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CAMPUS DRIVE: Car sharing is now
available at Stanford.
Courtesy
City CarShare/Patrick Barber
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the cars are so
smart, they know who’s
driving.
An electronic reader on the windshield verifies
the driver’s
computer-chip-enhanced key fob, deactivates the alarm system,
unlocks the doors and kicks the ignition into go. Then
a monitoring box takes over, clocking the driver’s
time behind the wheel and total miles driven. At the end
of the month, a bill
arrives: $10 for the monthly membership fee, plus $4 per
hour (or $2 off-peak, between 10 p.m. and 10 a.m.) and 44
cents
per mile.
“We’re trying to provide an affordable, convenient
option to private car ownership,” says Annie Bourdon,
San Francisco director of the nonprofit City CarShare, which
placed two cars
on campus in September. “We’re giving people
a choice who may not have access to a car or can’t
afford to own.”
Which describes a lot of Stanford
students. Freshmen are not permitted to bring autos
to the Farm. Just
35 percent of undergrads and 56 percent of grad students
have cars
on
campus.
Plus, “the cars could be an incentive to get [faculty
and staff] to use public transportation, if they knew
they could have a car on campus to go to appointments and
run
errands,” says
Brodie Hamilton, director of Parking and Transportation
Services.
Two silvery-blue Honda Civic hybrids are standing
by in the Tresidder and Serra Street parking lots. An
oh-so-cute signature green Beetle is available in the CarShare
pod
at
the Caltrain station in Palo Alto. Drivers wanted.
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