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Posts Tagged ‘CCP/I-GO Card’

Medill Reports covers I-GO/CTA smartcard program

Friday, October 21st, 2011

ccp_igo_card
“I-GO sees itself as a form of public transportation that provides the last mile solution for the CTA.” That’s the good word from reporter John Skelly, Jr., writing about I-GO’s partnership with the CTA for Northwestern University’s Medill Reports.

The article describes the motivating factors behind the 2008 development of the Chicago Card Plus/I-GO Card, a joint smartcard offered by I-GO that lets its members access both I-GO vehicles and CTA trains and buses. Today, reports Skelly, there are about 1,800 cards in circulation. The result: cost savings across transportation modes and a progressive re-thinking of how public transit can fit within a mixture of services to better meet the needs of a metropolitan population.

“You could have the most extensive transit system in the world but every rail line has to have an end. If you have I-GO cars at a station, people can take a car,” says I-GO’s Business Development Manager, Richard Kosmacher, who’s quoted in the article along with other sources who provide a well-rounded POV on the benefits of I-GO.

READ THE ARTICLE »

CTA/I-GO Card now open to all members!

Friday, March 26th, 2010

We have great news! The combined Chicago Card Plus/I-GO Card will be available to all I-GO members beginning April 1, 2010. This applies only to members who joined I-GO prior to this program’s pilot phase launch in January 2009.

I-GO and the Chicago Transit Authority created the Chicago Card Plus/I-GO Card — which provides easy access to I-GO cars and CTA trains and buses, as well as suburban Pace buses — to combine the convenience, affordability, and environmental benefits of car sharing and public transit in one handy smart card.

To learn more about how the card works, please read our CCP/I-GO Card FAQ.

To get your new card, click here and follow the simple steps.

(Please note that there will be a one-time $15 charge on your monthly invoice to cover the cost of your new card. You could more than offset this charge by referring a new member to I-GO. For every approved applicant who names you on their application form, we’ll add $20 in free driving to your I-GO account.)

That’s all there is to it! To all our members who were not able to apply for the card during its first-year pilot program phase: We’ve appreciated your patience while we put the finishing touches on this fantastic program and, of course, your ongoing support as an I-GO member.

Pat Quinn supports I-GO Car Sharing

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

Above: Quinn, second from right, with I-GO CEO Sharon Feigon (far left) and DePaul University representatives during an I-GO/DePaul partnership ceremony in spring 2008.

As Rod Blagojevich’s governorship implodes, and Illinois Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn prepares to take the reins of the unwieldy contraption known as the State of Illinois government, we at I-GO Car Sharing would like to acknowledge that Pat’s an old supporter of our organization and an avid supporter of car sharing and green, sustainable public transit.

Chicagoist just reposted an archived interview they conducted with Quinn in April 2007. When asked for his opinion on transit, Quinn gives I-GO a huge plug as part of the solution for a more efficient public transit system. He’s quite the fortune teller: Just a few weeks ago, the CTA and I-GO joined forces to create a new Chicago Card Plus/I-GO smart card that can be used to ride CTA trains and buses and also access I-GO’s fleet of cars across Chicago, Evanston and Oak Park.

Here’s that part of the interview:

Chicagoist: When you talk about tax relief and budgets in the State of Illinois, those three things – education, health care and tax relief always seem to come up. On a more local level, what would you propose to solve the transit crisis in the region?

Pat Quinn: Well, I take the CTA, and have all my adult life. And I think it really is a crisis. I think the poor service, the trains not always clean as they should be, management leaving a lot to be desired, this should really be addressed. We need the so-called [Regional Transit Authority] to really truly be regional. Too many turf wars between Pace, Metra, CTA, RTA. Given the crisis we have, and the sustainability challenge we have, to have a green way of thinking, where you need to have an excellent public transit system, I think you just can’t hand out money in Springfield to agencies that have been acting in a dysfunctional manner. So I think you have to put some strings on that to get better performance. An example would be a universal pass, which you could use for all transit services, including there’s something we know about called I-GO, which is car-sharing. So you have your transit pass, if you wanted to use a car, and use it for an hour, you know you have this not-for-profit entity, and you can get an I-GO car, and use your pass to drive for an hour to shop, and then bring it back to where the space is. To me those are the creative solutions we need to have right now.