December 4th 2002 >> THE PRESS
DEMOCRAT
Three in Sonoma County top commuter-friendly list
by Erin Allday
Free bus passes and prime parking spots don't exactly spring
to mind as the ideal job perks a company can provide.
But at Amy's Kitchen, they're a pretty hot commodity.
The Santa Rosa frozen food company, along with dozens of other
Sonoma County employers, provides the city bus passes and parking
spots as incentives for workers to carpool or find other means
of getting to work.
The goal is to reduce air pollution and traffic congestion
by getting more cars off the streets, said Cindy Gillespie,
director of human resources at Amy's Kitchen, which is located
in a busy hub off Northpoint Parkway in western Santa Rosa.
It's also keeping employees happy, she said. Between 50 and
100 of the 600 employees at Amy's Kitchen ask for the bus passes
every month, and the four parking spots reserved for carpools
are full during every shift.
"We've just been really conscious about trying to do
everything we can to control traffic," Gillespie said. "I
think the bus pass definitely, that's a really great perk.
And the parking places are really hot right now.
"For its efforts at encouraging employees to use alternative
transportation, Amy's Kitchen was one of three Sonoma County
employers picked by a Bay Area environmental and business coalition
as among the best for commuters. Agilent Technologies and the
City of Santa Rosa also made the list.
The Bay Area's Best Workplaces for Commuters Coalition --
which includes the federal Environmental Protection Agency
and several transportation agencies and business groups like
the Bay Area Council and the Silicon Valley Manufacturing Group
-- released its first-ever list of 84 employers that provide
incentives to help workers avoid driving.
The coalition hopes to draw attention to companies that have
developed creative ways to encourage alternative transportation
in the hopes more companies and the people who work for them
will do the same.
According to recent Census figures, 75 percent of Sonoma County
workers drive alone to work. In the Bay Area, only Santa Clara
County had a higher percentage of solo commuters.
The City of Santa Rosa joined the list in part for its program
that offers incentives to employers and commuters to leave
their cars at home. About 1,800 people have signed up for the
6-year-old program that gives employees of Santa Rosa-based
companies prizes like free movie tickets if they carpool or
use alternative transportation at least eight days a month.
"It's about air quality," said Joan Moulthrop, the
city's transportation systems management coordinator, who runs
the incentive program. "That is the goal, to reduce air
pollutants.
"She said that participants in the incentive program
cut back 7,800 car trips in October by carpooling, taking the
bus or walking or biking to work. And with the new carpool
lanes on Highway 101, she's seen interest in the program spike
in the past month.
At Agilent Technologies, Sonoma County's largest private employer
with 3,600 employees working at facilities in Santa Rosa and
Rohnert Park, about 60 people participate in the city program,
said spokesman Jeff Weber. Other company incentives range from
135 convenient parking spaces for carpools to showers for employees
who bike to work.
Agilent also provides a shuttle service between its Fountaingrove
and Rohnert Park facilities so employees won't have to drive
themselves to meetings, and workers who carpool have access
to the emergency ride program, which guarantees them a free
taxi ride home if they suddenly have to leave work.
"For me, I carpool because of sustainability and environmental
matters," said Petaluma resident Claire McCarthy, who
carpools to her job at Agilent about twice a week. "Anything
I can do to lower greenhouse gas emissions I will try and do.
Besides, the days when I don't carpool, I'm stuck just watching
all these other cars whiz by me in the carpool lane.
"Weber said almost all of Agilent's carpool spots are
taken every day. And while he couldn't say exactly how many
employees use bicycles to commute, biker Louis Salz said about
20 to 30 coworkers regularly peddle to work.
Salz, a research and development engineer, has been riding
his bike nearly every day for the 22 years he's worked at Agilent.
It takes him 25 minutes to ride the 5 miles to work -- including
a famously strenuous climb up Fountaingrove Parkway. Once he
gets there, Salz hits the locker room for a quick shower and
changes into fresh clothes.
"It keeps me in shape. I find I feel better, more alert," Salz
said. "And it saves money. The single biggest expense
most of us have outside of our homes is our cars."
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