Photo: iStockphoto
Ripon College, a private liberal-arts school in Wisconsin, has launched a program to give new bikes to first-year students who pledge not to bring their cars to campus for the year. Prompted by concerns that the school might have to expand parking lots into green space if the growing student population keeps driving to (and parking at) school, Ripon decided to take the unconventional approach instead. The school hopes a few hundred of this year's new students will agree to the deal, especially those who were originally planning on driving. Administrators have high hopes. "We're trying to change the culture," said Ripon President David Joyce. "I figure it's easier to bribe people than to punish them." Students who take the bribe will get a free Trek 820 mountain bike, complete with lock and helmet. Students, you will be tested on this. (Psst, this is the test! Don't fail it.)
Comments
View as Threaded
Delay And Deny Posted 5:11 am
14 Feb 2008
I was looking through this brochure that was part of my Princeton Alumni Weekly magazine and it was about redesigns of the campus. It immediately struck me that it looks like they're trying to build a carfree city almost in New Jersey.
Of course, the Princeton campus, like many great campuses, are really model cities when it comes to promoting walking and bikes above cars. Many campuses only offer two lane winding paths for cars that make it difficult if not impossible to use them. Many campus personal opt for the golf cart approach.
The downside of this is that campuses are investment rich places. It takes endowment, capital and so on to marshall all the resources that make that kind of centralized living possible.
The engineering side of me wonders about the tradeoffs...not just the benefits.
Permalink
Wolverine Posted 8:12 am
14 Feb 2008
Permalink
timhammond Posted 9:42 am
19 Feb 2008
Permalink
Wolverine Posted 4:21 am
20 Feb 2008
Permalink
kmp Posted 4:38 am
20 Feb 2008
My guess is that there would be fewer objections to this plan if it were open to all students, not just first years. After all, why deny a junior a free bike (if he/she chooses not to drive to campus) just because the plan is starting this year? Seems odd.
Permalink
kidintheclouds Posted 12:50 pm
21 Feb 2008
Lack of infrastructure for 200 more bikes--narrow trails, too few bike racks, etc.
Get a free bike the first year, bring a car the next--best of both worlds. What's to stop someone?
Why can't a non-driving sophomore get a bike?
If I were mobility impaired, could I get the cash value of the bike, b/c there's a good chance I'm not driving!
Why not just credit the student $400? A choice between the two? Let them choose a bike, snowshoes, or spend it on text books and walk on campus?
I guess I feel disenfranchised mostly; yet another policy change without any student input. Students should be consulted or have a means to weigh-in.
Permalink