Vehicles Banned On Campus…
October 15, 2008
Post by our pal, The Alternative Vehicle Reporter
Looks like the future of private transport is changing more rapidly than even IBM and the car manufacturers thought. Community vehicles are already here!
Today I discovered two universities in the US that have BANNED private vehicles for freshman students. Instead, they have a partnership with a car-sharing program by Zipcar. IBM’s Automotive 2020 study did predict it, just looks like they were a bit off the mark as to when…
Alternative Transport - car sharing
We’re seeing a lot more sustainability-minded colleges, universities and even high schools encouraging their students to walk or bike, rather than drive, to classes. But two institutions of higher learning, one in the north, one in the south, are taking things even further by banning on-campus cars for all incoming freshmen.
For the first time ever, the University of Miami is prohibiting cars for freshmen starting this fall. Instead, new students, returning students and faculty alike will be able to travel around campus and the city using fuel-efficient cars available through a university partnership with Zipcar. The car-sharing program offers users hourly, daily or annual access to cars when needed, gas and insurance costs included.
The Zipcar option will also be offered at Maine’s Bowdoin College, where first-year students will be barred from having on-campus cars starting next fall (2009).
“Students get along just fine without a car on campus, even in the winter months,” said Tim Foster, dean of student affairs. “With expanded alternative transportation methods in place now and others planned for the coming year, we believe first-year student transportation needs can be met quite adequately as we reduce the environmental impact, parking difficulties and congestion caused by additional cars.”
The University of Miami and Bowdoin are among a growing number of colleges and universities that have partnered with Zipcar. Other campuses offering the car-sharing program include Amherst, Boston, Columbia, Georgetown, Harvard, M.I.T., Smith, the University of Chicago, the University of North Carolina and Wellesley.
(See the original article here)





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