The Round Lake Park Police Department has partnered with Working Bikes a Chicago area based non for profit organization, to insure unclaimed/abandoned bicycles that we recover are distributed to those in need.
Countless bicycles are discarded or sit unused in garages in the United States every year. But in a developing country a bicycle can truly change the life of an individual, their family and their community. Bicycling is, of course, a form of transportation. But bicycles are also used for towing cargo, and even as a source of electricity through the creation of pedal-powered machines. In areas plagued by poverty, high levels of unemployment and lack of reliable, accessible transportation, a bicycle can help provide access to jobs, education, medical attention, and other resources.
Global Impact: Working Bikes ships thousands of bicycles each year to our partners in countries throughout Latin America and Africa, including El Salvador, Guatemala, Panama, Nicaragua, Uganda, Lesotho, Sierra Leone, South Africa, and Ghana.
Local Impact: Working Bikes donates to individuals and partner organizations here in Chicago, providing transportation to people in homeless transition, refugee resettlement, and youth empowerment programs in our own community.
Working Bikes donates over 6,500 bicycles each year to our international and local partners.
History
Working Bikes is a 501(c)(3) organization that was started in 1999 by Lee Ravenscroft, Amy Little and a group of volunteers dedicated to recycling bikes, supporting bike culture, and helping international and local projects. Since its inception, Working Bikes has recovered tens of thousands of discarded and donated bicycles from Chicago and the Midwest, and has redistributed more than 70,000 of them worldwide.
“The Round Lake Park Police Department will continue to distribute bicycles to our community as well. We were recently contacted by a Veterans organization and hope to partner with them as well”
Chief George Filenko









