volunteers who are 
			trained to deliver safeguarding assemblies and interactive workshops 
			in schools.   Every penny you raise will get us closer to 
			our goal of making sure we can deliver this vital service to every 
			child in the UK.
 Tickets for adult riders are 
			priced at £17 per adult and £8 for children (8 to 16 years). Riders 
			under 16 must be accompanied by an adult over 18 and wear a helmet.
 For more information and your fundraising pack and to book your 
			place on the ride please visit:- 
			
			bikeevents.com or call the 
			NSPCC fundraising team on:- 0844 892 0253, plus you can email:- 
			
			northwestappeals@nspcc.org.uk 
			if you wish! You'll receive your registration pack in the post, 
			along with a fundraising pack to help you get started.
 
			 |  | Schools say 
			let's 'GO 20' for safer streets for kids at start of UN 
			Global Road Safety Week AT the start of the UN's 
			Global Road Safety Week 6 May to 12 May 2013, which urges action to 
			protect pedestrians, UK schools are calling for steps to enable kids 
			to walk in their area without being endangered; adding to growing 
			calls for all our communities to 'GO 20' by switching 
			to 20mph limits.
			
 A survey by the charity Brake and Hampson Hughes Solicitors of 500 
			UK primary schools reveals teachers are deeply concerned about 
			pupils' ability to walk or cycle to school safely. So much so that 
			77% feel compelled to actively campaign to make local roads safer 
			for kids.
 
 92% of schools think local roads need to be made safer for children 
			to walk and cycle and 81% want 20mph limits around the school and on 
			routes connecting the school with local homes. Only 12% of schools 
			say they already have 20mph limits.
 
 During Global Road Safety Week, Brake, alongside a GO 20 coalition 
			of 11 charities, is calling for steps to enable children to walk or 
			cycle without fear or threat from fast traffic:-
 ►  
			The government to work towards 20mph being the norm in all our 
			communities. ►  
			More local authorities to implement 20mph limits 
			across towns, cities and villages, alongside other measures like 
			safe pavements, paths and crossings, 
			 Also drivers to pledge to GO 20 or 
			below around homes, schools and shops.
 Every day in the UK, 12 children are run over and hurt when walking 
			or cycling to or from school and 2 of these children are killed or 
			suffer serious, sometimes life-long, injuries. Death on the road is 
			the biggest non-medical killer of school aged children in the UK, 
			greater than drowning, falls or accidental poisoning combined. 
			Across the globe, traffic kills more 5 to 14 year olds than malaria, 
			diarrhoea and HIV and Aids. Road danger is also a major barrier to 
			kids' mobility and health; many UK parents do not let children walk 
			and cycle to school because of fear of fast traffic.
 
 Julie Townsend, Brake's deputy chief executive, said:- 
			"Schools know what's important for kids, and they are telling us 
			road safety is a massive issue for them. It's telling that so many 
			schools are actively campaigning for safer streets, showing there's 
			a lot more we can do to protect children's right to walk and cycle 
			safely. It's not acceptable that children continue to be hurt and 
			killed daily on our roads, and it's a sad state of affairs that many 
			are prevented from walking or cycling because of traffic danger. One 
			of the best ways to protect kids on foot and bike is to slow maximum 
			traffic speeds to 20mph around homes, schools and shops, to create a 
			safe haven for walking and cycling. 'GOing 20' makes our 
			communities nicer places to be, enables people of all ages to get 
			out and about on foot and bike, improves health, and saves lives. As 
			the UN's Global Road Safety Week kicks off, we are appealing to 
			government, local authorities and drivers around the UK to put 
			children's safety and wellbeing first, and GO 20."
 
 Road Safety Minister Stephen Hammond said:- "We want to see 
			safe roads which meet the needs of pedestrians, cyclists and 
			motorists - that is why we want to see all Councils looking at 
			whether 20 mph speed limits could help improve safety on their 
			roads, particularly near schools and residential areas. Speed limits 
			should be set by Councils based on their local knowledge and the 
			views of the local community, but to help Councils further we have 
			provided an online toolkit and new guidance to help them make the 
			best decisions for their area."
 
 Lisa Pearson, marketing and business development manager at Hampson 
			Hughes Solicitors said:- "It is incredibly important for 
			Hampson Hughes Solicitors to be able to support Brake and the GO 20 
			campaign, as well as being involved in positively affecting the 
			safety of the country's school children. Unfortunately we are well 
			aware of the consequences of road traffic collisions, particularly 
			those involving children being run over, through our personal injury 
			law service and the clients we represent through this. We know how 
			important road safety is and Hampson Hughes Solicitors is keen to 
			see the 20mph speed limit implemented to areas around schools, homes 
			and shops – we are confident that this reduction in driving speed 
			will result in safer roads and a reduction in serious injuries and 
			fatalities for our children and our communities."
 
 Caroline Tyson, head of school, London Fields Primary School, 
			Hackney, said:- "We are delighted to support Brake and the GO 
			20 campaign. We were so pleased to get a 20mph limit and other road 
			safety measures installed in our area, and we have seen an increase 
			in children cycling to school as a result. But there are so many 
			more schools around the country battling for basic measures to 
			protect children on foot and bike. Reducing the speed of the traffic 
			can only help to further encourage children and families to walk and 
			cycle which, along with other awareness-raising initiatives we run 
			at school, helps to build a better community."
 
 Cllr Feryal Demirci, Hackney Council Cabinet Member for 
			Neighbourhoods, said:- "I am delighted to welcome Brake to 
			Hackney where the Council's commitment to safe roads for cyclists 
			and pedestrians has seen all residential streets in the borough 
			become 20mph limits. Alongside free cycle training for school 
			children, awareness training for drivers, and safety-led road 
			planning, this measure is helping to save lives and encourage even 
			more parents and children in Hackney to walk and cycle."
 
 Anyone can pledge their support for safer walking and cycling at 
			go20.org.
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