University of Utah introduces free campus rideshare app


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SALT LAKE CITY — As part of new safety measures at the University of Utah, students, staff and faculty on campus will be able to download an app and summon a free shuttle to deliver them safely to their dorms or car after dark.

The app called TapRide is currently used by other higher learning institutions in the nation, but the University of Utah will be the first to to bring the niche rideshare app to the state.

“Safety remains an absolute priority for our campus and our university, and safe ride is an example of this focus on safety,” said Lori McDonald, associate vice president of the U.

The idea was brought forth by students on the University’s Safety Task Force assembled by the U. President Ruth Watkins after student-athlete Lauren McCluskey was murdered on campus in October.

“Our campus has had a couple of tragedies in the recent years,” said McDonald, who emphasized “improving campus safety has been incredibly important.”

Alongside the rideshare app, new safety measures include hiring a senior-level chief of safety officer, clustering night classes in quadrants with increased safety patrols, and providing extra student parking after 3 p.m.

The safety implementations, funded by an approximately $925,000 budget appropriation, come on the heels of a $56 million lawsuit filed by McCluskey’s parents, Jill and Matt McCluskey, claiming the university did not do enough to prevent the death of their daughter.

Alma Allred, director of the U.’s commuter services, said the app will make use of three commuter service vehicles, one of which is wheelchair accessible. He noted that the university is in the process of hiring five to six student drivers for the new service, which will make an average of four drivers available from 6 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.

Student drivers will be paid $15.35 an hour to drive their peers around campus or to parking locations near campus. AnnaMarie Barnes, U. student body president, said this was also a result of student suggestions.

She said during a pilot launch of the app over the summer, having “student drivers made the students in vehicles feel more comfortable.”

“It’s important to recognize a lot of students from various communities don’t really feel safe around police and security, and so having that peer-to-peer relationship, in a safety situation, is really important,” she added.

Student driver Robert Witkop said, “It’s cool that, you know, students can feel safe,” because “this service is going to be there for them, all they have to do is click on the app, request a ride and we’ll be there.”

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Christina Giardinelli

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