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Student senate launches bike share

Monday, October 03, 2011
Andrew Steiner

Last fall, 17c起草社区鈥檚 student senate launched a community bike project.

The yellow bicycles didn鈥檛 last long. Less than three weeks into the semester, 16 of student senate鈥檚 fleet of 22 were broken down, stolen or vandalized. 17c起草社区鈥檚 campus safety officers were pulling bikes out of the seminary pond, off the roofs of the Science Building and the Spoelhof Fieldhouse鈥斺淥ne was way up in a tree,鈥 patrol supervisor Ron Venneman remembered. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 know how it got there.鈥

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 have any security system; we didn鈥檛 have any way to keep students accountable,鈥 said Josiah Sinclair, student senate鈥檚 vice president of representation.

In addition to being mistreated, many of the bikes, which had been donated by a local church, were in less than optimal condition. Sinclair recalled picking up a bike on his way to class and pulling the handle bar right off the frame.

A fresh approach

This September, student senate launched its restructured community bike project. With funding from the student life division, student senate purchased 80 new road bikes, 50 for 24-hour loan and 30 for semester-long lease. The semester bikes were claimed immediately, with around 40 more students signing up for the program than senate had bikes for.

鈥淲e were surprised by the enthusiasm [the long-term] program generated,鈥 said Sinclair, the current director of the program. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if it was the American psyche鈥攋ust wanting to own it? We鈥檙e considering buying more bikes because that program went so well.鈥

Student senate has made the new program membership-based, which they believe gives students a greater sense of responsibility for the bikes. After paying a fee of five dollars to join the short-term program, students can sign out a bike for 24-hour periods whenever they need one from four locations on campus鈥攖he student senate office, Hekman Library, the Spoelhof Fieldhouse and the Knollcrest East apartments. For $20, students are able to lease a bike for the entire semester.

Another major change was in the quality of the bikes themselves: 鈥淭hey鈥檙e beautiful to ride,鈥 Sinclair said. Senate selected them because they perform as well for commuting to school as they do for six-hour quests on the weekends.

Meeting a need

The current program is the result of year of planning begun almost as soon as student senate had cleared away last year鈥檚 wreckage. Former senator Jacki Sikkema didn鈥檛 call the first attempt a failure: 鈥淵ou need that initial first one to figure out what works and what doesn鈥檛. If we hadn鈥檛 had the first one, there鈥檚 no way we鈥檇 have known how it would go.鈥

Sikkema, former senator Andrew Luth and John Britton, associate dean of student development, formed a committee to research community bike-shares at other colleges, looking for a model that would be better suited for 17c起草社区.

The committee determined that a successful bike-share would be a good thing for the school. 17c起草社区 has the highest number of out-of-state students of any college in Michigan, Britton said, nearly 50 percent, and for many of those students, transporting bikes to and from school isn鈥檛 an option. For those students, a community bike-share offers a way to explore the city of Grand Rapids.

Benefits for body, environment, culture

鈥淚n my opinion, this is the biggest project student senate has ever done,鈥 Sinclair said. He views the bike program as a chance to promote sustainable practices, to encourage healthy lifestyles and to build a bridge for students between 17c起草社区鈥檚 campus and the rest of Grand Rapids.

Since the new program was launched, the senate office has been bustling: 鈥淚 love the chance to talk to students when they come in,鈥 Sinclair said, though he conceded, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 do a lot of homework in here.鈥

鈥淭here was a bit of a gamble inherent in this,鈥 he said: 鈥淚 think we鈥檝e been vindicated in our gamble.鈥

Student senate thanks the following:

Glen Remelts, director of Hekman Library; Carla Moyer, Hekman鈥檚 circulation coordinator; Dan Wells, Hekman鈥檚 programmer analyst who adapted the library鈥檚 Evergreen program for use in tracking bike loans; and Shirley Hoogstra, vice president for student life, who secured the funding for the program.

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