UNC law student and Hillsborough native Amanda Gladin-Kramer bought her first road bike and began cycling in May.
Since then, Gladin-Kramer, who is in her second year of law school, has completed 50- and 75-mile bike rides. She even pedaled a 100-mile ride in August.
On Wednesday she embarked on her most significant ride yet — a five-day, 476-mile course across North Carolina to raise awareness about state budget cuts to education.
“It is a little crazy,” she said. “I know it will be very, very difficult.”
Gladin-Kramer’s original plan was to bike one mile for every $1 million cut.
When she began planning the ride, data she researched suggested the cut was about $476 million, and she decided to use that number to ensure she biked enough symbolic miles.
The state budget cut to public education is about $459 million, according to a report from the N.C. Senate appropriations committee.
In June, the N.C. General Assembly approved a budget with sweeping cuts to help close a $2.4 billion gap. To cope with cuts, state public schools eliminated about 6,300 positions and laid off about 2,400 employees for the 2011-12 academic year — the largest cuts in recent history.
Gladin-Kramer said she hopes to draw attention to the budget cuts and to organizations that are working to alleviate their impacts.