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July 2, 2008

Be Prepared: Commuting During Art Fair

It’s that time of year again.  The Ann Arbor Art Fairs will descend upon downtown Ann Arbor from Weds. July 16-Sat. July 19th.

Because the Art Fair’s close many downtown streets and parking prices increasing during this time, you might be looking for other commuting options during this time.

getDowntown has created a page on our website with info on Art Fair Commuting, from which streets will be closed, to what you need to know to get around.

Check it out here: www.getdowntown.org/resources/Commuting_during_Art_Fair.html

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June 26, 2008

Reduce Your Commuting Costs with the Commuter Tax Benefit

Perhaps you are thinking about busing, carpooling or vanpooling and need another financial incentive to get you motivated.  Perhaps you are an employer looking for ways to encourage your employees to use sustainable transportation to get to work.

Either way, you should definitely check out the Commuter Choice Tax Benefit.

A little about the benefit:

“The law allows employers to give their workers up to $115 each month for transit or vanpool commuting costs as a tax-free benefit. It also allows employers to give employees the option to use payroll deductions to avoid paying taxes on up to $115 a month in commuting costs. Alternatively, employers can share these costs with their workers by paying part of their monthly commuting costs and letting workers pay the balance using pre-tax dollars. Either way, both employers and their employees can save money by participating in this simple plan.”

Check it all out here: http://www.apta.com/research/info/online/paystoride.cfm

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Simple. Clean. Fast. Reasons Nicole Rides the a2Chelsea Express

Filed under: Your commute options, busing, commuter friendly businesses, go green — Nancy Shore @ 4:18 pm

Every once and awhile, getDowntown does a Commuter Profile. This month, our featured Commuter is Nicole Trinkle of the Whole Brain Group. Read all about her and the a2Chelsea Express below:

Nicole Trinkle

“It couldn’t be simpler. I get on at the end of the block. It feels like it takes 5 minutes. And it’s always on time.”

Nicole Trinkle (pronounced Trink-lee) has nothing but good things to say about the new a2Chelsea Express.

The Ann Arbor Transportation Authority (AATA) started the a2Chelsea Express on May 15, and Nicole was one of the first people to get on the bus. The a2Chelsea Express runs from Chelsea to downtown Ann Arbor twice in the morning and twice in the afternoon during peak commuting times. And it just takes about 20 minutes.

Nicole works for the Whole Brain Group, a software development and accreditation company in downtown Ann Arbor. She grew up in Chelsea, got her degree from Eastern, and now enjoys saving money, catching up on sleep and reading books on the a2Chelsea Express.

Nicole is one of the many people who get on the a2Chelsea Express every morning at the Arctic Coliseum in Chelsea. Some of the other bus riders include a lawyer, a landscape architect and UM employees. And the coolest part is the bus drops Nicole off a block from her work!

But Nicole doesn’t just ride the a2Chelsea Express for conveniences’ sake. It also saves her a huge amount of money. How much? If you include the cost for parking and gas, Nicole figures she’s saving well over $200 a month by taking the bus, even including the $125 a month she pays to ride the bus.

To make the cost of commuting even cheaper, the Whole Brain Group is looking to provide their employees with a sustainable transportation benefit, which other companies such as Inner Circle Media already provide. GetDowntown also let Nicole know about the Commuter Choice Tax Benefit, which allows employers to give their workers up to $115 each month for transit or vanpool commuting costs as a tax-free benefit. To find out more about the Commuter Choice Tax Benefit, go here: http://www.apta.com/research/info/online/paystoride.cfm

In addition to getting some sleep on the bus, Nicole has also read three books during her morning and afternoon trips. Right now, she’s in the middle of The Other Boleyn Girl. In her spare time, Nicole really enjoys painting, scrapbooking and being crafty.

When asked what advice she would give other people who are thinking about riding the bus, Nicole says she’s learned to plan ahead so that she can do things like coordinate rides once she’s at work. So when there’s a networking event, Nicole carpools with co-workers to that event, so she doesn’t have to worry about needing a car. Another cool feature of the a2Chelsea Express is that it offers a Guareented Ride Home, so if Nicole did need to get home or somewhere else in an emergency, she’d be able to get a free cab ride.

Nicole also reminds people that you can take a trial run on the a2Chelsea Express and ride free for a week. So there is no cost just to try it out and see if you like it.

Nicole is just one of the many people who are saving money and helping the environment by riding the a2Chelsea Express. If you live in the Chelsea area, why not join people like Nicole and get on the bus? You can find out more here: http://www.theride.org/A2chelsea.asp

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June 25, 2008

AATA ridership is up, up, up!

Filed under: Your commute options, busing, news — Nancy Shore @ 1:57 pm

If you’ve been riding the bus more lately (or for the first time) you’re not alone.

In an article in the Ann Arbor News today, John Mulcahy reports that more and more people are riding AATA buses.  One of the primary reasons cited in the article is the rise in gas prices.

While many of the riders on the buses are affiliated with the UM, the article reports that recently, some of the ridership increases are due to other, non-UM folk riding the bus.

And, as reported in the article, I am seeing increased use of the go!pass, which allows downtown employees to ride the buses for free.

The one thing the article doesn’t talk about is that more people riding the bus doesn’t mean more bus service.  Apparently, since fare revenue (the amount a person pays to use the bus) is so low relative to the total cost of operating a bus, it’s hard to increase service when lots more people ride the bus.

In some ways, I am ok with this.  The bus is like a public good, and it’s important that the cost is kept low so that all sorts of people can use the service.  However, in other ways, this really frustrates me because it means that we must rely on government or other sources of funding to increase service.  And it’s not always easy to get that money.

I hope that as more and more people ride the bus, more people will see the value of having excellent bus service.  This in turn will demonstrate to policy makers (and perhaps private companies) that all of us want a high level of bus service, rail service, etc.

So in all, I think it’s fantastic that there are more people riding the bus.  Let’s keep showing our support for public transit, both by riding the bus and by speaking out about the need for high quality service.

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Number of bikes on AATA buses is increasing

Filed under: biking, busing, research — Nancy Shore @ 8:56 am

In light of the fact that more people are riding AATA buses that ever before, some of you might be wondering if the number of people putting their bikes on the buses is also increasing.

Well it is.

According to the AATA, the number of people boarding an AATA bus and putting their bikes on the bus has been increasing for the last several years.

In May 2008, there were 3,056 bus boardings with bikes.  This is up 18% from 2,593 bike boardings for May 2007.

What might account for this increase?  Well it makes sense that as more people ride the bus, more people will bring their bikes on the bus.  But I also wonder if some of the reason is that people are biking from further away to catch the bus.  Or perhaps more people are just biking in general, and that is leading to more bikes on the bus.

Another interesting stat that I just came across is how many people in the downtown report commuting by bike:

In a 2001 UM study, 2.2% of people surveyed reported commuting by bike to the downtown.
In a 2005 UM study, the percentage increased to 4.2%
And in a study conducted last year (October 2007) by getDowntown (which had similar numbers of survey respondents), the bike commuting percentage was 7.4%

So according to the data at hand, there definitely seems to be an increase in the numbers of people bike commuting, as I surmised in yesterday’s post.

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June 17, 2008

Have Gas Prices Finally Reached a Tipping Point?

Filed under: biking, busing, carpool/vanpool, news — Nancy Shore @ 10:28 am

If you haven’t already read The Tipping Point by Malcom Gladwell, I definitely recommend it.  The Tipping Point is commonly described as “any point when a gradual change quickens and becomes irreversible”.

Some people are wondering if we have reached this point with sustainable transportation because of high gas prices.

That’s the idea discussed in this recent Wall Street Journal Article.

But I don’t think you need to read the article to see what’s going on.  More people that ever are getting on the bus, biking, walking, carpooling, etc. I definitely see this happening in Ann Arbor, where the number of people participating in the Commuter Challenge almost doubled from last year.

I have heard many people remark that they have carpooled, biked, taken the bus, etc. for the first time recently.

So how do you change people’s behavior?  I think gas prices can definitely help.

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June 13, 2008

Bike Fest and Green Commute are ON rain or shine!

Filed under: biking, busing, carpool/vanpool, events, general info, news, rail, walking — Nancy Shore @ 9:28 am

Hello all,

Looks like we will still be going ahead with the Green Fair, Bike Fest and Green Commute since the forecast is only calling for a 40% chance of rain.  So do the no rain dance and come on down!

It’s all happening between 6pm-9pm on Main Street and Liberty Street in Downtown Ann Arbor

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June 12, 2008

Bike Fest and Green Commute tomorrow!

Filed under: Your commute options, biking, busing, carpool/vanpool, events, go green, news, rail, walking — Nancy Shore @ 10:40 am

As part of the Mayor’s Green Fair, getDowntown is helping organize a Bike Fest and Green Commute section of the Green Fair.  We will have tons or great activities, including rides on the Seven Person Conference Bike, an AATA Hybrid Bus, a Zipcar, and much much more!

Read all about Bike Fest Here

Read all about Green Commute Here

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June 3, 2008

AATA Route #4: From Poorhouse to President’s House

Filed under: Citizen Post, busing — Nancy Shore @ 8:38 am

We continue our Route of the Month Series today looking at one of the AATA’s busiest routes, the #4.

In this post, writer Laura Bien imagines what a ride on the Route #4 Washtenaw Bus might have been like in June of 1840. . .

Route of the Month: Route 4
From Poorhouse to President’s House

Route 4 travels the county’s most heavily urbanized stretch of road, where often the only bits of green are patches of fast food restaurant landscaping and trees in parking lots’ mini grass islands. But imagine hopping on the #4 in Ypsilanti in, say, June of 1840.

Remember to look for the bus whose front and side signs don’t read “Washtenaw,” as they do now, but “Middle Ypsilanti Road,” as Washtenaw Avenue was once called. (The #3 would similarly be called “North Ypsilanti Road,” the onetime name of Geddes Road, and the #5 would be called “South Ypsilanti Road,” the onetime name of Packard). Avoid the back of the bus, where the modern-day mildly bouncy ride would instead throw you out of your seat. Pick a dry day, since the Middle Ypsilanti Road is, in 1840, a narrow dirt path. Last, it wouldn’t hurt to sit next to a red-handled emergency exit window–just in case, Heaven forbid, the bus tips over in one of the road’s deep wagon-wheel ruts.

Off we go.

On the bumpy, jaw-rattling ride to Ann Arbor, the view is reversed from the present-day scene. Instead of buildings and parking lots with relatively little greenery, the rider sees green trees, tidy fruit orchards, black and brown cows, and neatly-fenced farms, with only a few buildings in sight. Look south when passing Carpenter Road and you see the handful of buildings that eventually formed the now-vanished village of Carpenter’s Corner, at Carpenter and South Ypsilanti Road.

One of the most impressive buildings comes into view just southeast of the city limits. Here the rider sees the new two-story poorhouse. It occupies a 128-acre farm. In one field the rider glimpses several people tending rows of vegetables; these are the pauper residents, who helped tend the farm and who, by all accounts, were treated humanely.

Even forty years later, the facility was Michigan’s only county poorhouse with a special bathing-house, when many Michigan county poorhouses had no bathing facilities at all. The site is today’s County Farm Park at Washtenaw and Platt.

The most exciting scene comes further down Washtenaw, where the rider can disembark to view the infant University of Michigan, occupying the square bounded by North, South, and East University Avenues and State Street. Only four buildings appear: professors’ houses, of which the modern-day President’s House survives. There’s also a prepared foundation for the scheduled construction of Mason Hall, which served as both dormitory and classrooms for U-M’s first class, in 1841, of 6 students. Otherwise, the campus looks barren, with muddy paths between the buildings. An L-shaped line of oaks, along the eastern and southern sides of campus, provides the only shade. The campus’s bleak appearance prompted one group of advisors in 1847 to suggest that “the highway of thought, and intellectual development and progress, much of which is parched and rugged, should, as far as may be, be refreshed with fountains and strewn with flowers.” They’d likely smile to see today’s pretty campus, and the time-traveling rider also smiles to see the humble beginnings of a great university on its third birthday, three years after its inaugural regents’ meeting on June 5, 1837.

A smile that fades at the thought of the hair-raising 1840 bus ride back to Ypsi.

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June 2, 2008

Cedric Richner’s Commuter Challenge Blog

Filed under: Citizen Post, Curb Your Car Month, Your commute options, biking, busing, carpool/vanpool — Nancy Shore @ 10:47 am

Want to see the Commuter Challenge through the eyes of someone who lived it?  You can by checking out Cedric Richner’s Commuter Challenge Blog. Cedric works for Richner and Richner as a fundraising consultant.

Here are a couple of snippets:

“May 1: Today is the beginning of my vow to not use my car for the entire month. I walked down to the bus stop, chest thrust out- nose in the air- and dismissively eyed the mass of humanity in their gas guzzling behemoths. I could practically hear them cackling with glee as they raced through the streets relentlessly pursuing their demonic mission to destroy the earth with their over the top, self absorbed singular focus on sucking the planet’s resources dry one commuter, one commute at a time. . . .”

“May 5: Today marks the day of my first official client visit via my bike. I was about to leave on the three mile ride to the client site when a co-worker told me that she was going to be driving right by where I needed to go… What could I do? What would you have done? . . .”

“May 7: Warning! Beware of any company that employees a guy named Rooney, William
Vice President, Security Strategy and Special Operations… You just know that you are going to be in for a bad experience. Rooney, William works for a company called “Amtrak”. You might have heard of it…”

Read Cedric’s Commuter Challenge blog here

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