As we grapple with the need to recycle bikes, e-bikes, scooters and other personal transport vehicles (PTVs), rescuing them from the waste stream and rescue then from landfill to divert them from the waste stream divert from landfill, new partnerships and are vital. So I congratulate Revolve Recycling Foundation, Miller Technology High School and Western Sydney Migrant Resource Centre for coming together to address exactly this problem. RRF works to fully restore, safety-check, and redeploy abandoned and unwanted children's rides, changing their destiny so that children who would not otherwise get the opportunity to ride a bike can access one. This could include a first nations child, a refugee, a child with a disability, or child from a disadvantaged background, because they believe "every child deserves to experience the joy of riding a bike". Transurban has awarded RRF a grant of $10,000 to provide newly arrived children and teenagers from refugee and non-English speaking backgrounds in South Western Sydney access to high quality safe bicycles, as well as bike maintenance and safety education, working with the Intensive English Centre at Miller Technology High School and Western Sydney Migrant Resource Centre.
Revolve Recycling Foundation Transurban Grant
26 March 2026

