Guaranteed Ride Home Program

Baltimore City Rideshare CityCommute Program

Guaranteed Ride Home Program Registration

Guaranteed Ride Home is a free commuter insurance program for those commuting using alternative modes of transportation within the Baltimore and Washington D.C. Metropolitan Areas.

Offers up to 4 free rides home per year to those who ride transit, commuter rail, bike, walk, carpool, or vanpool to work at least twice a week. Typically, the ride home will by cab or rental car.

Free to all working in the Baltimore, Central Maryland, and Washington D.C. regions.

It’s there when you need it. For when you stay late and miss your ride home or have to leave work early due to illness, kids, or an emergency.

Makes it easier to depend on alternative modes of transportation.

Easy-to-use phone number: 1-800-745-RIDE.

Operators on call between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m., Monday – Friday.

Your privacy is guaranteed too. We don’t like spam either.

guaranteed ride home baltimore

Fill out the secure form below to register for Guaranteed Ride Home.

Once your application has been processed (normally within 24 hours), you will recieve an e-mail from your rideshare coordinator. You should also recieve a card in the mail from Commuter Connections.

Guaranteed Ride Home is a program of Commuter Connections, The Baltimore City Department of Transportation, and the Maryland Transit Administation.

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Peopleforbikes.org wants to know how you roll


peopleforbikes.org

As one of the first 200,000 people to sign the peopleforbikes.org pledge, you’ve made it clear that you want a better future for bicycling.
Now, we want to give you a chance to tell us more about your own experiences on a bike.

While the peopleforbikes.org movement is designed to unify all people who ride bikes to speak with one powerful voice to policymakers, media, and the public,
we’ve also created this special opportunity for you to help guide the future of bicycling advocacy and products.

We want to know why you ride a bicycle, who you ride with, and what type of bicycling you do. Having a better sense of Americans’ bicycling habits will help enable us to create a
stronger peopleforbikes.org movement. Your answers will also contribute to the development of better bike products.

Please take 10 minutes [it is rather long] to answer this survey on your bicycling habits and preferences. Completing the survey makes you eligible to win one of two Schwinn cruiser
bikes or one of 10 peopleforbikes.org prize packages.

Click here to take survey: https://survey.leisuretrends.com/default.asp?study=S544V1127&pinid=05EBA4F63

Survey rules: https://www.peopleforbikes.org/pages/giveaway_official_rules

Happy Trails,

Tim

Tim Blumenthal
Director, Peopleforbikes.org

Supported by:    
HUMANA
    
SRAM

Rules of road for bicyclists proposed

Once again Michael Dresser shows that he is a motorist that "get’s it." Job well done Michael!

Read the full article here: https://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/news/traffic/2011/05/rules_of_road_for_bicyclists_p.html

I have a few comments (of course 😉 )

I find the comments interesting that a bike horn is near useless because of drivers having music blaring vs the comment on cyclists using music players and "need" to hear things. Which leads me to the thought I wish bills going through Annapolis had options to pick, like: 1) Playing music in a motor vehicle is prohibited because drivers need to hear pedestrians and bicyclists they are about to run over OR 2) Allow bicyclists to wear headphones and listen to music at a reasonable volume. (Under the principle fair is fair and what’s good for one is good for the other.)

My point here is not to encourage headphone use but to encourage driving a bicycle just like a motor vehicle so hearing is not necessity. That is to say if you are always running red lights and such,* hearing is very necessary so doing that with headphones, well that’s just crazy.

On the subject of horns and bells; Never use a horn on a trail, I know iZombies are a pain but they are out there the same as you to have a pleasant experience away from cars. Don’t bring that car honking attitude to the trails but …

Joggers and walkers please stay right and leave enough space for a cyclist to pass before having to have a horn on the trail becomes a necessity. And Park Services please get this information out rather then put sole responsibility on cyclists. We are willing to do our part but others have to do their part as well.

Avoid busy streets: While Michael’s comments are very good on this point I feel it’s necessary to point out that bicyclists on average don’t like riding busy roads any more the motorists like seeing us there but too often there is no choice if there really was a convenient route with less traffic we would be on it. Or … Dear motorists look at it this way: why are you not using the freeway where bikes and pedestrians are prohibited? If you have limits on how far out of the way you drive, well surprise, bicyclists have limits too. But the main point is very valid the route you take by car and the route you would take by bike are very often very different and it takes a while to think differently.

So if you are thinking of bike commuting and are unsure of a route, use our forum and we’ll try and get a decent bike route together for you.

Forget Your Bike Lock? Businesses in Portland Have You Covered

from Streetsblog.net by Angie Schmitt

Portland Businesses Loan Bike Locks to Forgetful Customers: It’s interesting how businesses are taking leading roles in making Portland even more welcoming for cyclists. Last month we reported local shops were clamoring for additional bike parking space. Now, Jonathan Maus at Bike Portland reports that business owners in this preeminently bike-friendly city have taken to keeping extra bike locks on hand, lest their customers arrive unprepared. “At the American Red Cross on N. Vancouver Avenue, a sign near the bike racks says to inquire at the lobby if you need a lock. I spoke with a woman behind the front desk who said people utilize the loaner frequently. ‘We just call security and they have locks to loan out. Just give us an ID and the lock is yours to use.’” Maus continues: “Loaner bike locks are just one way Portland businesses cater to bike-riding customers.” Wow. Wait till Portlandia hears about this.

Continue reading “Forget Your Bike Lock? Businesses in Portland Have You Covered”

How to get started on a bicycling commuting program

by Ann Brennan
This is Jesse. He’s USA Cycling’s New Media Manager and he rides his bike to work several times per week. As gas prices soar, more and more cyclists are taking to the roads for their morning and evening commutes. But often, even with the motivation to get started on a cycle commuting program, it is difficult to decide how to start.
Few cyclists jump into cycle commuting with both feet. It is a process. But where does the process start? What do you need to know? How do you do it safely and make sure you get to and from work on time in the process?
Isaias O’Daniell uses his bike to commute a total of 15,000 miles a year. Even so, he suggests cyclists start slowly and develop a routine that works for them before trying to do it every day, especially, if they will be cycling twenty or more miles each way.
Most cyclists find that the route they drive is different from the one they ride to work. By using maps and practice rides on their days off they have learned about trails, alleys and back roads they had never seen before. Sometimes these alternative routes offer a shorter distance to work but more often than not the benefit is simply being away from traffic.
The commuter cyclists I spoke with agree that it is important to remember recreational riding is a whole different animal than commuter cycling. The pressure to be on time can cause you to make mistakes you would not otherwise make. Keep in mind that there will be more traffic during commuting hours and the drivers are, more often than not, distracted because they are also on their way to work.
Because learning what you will need to carry with you is a process in and of itself, the cyclists I spoke with suggested making one day a week a logistics day. This is the day you bring in clothes, shampoo, shoes and the extra food you will want to eat before heading back out on your bike at the end of the day. Ben McKeown, who describes himself as a sometimes commuter, pointed out that shoes are heavy. He suggests leaving a pair of shoes at the office fulltime so you are never in the position of having to carry them.
“But,” Mike Binnix another full time commuter adds, “you should not be discouraged if on the second ride in, you get to work or school and discover you forgot your shoes or glasses. If you commit to giving bicycle commuting a try, give it a real try. Make the round trip at least five times over a few weeks and it will become second nature to you.”
Most importantly just as with fitness and recreational rides, remember all of your safety equipment – a tube and C02 cartridge, a small first aid kit and lights, lights, lights. There is no such thing as too many lights.
Lori Garlands who works from home but uses her bike for business meetings several times a week believes there is no reason to learn any lesson the hard way.
“Reach out to the cycling community through local bike shops, bike groups, or even the guy you see riding every morning while you’re sitting in your car. Everyone I have met is willing to share their knowledge and direct you to others that may know more.”
Commuter cycling is not second nature to most of us, nor is it rocket science. Whether you hope to cycle to work on a daily basis or you hope to add one or two days of cycling into your schedule it can be done safely and efficiently by starting slow and learning the ropes along the way.
Ann Brennan is a freelance writer and fitness columnist from Annapolis, Maryland. She writes for Patch and for Ann’s Running Commentary.
Continue reading “How to get started on a bicycling commuting program”

Where can Frederick find money for bike programs?

By Patti S. Borda
News-Post Staff

Bicycle enthusiasts made the loudest case during Frederick city’s budget discussion Tuesday.
Ten of them applauded when the Board of Aldermen endorsed constructing a shared use lane along Seventh Street between U.S. 15 and Fort Detrick.

Mayor Randy McClement said he would offer $20,000 from his contingency fund if bicycle enthusiasts would find matching funds.


He and Zach Kershner, deputy director for engineering, are hoping to be able to extend the deadline to use a $3 million state grant for work on the Carroll Creek Linear Park. A previous extension of the grant, which required a matching contribution from the city, runs out in June.


B’ Spokes: Where can Frederick find such money?
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You’ll note Maryland’s highest requirement of a local match.

Continue reading “Where can Frederick find money for bike programs?”

Next: LAB teams up with DOT to ask motorists to wear fireproof jumpsuits

from TheWashCycle by washcycle

To celebrate National Bike Month, the NHTSA teamed up with AAA to ask cyclists to ride safely. Together, they’ve started Roll Model

a campaign reminding parents and caregivers to set positive examples that encourage children and teens to ride safely, this month and every month.

Why AAA? Don’t they still have work to do with drivers?

I guess they feel they can sell hotel discounts, complain about losing road space to bike lanes and give out bad advice all at once.

And what’s the first lesson in bike safety?  Always wear a properly-fitting bicycle helmet.

No. No it isn’t. That might be tenth. But knowing how to operate a bicycle, the rules of the road, how to ride in traffic, having a bike that operates properly, using lights at night etc…All of those come before a helmet. They list wearing a helmet first, and driving safely last. Nothing like pushing the responsibility onto kids. I’m not one to get behind the Copenhagenize conspiracy-theory idea that car organization push helmets on cyclists, but ….well that’s what’s going on here.

Remember, bicycles on the road must follow the same laws as motorized vehicles.

Wrong again. Bicycles on the road must follow the law, the same as motorized vehicles, but the law is not the same for both. For example, cyclists can often turn without signaling but drivers can not.

Anyway, could DOT really not find a bike organization to team up with? It looks like all AAA did was spring for a webpage.

Continue reading “Next: LAB teams up with DOT to ask motorists to wear fireproof jumpsuits”