Transportation Nation

Car-sharing matches unused cars with people who need them

Casey Miner May 27, 2011
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Transportation Nation

Car-sharing matches unused cars with people who need them

Casey Miner May 27, 2011
HTML EMBED:
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Tess Vigeland: Some 35 million Americans are expected to hit the road this holiday weekend, according to AAA. And they’ll be spending more for a gallon of gas than they did at this time last year. But some people do entirely without cars. They rent when they need to or borrow a buddy’s wheels. But three new companies in the Bay Area are matching unused cars with people who need them.

KALW’s Casey Miner reports.


Ali Fenn: My car is a fun car, it’s a big, jacked-up Jeep, and it’s got oversized tires, the top comes off and it’s a fun car.

Casey Miner: Ali Fenn lives in San Francisco. And she’d be happy to let you borrow her Jeep, even though she’s probably never met you.

Fenn: I had my first rental within a week. It was slightly awkward. The person was like, “How does this work? What do I do?” I said, “I guess I just give you my keys and you drive away.” It was very easy.

Fenn drives her Jeep maybe once a month; the rest of the time, it just sits in her garage. A few months ago, she found out about a new company called Getaround, located just down the street from her. She registered her Jeep on Getaround’s website, set up a calendar to show when it was available and named her price.

Fenn: I charge $15 an hour or 50 bucks for a day.

Renters pay for gas, and the company provides comprehensive insurance, so the car is totally covered.

Fenn: It was gone for 24 hours, it was gone overnight, and I walked down through my garage to go somewhere else and the car wasn’t there. And I thought, “I have no idea where my car is at this moment.”

Jessica Scorpio is one of the founders of Getaround. She says people who car-share don’t think of their cars as their babies; they just see them as tools. So they’re not overly attached.

Jessica Scorpio It takes a certain kind of open-minded person to decide they want to share their car.

But she says, people still need to feel like they’re in control. Ali Fenn says that’s what helped her make the leap.

Fenn: At times in the past, I’ve had cars I wouldn’t let anybody touch, including the one I have now. But I just sort of come to a point where I thought, “What could possibly happen?”

We’re not talking cheap clunkers here. You can rent anything from late ’90s sedans to a brand-new Tesla Roadster. The idea is for car owners to make money. That Tesla will run you $50 an hour.

Shelby Clark: We’ve got a number of Priuses, we’ve got a bunch of SUVs, a truck, a big cargo van.

Shelby Clark is the founder of RelayRides, another car-share company in the city. His goal is for people to be able to find the kind of car they need, when they need it.

Clark: People are becoming more and more comfortable with sharing. But at the same time, people don’t really want to compromise on their lifestyle. And I think that sharing goods is a really great way to do that.

Right now, a few thousand people are car-sharing in the Bay Area. But will this work for those of us who don’t have fancy rides? I decided to find out by signing up my own car: A 1998 Honda Civic. Dark green and awesome. I picked Getaround, because they have cars and renters in my neighborhood.

Jessica Scorpio met me at Getaround’s offices in San Francisco to take a look.

Scorpio: I’d say this is probably on the old, beat-up end of the spectrum, to put it kind of bluntly, I guess.

OK, so my car does have more than 100,000 miles on it. And one of the doors doesn’t open. And there’s no radio. But it runs just fine. Surely I could persuade someone to rent it. I sat down with Scorpio to create my car’s online profile.

Scorpio: Check off what features your car has.

Miner: I do have air conditioning… Let’s see… Nope, I think that might be the only feature that my car has.

Given that, I set my hourly rate to the minimum: Just $3 an hour. But a few days went by and no one was biting. I started to worry that my car just wasn’t good enough. Then, finally, I got a request.

Chris Brooks: My name is Chris Brooks, I’m from Las Vegas, Nev.

Brooks told me he came to California more or less on a whim. The mood just struck him one day…

Brooks: …And here I am.

Miner: Well, have a good time this week.

Brooks: Yeah, thanks for letting me use your car.

Brooks returned my trusty Honda Civic a few days later, in pristine condition: He filled up the gas, even made me a new set of keys. It was nice to have my car back, but in the end, I’m just as well off without it. If I really need to drive somewhere, I can always rent someone else’s car.

In San Francisco, I’m Casey Miner for Marketplace Money.


Vigeland: Casey’s story was part of the Transportation Nation public radio reporting project.

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