How’d you like to save thousands of dollars in commuting costs by car? And at the same time cut the number of vehicles on our highways?
The answer: ride sharing.
With the sudden surge in gasoline prices there’s renewed interest in car / van pooling, as the folks at CTrides can attest. They’re the state agency tasked with selling the idea of “green rides”, though I think it’s the green in your wallet that most captures commuters’ attention these days, not just saving the environment.
Remember our clear blue skies
at the start of the pandemic when nobody was driving?
Census data shows that 76% of commuters drive solo while about 8%
share their ride. Transit accounts for
only 4.5% while telework (WFH) is about 7%, but climbing. In Fairfield county transit and telework numbers
are much higher given the time and cost involved with getting to jobs in NYC. The long term effects of work-from-home are
yet to be seen.
The CTrides folks promote all
the alternatives to solo driving, ironic for an agency funded by the CDOT which
spends billions on our roads.
But the excuses for not
sharing a ride are many:
“I like driving my own car by
myself”. Well,
do you like pay for gasoline and car repairs by yourself, too?
“My work schedule is always
changing”.
CTrides can match you with others also on your ever-changing schedule.
“What if I need to get home
mid-day in an emergency?” CDOT sponsors an Emergency
Ride Home program for enrolled companies, paying as much
as $200 for an Uber up to four times a year.
There are plenty of benefits that come with ride sharing, aside from the cost savings. Some interstates (I-91 and I-84) offer diamond lanes for car poolers. Employers often offer preferred parking spots at work.
There’s even a federal
commuter tax benefit of up to $280 a month for
enrolled employees at companies. Talk to
your company’s HR department for details.
Still hesitant to share your
ride? Thousands do it daily on commuter
rail with up to 100 passengers in a single (rail) car: ride sharing on steroids!
Employers find that carpooling often increases morale and employee retention, even if your crew doesn’t join in comedian James Corden’s “Carpool Karaoke”.
CTrides also promotes rail and
bus ridership as well as telework… anything to get SOVs (single occupancy
vehicles) off the road. They’re
optimistic that the increasing costs of gasoline will encourage more commuters
to ride share.
To sweeten the pot even more,
CTrides offers a rewards
program. Just
download their app, set up an account and log your “green rides”. Accumulate enough points and you win
restaurant discounts and cut-rate tickets to shows and attractions. Participants save money and the environment.
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