Sunday, November 2, 2008

With Free Bikes, Challenging Car Culture on Campus

BIDDEFORD, Me. — When Kylie Galliani started at the University of New England in August, she was given a key to her dorm, a class schedule and something more unusual: a $480 bicycle.

The University of New England

Bicycles to be given to freshmen at the University of New England in Biddeford, Me.

The University of New England

The University of New England bikes are personalized. Free or subsidized bike programs at colleges have had mixed success.

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“I was like, ‘A free bike, no catch?’ ” Ms. Galliani, 17, a freshman from Fort Bragg, Calif., asked. “It’s really an ideal way to get around the campus.”

University administrators and students nationwide are increasingly feeling that way too.

The University of New England and Ripon College in Wisconsin are giving free bikes to freshmen who promise to leave their cars at home. Other colleges are setting up free bike sharing or rental programs, and some universities are partnering with bike shops to offer discounts on purchases.

The goal, college and university officials said, is to ease critical shortages of parking and to change the car culture that clogs campus roadways and erodes the community feel that comes with walking or biking around campus.

“We’re seeing an explosion in bike activity,” said Julian Dautremont-Smith, associate director of the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education, a nonprofit association of colleges and universities. “It seems like every week we hear about a new bike sharing or bike rental program.”

While many new bike programs are starting up, some are shutting down because of problems with theft and vandalism. The program at St. Mary’s College in Maryland was suspended because bikes were being vandalized.

“Ours was one that was totally based on voluntary taking care of the bike,” said Chip Jackson, a spokesman for St. Mary’s, “and I guess that was maybe a tad unwise. So the next generation of this idea will have a few more checks and balances.”

At Ripon, and the University of New England, officials say that giving students a bike of their own might encourage them to be more responsible. Ripon’s president, David C. Joyce, a competitive mountain biker, said the free bike idea came in a meeting about how to reduce cars on campus.

The college committed $50,000 to the program and plans to continue it with next year’s freshmen. Some 200 Trek mountain bikes, helmets and locks were bought, and about 180 freshmen signed up for the program. “We did it as a means of reducing the need for parking,” Dr. Joyce said, “but as we looked at it from the standpoint of fitness, health and sustainability, we realized we have the opportunity to create a change.”

The University of New England here in Biddeford had a similar problem — too many cars, not enough space and a desire to make the campus greener. So it copied the Ripon program, handing out 105 bikes in the first week of school. Because of the program, only 25 percent of freshmen brought cars with them this year, officials said, compared with 75 percent last year.

“We felt the campus could devolve to asphalt parking lots, and a lot of people didn’t want that to happen,” said Michael Daley, head of the university’s environmental council and a professor of economics.

The bikes are marked with each student’s name.

“I don’t have to fill it with gas, and it doesn’t hurt the environment,” said Kaitlyn Birwell, 18. “With a car, you need a parking permit, gas, and it breaks down. I’m a college student and don’t have the money for that.”

Michelle Provencal, 18, said she hopes her bike will help her avoid a dreaded side effect of being a college freshman. “Maybe instead of gaining the freshman 15 I’ll lose it,” Ms. Provencal said.

When Mercer University in Macon, Ga., asked for donations of old bikes, it received 60, which are being fixed up and painted orange and black, the university colors. Forty are available for weeklong rentals, and Mercer has organized mass rides to downtown Macon, about three miles away, to promote the program.

“A lot of students haven’t ridden a bike since middle school or even younger, but when they get back on it their faces light up,” said Allan J. Rene de Cotret, director of the program. “So why not leave your car parked where you live or back home with your parents and ride your bike around campus?”

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Emory University has partnered with Fuji Bikes and Bicycle South, a local bike shop, to provide 50 bikes that can be rented at no charge at six spots on campus. Students can also buy Fuji bikes at a discount and receive a free helmet, lock and lights from Emory.

Students, faculty and staff can go to a rental station, show their Emory ID and check out bikes. The program plans to add 70 more bikes and four checkout points in the next year. In addition, about 150 bikes have been sold through the partnership in the past year, said Jamie Smith, who runs the program, called Bike Emory.

“We like the idea of bolstering the cycling culture here,” Mr. Smith said, “and ultimately it supports alternative transportation.”

Bikes at some campuses were treated as toys rather than transportation. Others were difficult to maintain or were not used.

“The kids weren’t taking care of the bikes, leaving them wherever instead of parking them in the bike racks,” said John Wall, a spokesman for Juniata College in Huntingdon, Pa., which eliminated its two-year-old bike-sharing program this year. “The other problem was that the bikes weren’t the greatest to begin with. They were donated by Wal-Mart, and others were rehabbed. They had also been out in the weather. It just didn’t work out.”

The elements are a concern at other universities as well. More than 150 students at the University at Buffalo signed up for a city bike-sharing program that has drop-off points on campus, but it suspends service from November to April.

“It’s hard to maintain all the bikes during winter, and usage drops dramatically,” said Jim Simon, an associate environmental educator at Buffalo.

Here at the University of New England, officials wonder what will happen when snow starts falling, but they are looking toward bike-sharing programs in cities like Copenhagen and Montreal as proof that they can work in the cold.

St. Xavier University in Chicago this month is unveiling the first computer-driven bike sharing system on a college campus.

Students can wave their ID card over a docking port. The port is attached to a rubber tube, which can be used as a lock and opened by entering an access code. Students must enter the bike’s condition before it can be unlocked. The system is used in Europe, but with credit cards.

The first 15 minutes are free, and users pay 60 cents for each additional 15 minutes, or $2.40 per hour. All 925 resident students automatically become members through their ID cards. The system was intended to be environmentally friendly, with solar panels powering the ports.

A tracking system similar to G.P.S. will keep tabs on the bikes.

“You can’t throw it in Lake Michigan,” said Paul Matthews, the university’s vice president for facilities management, “because we’ll know if you throw it in Lake Michigan.”

Friday, October 31, 2008

Changing ways of commuters

Changing ways of commuters 
Colleges use rewards to entice students, staff to go green

UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

October 31, 2008

Any student who has ever scoured a congested college parking lot for a spot – even a crummy one – minutes before class knows how agonizing the search can be.

Yet at San Diego Mesa College, car poolers are entitled to rock star parking. At San Diego City College, 33 choice parking spots soon will be reserved for hybrids and other high-fuel-efficiency vehicles.


NANCEE E. LEWIS / Union-Tribune
Kim De Wolff, 27, a graduate student at UCSD, sought bike parking on campus Wednesday. The university has floated incentives to students who choose not to drive.

NANCEE E. LEWIS / Union-Tribune
Katie Burrell, 19, who is studying sociology and psychology at UCSD, parked her bike on campus Wednesday.
As part of their efforts to go green, colleges across the country are rolling out programs to promote more eco-friendly commuting among students, staff and faculty. With fluctuating gas prices and all the talk about carbon footprints, students increasingingly are receptive to the idea.

“We're seeing programs where students get free bus passes. We've seen car-sharing programs, bike-sharing programs. Schools going to four-day weeks. Some schools will actually pay you not to drive to campus,” said Julian Dautremont-Smith, associate director of the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education in Lexington, Ky.

Stanford University pays students and employees up to $282 a year for not driving at all, or at least not driving alone. This fall, freshmen at Ripon College in Wisconsin who agreed to leave their cars at home received a free Trek mountain bike, helmet and lock worth about $450.

Also, new bike-sharing programs are popping up throughout the nation, replacing problematic older programs, Dautremont-Smith said.


NANCEE E. LEWIS / Union-Tribune
Jessica Wall (left) participates in UCSD's Pedal Club, which rewards bicyclists with 10 free days of car parking per year. Fellow student Toby Hammer rode behind.
“You'd put a bike anywhere, and anyone could take it,” he said. “Only, sometimes the bikes would end up in disrepair. Or they'd end up in a ditch or somewhere in a lake.”

Newer programs, such as Triton Bikes at University of California San Diego, involve more accountability. Students must show their driver's license and student ID to check out a free bike at stations around campus. The 120 or so bikes were previously abandoned on campus, refurbished and covered with yellow vinyl tape.

“They're not the prettiest, but we try to make them functional and identifiable,” said Rhett Miller, who's in charge of the program.

UCSD is trying a number of ways to discourage students and employees from driving.

For a Ditch Your Car Competition last spring, students who agreed not to drive to campus for a month received a month's worth of free alternative transportation, such as the train or bus – modes that are on the rise nationally.

Americans took more than 2.8 billion trips on public transportation in the second quarter of 2008, almost 140 million more than in the same period last year, according to the American Public Transportation Association. Nearly 11 percent of public transportation users are students, according to a May 2007 association report.

Last year, UCSD fine-tuned its free shuttle service to transport 1,000 more people with 10 fewer buses. In a few weeks, the service will include a special Greenline bus powered by biodiesel.

Meanwhile, UCSD's popular Pedal Club gives 10 free days of parking each quarter to students and others who commit to riding their bikes to campus most of the time.

Senior Jessica Wall joined last winter because it was cheaper and more environmentally friendly. She owns a car but uses it only at night or for long distances. Plus, a growing number of her friends bike.

“It's almost like peer pressure,” she said. “The more people that do it, the more you realize you can do it, too. You realize, 'I don't need to drive.' ”

Senior Michelle Kizner joined the Pedal Club about a year ago to get the free parking permit. She never used it.

“I'm a huge environmentalist,” she said. “(Driving) creates pollution, basically, and I can't know the impact and not do something about it.”


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As UCSD has added programs, campus officials have seen a gradual shift in commuting behavior. Transportation data show that single-occupant vehicle usage around campus dropped from 66 percent in 2001 to 49 percent in 2008.

The University of San Diego unveiled two Zipcars in September to discourage students and staffers from bringing their own cars on campus. Zipcar is a car-sharing service available on more than 100 college campuses nationally, including UCSD.

After paying a membership fee of $35 a year, students can rent a Zipcar for $9 an hour, said André Mallié, executive director of auxiliary services at USD. The cost of gas, insurance and parking is included.

Because parking is such an issue, many schools have leveraged their parking lots to reward environmentally conscious behavior. San Diego State University has 52 car pool spots in two faculty lots and subsidizes bus and trolley passes. California State University San Marcos has 80 prime car pool spaces for students and employees in the main lots. Permits for these spots have sold out in recent semesters.

“This year we sold out before the school year even started,” said Deb Schmidt, campus commuter coordinator at Cal State San Marcos.

Robert DeMartini, student government president at City College, supports the upcoming spots slated for fuel-efficient vehicles.

“It's more or less a stand to say we are environmentally sound and sensitive,” he said.

But, he added, it's a double-edged sword.

“Maybe not a lot of students can afford a hybrid, especially at a community college,” he said. “And would the most eco-friendly people be driving in the first place?”

A community college district spokeswoman said the spots also would be for faculty and staff and make up a small percentage of the 727 total spots in the parking structure.

As gas prices peaked nationally at $4.11 a gallon in July, a number of community colleges around the country began exploring ways to alleviate the burden for students.

Coastal Bend College, for example, shifted to a four-day instructional week on its Beeville, Texas, campus over the summer. The move was so popular that its three other campuses did the same this fall.

J. Sargeant Reynolds Community College in Richmond, Va., wanted to do more. So this semester, the school unveiled Fuel $mart Fridays. The program enables students to take all their classes on Fridays.

“We know our students are pushed for money for gas, and we had started discussing how we were going to remove barriers for students going back to school,” said Nannette Smith, associate vice president of academic affairs.

With a typical student commuting about 20 miles a day, the program can save them from driving 80 miles a week or 1,280 miles a semester, according to the college.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

British Columbia to benifit from $14 Billion Transit Plan


On the heels of recent cutbacks in transit service in the Silicon Valley I came upon this news item that was published January 14, 2008 in the Times Colonist. In what was billed as the largest provincial infrastructure spending plan in history; the plan would double the number of buses in the area by 2020 and create two new rapid transit lines.

Some of the money will go to:
  • $1.2 billion for high capacity rapid bus service along nine routes in Kelowna, Victoria, and Vancouver.
  • $1.4 billion to be earmarked for four new rapid transit lines in Vancouver.
  • $1.6 billion will be spent on 1,500 clean energy buses provide improved bus service around the province.
According to the article, "Greater Victoria's transit system is already in its biggest expansion in a decade with the purchase of 16 new double-decker buses. A record 22.2 million passengers used transit in the region in 2006-07, an increase of four per cent over the previous year."

In comparing this with the VTA; Vitoria BC had ridership last year of 22.2 million passengers in a city of 79,000 in 2006 verses VTA's passenger count of 31.0 million passengers in the valley. San Jose alone has a population 930 million. Santa Clara County's population topped 1.6 million residents in 2006. A ridership rate of 282 trips per person verses Santa Clara County's 19 trips per person! Let me repeat that 282 vs. 19.

see also Miss 604's transit blog.

Photo by Dennis Sylvester Hurd at http://www.flickr.com/photos/dennissylvesterhurd/

Caltrans Forced to reduce Oil and Toxic Waste from California's Highways



Another cost of the primacy of the automobile, toxic sludge draining into Southern California's waterways was highlighted yesterday in federal district when Caltrans and the National Resources Defense Council and Santa Monica Baykeeper reached an agreement to limit pollution to the southland's watershed. The agreement calls for a reduction of pollution to 20% below 1994's levels. According to David S. Beckman a Defense Council attorney, This represents a major step forward in the control of storm water runoff -- the largest source of water pollution in the state."
LA Times "State to Curb Toxic Runoff" Dan Weikle January 19, 2008.

The state's Environmental Protection Agency reports that runoff oil alone accounts for 6 million gallons of oil from roads and sidewalks. Compare this with the recent headlines of an oil tanker spill in the San Francisco by which spilled 58,000 gallons of oil from a point source. Most of the oil combines with rubber, metal bits, human waste, solvents, pesticides, fertilizers, and brake dust. All of this combines to form a toxic sludge that effects birds, fish, shrimp, and other marine life.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

A Sad, Sad Start to the New Year


Traffic Fatalities continue to plague San Jose City and Santa Clara County. With the sad death of Hsien Tsun Wan, 77, only ten days have passed into the new year with a road fatality victim each represented by a pedestrian, cyclist, auto passenger and driver. There has also been a fatality during the first 10 days which died after being struck by a VTA light rail train.

Now with six road fatalities by the first half of the first month; at this rate the county could possibly reach 150 fatalities by the end of the year far eclipsing 97 road fatalities in 2007. Somehow when we state that We are America's safest big city, we never seem to mention traffic deaths or injuries.

Monday, January 14, 2008

San Jose Mercury News Article on Pedestrian Fatalities

Today's Mercury News featured in the local "Valley" section this morning an article about the recent and dramatic rise in pedestrian deaths last year and more specifically in the last 3 and one-half months. Pedestrian deaths almost doubled from 2006 to 2007 in San Jose. No specific figures were given on pedestrian deaths for Santa Clara County as a whole, only that there were 14 other pedestrian fatalities in the South Bay area. San Francisco also exhibit a similar rise in pedestrian deaths last year.

Lt. George Graham was quoted as saying, "This startles me, I don't understand it."
The article stated that they are reviewing traffic reports looking for a common thread. In discussing other pedestrian casualties - including the young girl walking her bike in a crosswalk towards a popular park in Willow Glen - the police have either stated it was the pedestrians fault or it was due to some environmental factor such as sun glare.

"He especially wants officers to target wide, six- or eight-lane expressways where pedestrians can be surprised at how much pavement a car going 45 mph or faster can cover in mere seconds.", the article states.

Common Threads

Common threads that I can see after removing somewhat obvious reasons such as alcohol, hearing disability, and age (84). Outside of these factors, it appears as though some common threads would be the area, the useability of the roadway for pedestrians and the fact that some pedestrians were born in other countries with different rules, traffic flows and speeds.

But first a comment on the new enforcement target of six or eight lane expressways. By their very design the only roadway more deadly is an interstate freeway. Take for example speed on an average Silicon Valley expressway. The posted speed limit is 45; the real speed is 55, and in the case of a recent teenagers death the speed on San Tomas Expressway was 75. In addition to speed, a pedestrian has to cross six to eight lanes of traffic with no protected island in the middle. Let's perform some basic math here. An average pedestrian covers 3 miles an hour when out for a stroll. Advancing age or the burden of carrying children or shopping this pace can slow to 2 miles an hour. Doing the math that works out to 3 to 4.5 feet per second. Now, where Estella Bacong was crossing E. Capitol Expressway near Quimby is about Rd. is about 130 feet across. It is actually even wider at the intersection approaching 160 feet (or as close as I can get with my Google Maps Distance Measuring Tool). Dividing 130 feet by a conservative 4.5 feet per second it would take her just under 30 seconds to cross the street. If she was not so quick or carrying shopping bags it might have take her up to 40 seconds to cross the street. So while she is traversing the expressway at 4.5 feet a second, a Toyota 4Runner with a Gross Vehicle Weight Rating of 5,000 is traveling at about 74 feet per second; worse odds than even the stingiest Las Vegas casino.

As long as you have people who are dependent on walking to get around town in a city that was designed for cars; and each year those cars get heavier, travel faster, with drivers who are more hurried and distracted, you are going to be assured of more and deadlier accidents.

Without climbing on too high of a soapbox here, a daily example is in order. In my neighborhood is a school with a radar detector and sign unit that displays a drivers speed. On any given school day with children present (and even in the crosswalk) vehicles approach doing upwards of 40 miles an hour in a 25 MPH zone. Not once have I seen any speed enforcement present in front of this school.

I wish the city of San Jose luck but it will take more than just finding fault with pedestrians in having to deal with a system that was not designed by or for them.


www.pedbikeimages.org / Dan Burden