Large roadside billboard reading “There will never be a bell loud enough, a helmet strong enough or clothing bright enough to make up for poor infrastructure,” alongside an image of a cyclist riding in a protected bike lane at an intersection.

S2E32 PnP Tom Flood transforming street conversations

Tom Flood transforming street conversations

Shifting Perspectives: Why Tom Flood’s Creative Advocacy is Transforming Conversations Around Safe Streets

In the world of safe streets advocacy, where technical debates often overshadow human experience, Tom Flood’s creative approach stands out. An advertising professional turned advocate, Tom has become a transformative figure whose visual work brings clarity, humour, and heart into conversations about making streets safer. Recently, Wendy sat down with him to explore how creativity can shift long-held assumptions and spark meaningful change.

Table of Contents

  1. Creating Change Through Creativity
  2. Connecting Hearts and Minds
  3. The Advertising Lens
  4. Fighting Fire with Fire
  5. Strategies for Advocacy
  6. Humanising the Conversation
  7. A Call to Action
  8. A New Normal
  9. Get Involved

Creating Change Through Creativity

Wendy opens the conversation in her studio, talking with Tom about his journey from Toronto’s busy streets to his work with Rovelo Creative. A single bike ride with his children led him to notice the imbalance on local roads. That moment pushed him deeper into safe streets advocacy, fuelled by a desire for basic safety that should be universal.

Tom explains that his work is driven not by statistics but by human stories. His advertising background helps him tune into emotion and clarity – skills that make his posters resonate so strongly. For many people, these visual statements are their first entry point into conversations about safer, more liveable streets.

Connecting Hearts and Minds

Tom notes that safe streets advocacy is often weighed down by technical language. “Numbers don’t connect with the average person,” he says. “We need to talk about benefits at a human level.”

Wendy highlights how Tom’s posters simplify complex ideas, making them relatable and grounded in daily life. By using familiar scenarios, he helps people reconsider assumptions about who streets are designed for and whose comfort is prioritised.

His analogy about smoking areas versus non-smoking areas is a powerful example of challenging outdated norms and inviting people to rethink what we accept as “normal”.

The Advertising Lens

Tom’s advertising background shapes his approach to safe streets advocacy. Instead of producing data-heavy explanations, he uses storytelling techniques common in consumer marketing: clarity, simplicity, and emotional impact.

He shares that he refuses to work on campaigns that promote unsafe vehicles. This decision underscores his values-based approach: advocacy isn’t just what you create; it’s also what you refuse to amplify.

Fighting Fire with Fire

Wendy and Tom discuss how car ads often glorify unsafe behaviour, ignoring the real impacts on communities. Tom’s posters counter these narratives with humour, irony, and a clear message about shared public space.

This light-touch approach helps ease tension in discussions that often become polarised. By reframing the conversation, he gives people permission to see things differently without feeling confronted.

Strategies for Advocacy

Throughout their discussion, Wendy and Tom explore how creative tools can strengthen safe streets advocacy in communities.

Advocates worldwide use Tom’s posters in diverse ways—from digital screens in New Zealand to cheeky wild postings in Vancouver. Wendy suggests integrating these visuals into policy submissions to provide emotional impact that complements written arguments.

Tom encourages advocates to keep experimenting, noting that creativity can break through where bureaucratic language falls flat.

Humanising the Conversation

In politicised environments like Toronto, advocacy can become adversarial. Wendy and Tom emphasise that safe streets advocacy must remain grounded in empathy. Policymakers, planners, and community members all share a desire for streets that feel comfortable, accessible, and safe.

Human stories create connection, and connection creates momentum.

A Call to Action

Tom acknowledges the hard work of on-the-ground advocates and encourages people to keep leaning into creativity. The most effective campaigns tap into shared human desires – safety, comfort, and a welcoming public realm.

Wendy invites advocates to include Tom’s visuals in their submissions and community campaigns to amplify their message with emotional clarity.

A New Normal

This conversation isn’t just about posters or design. It’s about a shift in public thinking. Through creativity and emotional intelligence, Tom Flood shows how safe streets advocacy can challenge ingrained assumptions and expand what people believe is possible.

He invites all of us to imagine streets that put people first – and to take small, practical steps toward making that vision real.

Get Involved

If Tom Flood’s work inspires you, explore his designs and consider how they could support safe streets advocacy in your community. Visit his website and connect with local advocacy groups to help spread the message. Together, we can reimagine the streets we share.

To connect with Tom on LinkedIn: ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/tom-flood-7a91b411/⁠

To share Tom’s posters, follow his Facebook page  – ⁠https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61583795684294⁠

Here’s Tom’s website: ⁠creativebyrovelo.com⁠

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/tomflood.bsky.social

Instagram @rovelocreative

⁠GetAroundCaboolture.au

The Streets and People Podcast

Every day in Caboolture and Morayfield, people get left behind because they can’t drive. Some are too young. Some are older. Others live with disability or manage on a low income. You probably know 1 or 2 people in that situation.

We keep asking the same question: Why do cars get the red carpet while everyone else gets the gravel?

Get Around Caboolture is a local movement focused on practical transport solutions that work for more people. Through real stories and expert insights, our podcast highlights what’s missing – and what’s possible.

Our podcast series:

People & Projects (PnP): Interviews with researchers, advocates, and professionals working on transport solutions across Australia.

Not Everyone Drives (NED): Conversations with locals who don’t drive, sharing how transport access, or the lack of it, shapes their everyday lives.

Road Rules 360 (RR360)
Co-hosted with John Burrill, this series looks at road rules from all angles, with a focus on people walking, riding, scooting, or using mobility aids.

You’re invited to explore the episodes and learn more at www.GetAroundCaboolture.au.

Get Around Caboolture is a community movement advocating for more transport choice and less hassle.

Here are easy ways you can help us get better transport 

Feel free to share the love and post an episode to a friend or colleague you think would enjoy listening to it. 

If you like what we’re doing on our podcast, please review and rate as this helps the analytics :-)

Click here to find out how to help us get more transport options! 

A woman in a pink top jogs toward the open door of a green TransLink bus

Are you 18+ years?

Do you live in the larger Caboolture region?

With limited access to public transport?

If yes, you are invited to complete a 10-minute anonymous online survey.

Participants can choose to enter a draw to win 1 of 2 x $50.00 e-gift cards.

This survey is for residents of the wider Caboolture area.
If you live in any suburb in or around Caboolture (see the full list below), your input is encouraged. The survey uses Caboolture which refers to the whole area, not just the suburb.

Beachmere
Bellmere
Bellthorpe
Booroobin
Bracalba
Burpengary + East
Caboolture + Upper
Campbells Pocket
Cedarton
Commissioners Flat
Corymbia
D’Aguilar
Deception Bay
Delaneys Creek
Donnybrook
Elimbah
Godwin Beach
Greenstone
Lilywood
Meldale
Moodlu
Moorina
Morayfield
Mount Delaney
Mount Mee
Narangba
Neurum
Ningi
Rocksberg
Sandstone Point
Stanmore
Stony Creek
Toorbul
Wagtail Grove
Wamuran
Woodford

Ethics approval: A252866

Exp: 31 March 2026

Laura's family crossing the road
If you're interested in what we do, we could do with your support

Get Around Caboolture is a community movement advocating for more travel options for people in
Caboolture & Morayfield. 

Our Goals

1. All children can ride to school on safe streets 

2. All young adults can get to work or study without needing a car so they begin adulthood without a debt of $15,000 a year. 

A lack of transport options leads to a high financial burden for
families, businesses and governments.

The only way we can be sustainable for the long term is with your help. 

Photo: Dan Peled/The Guardian