Project fixes up, donates bikes to those in need
By KELLY BURCH
Valley News Correspondent

LEBANON — With spring not too far off, Upper Valley residents are dusting off the bikes and preparing for evenings spent riding with friends or family. For many, biking is a way to feel free: Kids can pedal off for adventures with their friends, families can enjoy healthy fun together and adults who may not have access to a car can still get themselves to appointments or work.
Yet bikes can be expensive to purchase and repair. That’s where the Community Bike Project comes in, with a team of volunteers who collect, repair and donate bikes that would otherwise be bound for the landfill.
“Every kid should be able to enjoy the feeling of freedom and independence of riding a bike,” said Todd Chewning, owner and operator of Cowbell mobile bike shop, who started the program. “For some adults, this is the only form of transportation.”
On Saturday, Chewning will be collecting bikes for the project from 11 a.m.-3 p.m. at his workshop at 6 Crafts Ave. in West Lebanon. He is looking for child and adult bikes that are in repairable condition. Anyone interested in donating a bike can drop by on Saturday or contact Chewning at cowbell.bike@gmail.com to arrange another time.
The idea for the Community Community Bike Project began in 2016, when Chewning started offering Earn-A-Bike classes in which where students attended eight hours of class learning how to repair bikes and then kept their bike at the end.
Chewning realized that, in the Upper Valley, with limited public transportation, bikes can be a lifeline, especially for people in need. In 2018, he was contacted by the Upper Valley Lake Sunapee Regional Planning Committee, which had secured a grant to fix up dumpster-bound bikes. He was able to repair and donate 15 bikes, and this year he hopes to donate even more.
After the bikes are fixed up, they’re given to local nonprofits, including Upper Valley Haven, WISE and the Special Needs Support Center, which distribute them to residents in need.
Chewning said the program has dual benefits for the community.
“It is important to the Upper Valley to first keep used bikes out of the landfill and second to provide reliable transportation to those in need, including children that cannot afford a bike,” he said.
In addition to bike donations, Chewning is looking for more volunteers for the project, both mechanics and people who can help collect donations. The volunteer hours are fairly light (Chewning estimates he put in 20 hours last year), but can make a lasting difference in the lives of Upper Valley residents.
“This is rewarding to me to help give someone a bike,” he said. “And during the fix-up party it was nice to bond with other like-minded mechanics.”
Anyone interested in working with or donating to the Community Community Bike Project can contact Chewning at cowbell.bike@gmail.com or get more information at http://www.cowbellbike.com.

Volunteers are needed to collect bikes and repair them for the Community Bike Project, which provides bicycles to people who need them throughout the Upper Valley.
COURTESY PHOTOGRAPH