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12 days left: Park car, vie for SmartCommute prizes

With 12 days left in the 2010 campaign, 4151 Triangle folks have taken the SmartCommute Challenge.

You simply pledge to try a new way of getting to work or to campus. How hard is that?

The deadline is May 15.  Participants are eligible for bikes, gadgets, $1500 cash and other prizes.

I know from past SmartCommute campaigns that this is how lots of people discover whether taking the bus could be a real option for them. Sometimes, they find the answer is Yes.

This year the three-county campaign also features a Flickr photo contest with $750 for the best pic submitted by folks showing how they bike, bus, walk, carpool or (I'm leaving something out I know) telecommute to work. Oh, or vanpool. I know they don't say telecommute any more - they say telework.

Take the challenge, try another way of getting to work

The 2010 SmartCommute Challenge is about to crank up. That means Triangle commuters will get the chance to win cool stuff in exchange for simply promising to experiment with a new way of getting to work.

This is a three-county, month-long campaign for people who commute to jobs or college in the Triangle. To reduce traffic congestion and improve air quality, commuters are encouraged to cut back on driving solo. Alternatives include taking the bus, joining a carpool or vanpool, walking or biking, or "teleworking" from home.

It's pretty easy. Between April 15 (Thursday) and May 15, ... [MORE]

Are the traffic jams getting worse -- or better?

First it was $4 gas, and later it was the recession. Whatever the reason, Americans have cut back on their driving over the past 18 months.

That should mean fewer traffic backups on the way to work each day.

How does it look through your windshield?  Are you getting to work more quickly these days, and home in time for supper?  Do you think Triangle traffic problems have eased since 2007?

I'd like to get your perspective for a story I'm writing this week.  Please call or e-mail me, and be sure to include your name and daytime contact info. 

One more day to enter SmartCommute Challenge and $2,500 drawing

Saturday is your last chance to take the SmartCommute Challenge -- a good idea on its own merits -- and enter the drawing for prices including a $2,500 check.

So far 10,433 Triangle residents have taken the challenge -- which means they pledge to experiment with some commuting mode other than driving alone to work or school. In other words: bus, vanpool, carpool, walk, bike, telecommute, did I leave anything out?

The idea behind this six-week, three-county campaign is simple and smart. Give lots of people incentives to leave the car at home and experiment with other ways of getting to work, and some of this will stick. Some people will actually change their habits.

Details are online

 

26 bicyclists roll around Raleigh

bike to workAs 26 cyclists set off for a leisurely loop through downtown Raleigh this morning, Jim Trogdon was the guy wearing a blue necktie and pinstripe shirt with his bike helmet.

“I usually wear a tie on Fridays, anyway – on ‘casual day,’ I wear a casual tie,” said Trogdon, assistant adjutant general of the N.C. National Guard and chief operating officer for the state Department of Transportation.

“Because of my tight schedule, I decided to bike to work in my duty uniform, but in a casual manner so I do not get too dirty and sweaty on the way in. And it’s perfect weather for that, cool today.”

It was a modest turnout for an event promoting Bike to Work Week. Many of the participants were bike boosters – city and state government and transportation and environmental officials, outdoor retailers, and retired veteran cyclists who still bike but no longer work.

Rebecca Ferres was a new recruit to the world of bicycle commuting.

“I just started yesterday,” said Ferres, 28, after the 15-minute ride around an 18-block circuit. Thursday had been her first day making the 5.75-mile commute from her home to her office on Fayetteville Street, where she works in the city’s stormwater compliance office.

“There’s a lot of reasons why, but I’m poor! I’m trying to save on gas. I need exercise. Environmental reasons. So there’s a hodgepodge of things. I was very scared when I first started, but I’ve gotten used to it.”

Cyclists plan downtown Raleigh ride Friday morning

bike to workDozens of helmeted commuters will tour downtown Raleigh on two wheels Friday morning, mingling with rush-hour automobile traffic in a group ride marking National Bike to Work Week.

Cyclists will gather on the north side of the Bicentennial Mall, in front of the Jones Street entrance to the Legislative Building. The event starts at 8:30 a.m. with a walk south through the mall and a ride looping around 18 blocks bounded by Edenton, Salisbury, Morgan, Fayetteville, Hargett, West and Jones streets.

Breakfast refreshments will be served at the end of the 45-minute ride. The event is free and open to the public. For more information, check the Bike to Work Week website or call 516-2158.

One man's two-wheel commute, in 1860 frames

bike to workIn honor of Bike to Work Week, enjoy this stop-animation show, "3.6 mile bike commute in 2 minutes," of N&O photographer Travis Long's daily ride to the office.

It's set to a frisky pedal-pumping track by The Cool Kids.

Taking the SmartCommute Challenge: 1501 so far

They say virtue is its own reward, and you could argue that taking the SmartCommute Challenge is its own reward, too.

But if it isn't -- if the experience of biking or carpooling or catching the bus is not enticing enough -- there are prizes at stake. Does that sound more rewarding?

The idea behind this six-week, three-county campaign is a simple and proven one. Give lots of people incentives to leave the car at home and experiment with other ways of getting to work, and some of this will stick. Some people will actually change their habits.

This really works. Frequently when I interview some Triangle commuter reading the paper on the way to the office, it turns out that he or she first got the bus-riding bug in a previous SmartCommute campaign.

Here's how it works:

From April 15 through May 30, any employee or college student who commutes to work or campus in Wake, Durham, or Orange County can participate. To enter the Challenge, make
your online pledge that at least once before May 30 you will carpool,
vanpool, bike or walk, ride the bus, or telework (work from home).

Everyone who takes the Challenge will be entered into a drawing to win one of several PRIZES, including $2,500 cash!

That's pretty simple. The website helps you figure out how you actually can ride a bike or a bus or join a vanpool etc., and of course it talks about those prizes. The campaign started last Wednesday, and 1501 people have signed up so far at the website.

Good luck and have fun.

Watch those elbows, Wolfpackers!

Reporter Josh Shaffer paints a pretty vivid picture in today's paper about the congested nature of N.C. State's commuter bus line today.

He writes:

"On a Thursday morning at 9:53, riding a Wolfline bus feels like a trip on a New York subway after a Yankees game. Quarters are close enough on the standing-room-only ride to gaze deeply into your neighbor's ear."

Kinda makes you want to keep reading, huh?

Lucky for you, the whole story lurks just one click away.

 

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