(photo courtesy of Zipcar)
A new partnership with Zipcar, the world’s leading car sharing network, provides an additional transportation option for students and employees of Oregon State University – Cascades. Included in the partnership are two Zipcar vehicles located on the new OSU-Cascades campus for convenient pick up and return.
The Zipcar vehicles are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week for students, faculty and staff age 18 and older, as well as members of the local community over the age of 21.
OSU-Cascades will initially offer two vehicles, a Ford Focus named “Freefall” and a Ford Escape named “Equinox.” The Zipcars are located in designated parking spots in the on-campus lot for convenient pick-up and return.
Casey Bergh, transportation program manager at OSU-Cascades, said car sharing can encourage employees and students to explore alternative transportation to and from the new university campus. “Many of our students and employees are planning to commute by bus or bike, or walking. The Zipcar option allows them flexibility to get to off-campus meetings and even run personal errands in the middle of the day.”
This year, OSU-Cascades members can join for $15, with rates for Zipcar vehicles on campus starting at $7.50 per hour and $69 per day. After the first year, student and employee members will pay an annual membership fee of $25. Gas, insurance and up to 180 miles of driving per day are included in Zipcar rates, and cars can be reserved for as little as an hour or for multiple days.
Rates are higher for community members and can be found on www.zipcar.com.
Denali Emmons, a first-year student from Hood River, came to OSU-Cascades without a car. “Bend has created an amazing transportation system for students without their own vehicles. Not only do we have the options of riding the CET bus system for free, or riding bikes, but we now have the option of using a Zipcar vehicle. It is nice to know that my friends and I can check out a car for a low price, and use it to drive anywhere.”
Members with iPhones and Android devices can download the Zipcar mobile app to make reservations, lock and unlock the vehicles and honk the horn to help locate the vehicle. Reservations can also be made over the phone or on Zipcar’s website.
“We share OSU-Cascades’ vision of more sustainable transportation on campus,” said Katelyn Bushey, director of university programs, Zipcar. “The introduction of a car-sharing program gives students and employees the freedom to get around without bringing a car to campus, which frees up valuable space and reduces carbon emissions.”
Zipcar has established relationships with more than 500 universities across North America. Additional information and promotions can be found by following @Zipcar on Twitter.
About Zipcar
Zipcar is the world’s leading car sharing network, driven by a mission to enable simple and responsible urban living. With its wide variety of self-service vehicles available by the hour or day, Zipcar operates in urban areas and university campuses in over 500 cities and towns across Austria, Canada, France, Germany, Spain, Turkey, the United Kingdom and the United States. Zipcar offers the most comprehensive, most convenient and most flexible car sharing options available. Zipcar is a subsidiary of Avis Budget Group, Inc. (Nasdaq: CAR), a leading global provider of vehicle rental services. More information is available at www.zipcar.com.
About OSU-Cascades: Oregon State University’s campus in Bend, Ore. features outstanding faculty in degree programs that reflect Central Oregon’s vibrant economy and abundant natural resources. Nearly 20 undergraduate majors, 30 minors and options, and four graduate programs include computer science, energy systems engineering, kinesiology, hospitality management, and tourism and outdoor leadership. OSU-Cascades expanded to a four-year university in fall 2015; its new campus opened in fall 2016.
1 Comment
Zip cars…OSU Cascades and their parking/traffic mitigation is now bordering on the absurd! Everyone in Bend, (except those few supporters of the Westside location that were either so desperate for a 4 year college that they’d take anything or will gain financially from the location) could see this problem coming from day one. OSU will be ‘mitigating’ this for the lifetime of the school in its ill advised sho-horned location. So sad for Bend.