When it comes to bike safety, your homeowners association wants your children to be as protected as possible while riding their bikes in the neighborhood, and recognizes that you can’t be there to watch them all the time. Here are some bike safety rules for kids that can help increase their safety when you’re not around.
Learning how to ride correctly is only part of what keeps a kid safe. Falls are inevitable, and teaching your children to fall correctly will prevent many serious injuries. Teach them to roll on impact, relax their body, and try to land on their padded and fleshiest parts.
Make sure your kids know where they can and can’t ride in the neighborhood. Maybe they are allowed to go to the end of the block, or not past the blue house. This will help them from getting lost, meeting strangers, or encountering things they are unfamiliar with, like a busy intersection.
Check bikes, scooters or roller skates for cracks or dents, sharp metal parts, jutting edges and slippery surfaces. Replace defective equipment, consult a professional for repairs and apply self-adhesive, non-slip material to slippery surfaces.
For example, "one person to each piece of equipment” or "you break it, you buy it.” They might be less likely to hop on a friend’s bike if they know it’s unsafe and that they’ll have to pay for replacing it when it breaks.
This is one of the most important safety rules for kids because it can literally save a life. Scooters, roller blades, bikes and similar equipment cause thousands of injuries—and even some deaths—every year. Make sure your children are wearing helmets, knee pads and elbow pads, especially if they are just learning. Buy a helmet your kid thinks is cool and you know is safe. It’s worth the extra money if your child is more likely to wear it.
Most importantly, make sure your children know these bike safety rules for kids are put in place so that they can have a fun, safe place to play in their homeowners association.