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Washington University in St. Louis News & Information > WUSTL in the News >


WUSTL in the News Spotlight


(Excerpted from St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2008)

Car sharing makes its area debut

Enterprise Rent-A-Car supplies six hybrids to Washington U. for hourly rental rates

Zeynep Esin, a Washington University freshman, shuddered when recalling the misery Monday night of lugging bags from Target and Best Buy on the MetroLink and then back to her dorm room.

"It was really cold and dark," she said. "It was painful. I wished I had a car."

So she was excited to learn Tuesday that she soon will -- sort of. In the next week or so, she, along with the 16,000 members of the Washington University community, will be able to "share" six hybrid cars -- four Toyota Priuses and two Ford Escapes -- that are already parked in designated spaces around campus.

The car-sharing program, which has no membership fees, will offer hourly rental rates of $10 to $12 and an overnight rate of $15, including gas. When Esin wants a car, all she will have to do is sign up for a time online and then use a car wand to open the car and get the key. No sales clerks or extra paperwork necessary.

The initiative, called WeCar, is being offered through Clayton-based Enterprise Rent-A-Car and is the St. Louis area's first venture into car sharing. The trendy phenomenon has become popular on college campuses and in dense urban areas like New York, Boston and Seattle, where many people do not own cars.

In a couple of weeks, Enterprise will announce the launching of a similar program for downtown St. Louis residents and commuters that will begin with nine Priuses to be shared around downtown.

Thomas Shrout, executive director of Citizens for Modern Transit, has been dreaming of bringing car sharing to St. Louis for about five years but has struggled to find ways to finance it.

Enterprise's first venture into car sharing began about a year ago with plug-in hybrid cars at Google Inc.'s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. The initiatives at Washington U. and in downtown St. Louis, though, are the first efforts in its WeCar program. Martini said Enterprise will be looking to expand in other markets, too.

At Washington University, the WeCar program adds to recent efforts to encourage public transportation. In August 2006, the university started giving all of its students and employees free and unlimited MetroLink and bus passes. It has been a very popular program, but some people were still hesitant to leave their cars at home, said Lisa Underwood, the school's director of parking and transportation.

"We repeatedly heard from people, 'I'd love to take the MetroLink to work, but what if I have a family emergency or a doctor's appointment?'" she said.

The other obvious audience for car sharing is students. Washington U. freshman cannot have cars on campus. And the upperclassmen often complain about parking costs and not being able to find a space in a nearby lot.

In the Washington U. program, the school is not subsidizing the program -- only providing the parking spaces to Enterprise for free. Enterprise is providing the other startup costs and the fleet of cars and hopes to eventually turn a profit.




Appeared in:

Click headline below to view news story as originally posted on an external Web site.

•   Car sharing makes its area debut

Enterprise Rent-A-Car supplies six hybrids to Washington U. for hourly rental rates

St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2008
Byline: Kavita Kumar, ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH


Story also ran in 3 others:  Bloomington Pantagraph (IL), WDAF-TV (Kansas City MO) and KTVI-TV (St. Louis)
(Note: Links do not imply an endorsement; some sites require registration; links may change or become broken over time.)


Related Information
Media Assistance:

Steve Givens
Associate VC for Public Affairs, Executive Dir. of University Communications
sjgivens@wustl.edu

(314) 935-5408
Related Topics:
Education Reform & Policy
Higher Education Issues

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Revised:

Friday, Feb. 22, 2008


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