Van Pools Blog

Posts Tagged ‘gas’

VPSI Eases VA Workers’ Commutes After Relocation

March 17th, 2011 0 Comments

v_rideIn early March, VPSI partnered with OhioRideShare to assist the Louis Stokes VAMC Cleveland staff with their commutes. The Brecksville location is being closed and nearly 1,200 employees will be moved to the downtown Cleveland Wade Park campus.  The relocation has created a need for some creative ways to assist with the new commutes the staff will soon face. Rising gas prices were another driving force for the staff to look for ways to not only save money on their commute, but to reduce their carbon footprint, as well the employee parking requirements at Wade Park.

Over the course of 2 days, nearly 200 people registered into the vRide program, which allows users to create their own “pools” based on where they reside, their work schedule and their new work location. While the original focus was on helping the Brecksville staff get to the Wade Park Campus, as word spread around about the events, existing Wade Park staff started forming their own pools.

Some of the comments received about the registration events were:

  • “The people were happy the VA made this happen”.
  • “The event was extremely well organized”.
  • “After we registered, we kept going back online to check responses. We were anxious to see if anyone else had joined our pool”.

Since the events were held, many more VA employees have signed up. As we work through the various transition dates of the move, we are confident we will be able to help many people find an efficient “pool” to get to work. Kudos to the Louis Stokes VA staff that helped organize the event and it is now something that they can “check off their list” of tasks to accomplish for this consolidation project.

Colleen Donnelly, transportation planner at OhioRideShare, said she is excited about the program.

“The partnership between OhioRideShare and VPSI will help hundreds of VA staff save a lot of money on their commutes and we are pleased to be able to offer this wonderful service to them,” she said.

Congratulation to Mary Latino who won the Grand Prize of a $499 Apple Gift Card!

Walletpop Shouts Out VPSI

March 16th, 2011 0 Comments

Rising gas prices have been kind of a theme around the blog these days. And with good reason; as prices continue to go up, more and more of us are looking ways to save money at the pump. Sarah Gilbert over at Walletpop.com, mentions vanpooling in general – and VPSI in particular – in her excellent piece about changing the way we think about commuting.

Beating the Rising Price of Oil

March 15th, 2011 0 Comments

175_2008-19-0007-glenncroston-72dpi-mctphotoBy Glenn Croston
Author of 75 Green Businesses and founder of Starting Up Green

Vanpools are far more fuel efficient than single passenger vehicles and a great step forward for many drivers, but this doesn’t eliminate the need to squeeze more miles from every gallon. The wave of unrest sweeping the Middle East has sparked a big jump in the price of oil and renewed awareness of the vulnerability of our oil supply. More and more it looks like the age of cheap oil is over. As the price of oil rises, so does the pressure to do everything we can to use fuel efficiently and save money, even in vanpools. There are many steps you can take though that can make a big difference for your vanpool, and for our planet.

Some predict that by the summer of 2011 we might see gas prices as high as those from 2008 when the price of oil crested at $147, and strained the budgets for homes and businesses. Even before the current wave of Middle East unrest the signs of economic recovery in the US and rapid growth in China and India was driving the price of oil upward, and these trends are likely to continue. For those managing fleets of vehicles like vanpools, the risk of a big increase in the price of fuel is magnified. Even if you cannot stop buying gas today, you can still protect yourself by taking another look at how vehicles are maintained, and how they are driven.

Some changes are behavioral. By driving more conservatively, avoiding jackrabbit starts and sudden stops, mileage can be increased as much as 33 percent. Slowing down is another way to make every gallon last longer. Depending on how fast you normally go, slowing down to less than 60 miles per hour can boost mileage by 7 percent or more. Changing driving behavior can be hard, but it does happen. Last time the price of oil spike in the summer of 2008, people and businesses responded by doing just these things, reducing fuel consumption for the first time in decades.

More aggressive changes in driving behavior can produce even greater savings. Plan routes to avoid traffic or use new GPS and information tools that lay out traffic choke points and suggest alternative routes. UPS plans routes to avoid left hand turns which take longer and consume more gas than right hand turns. Rolling down the windows reduces efficiency at higher speeds, and air conditioning consumes a fair amount of gas as well, at any speed.

Proper maintenance also increases mileage, including easy steps that cost little. Proper tire inflation can boost mileage by about 3 percent and keeping a vehicle well tuned increases mileage by 4 percent. Using the right motor oil can add another 1-2 percent to your performance. Some have proposed filling tires with nitrogen rather than air to reduce leakage, maintain tire pressure, and increase mileage.

Now is the time to take the next step toward a more fuel efficient country. We need to change how we drive to build a stronger country, and a cleaner world. Vanpools are an important part of this. And if vanpools can save more with steps like these, all the better to drive the move toward greener choices that help us all.

Glenn Croston is the author of “75 Green Businesses” and “Starting Green”, helping businesses everywhere to start green and grow greener at www.startingupgreen.com.

(The views expressed in this post are those of the author and not necessarily those of Van-pools.com or VPSI, Inc.)

What’s going on with gas prices?

February 11th, 2010 0 Comments

fuelpump

In a recent Automotive-Fleet.com market trends blog, Mike Antich writes, “The investment banks of Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley predict $100 per barrel or higher price for crude oil in 2011.”  The last time crude reached $100-per-barrel, the pump price was between $3.25 and $3.50 per gallon. Once the price of crude went above $110, the price jumped to $3.75 – $4.10 per gallon.

Over the past few months, gas prices have been hovering around $2.50 per gallon. But they always seem to rise during the summer months.

My MichiVan Experience

May 5th, 2009 0 Comments

By Carol Jones

I have been in a MichiVan vanpool since May 30, 2006 – 3 years. My drive to work is just over 100 miles per day round trip. I have a four-wheel drive pick-up truck that gets about 15 miles per gallon. 100/15=6.66 gallons of fuel each day. I checked Google for the average cost of gasoline in Michigan in 2006 – it shows between $2.90 to $3.09 per gallon. At $3.00 per gallon, it was costing me $19.98 per day to get to work and back. We were up to $4.00 at one time where it would cost $26.64 per day.

I keep calendars just to keep track of my MichiVan rides. I put a checkmark on the dates I ride and total the days up and
the bottom of the calendar. Friday, May 8, 2009, will be my 500th trip.

For these past three years, I have started and envelope each month. I turn the envelope so I can have room to write the month and year at the top and list each date I ride for that month. I then put $10.00 in the envelope. Read More