Skip to main content

Hytch helps Indiana car-pool incentives 

The city of South Bend in Indiana has chosen Hytch Rewards to provide shared ride incentives for workers with limited public transportation options.
By Ben Spencer March 11, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Indiana: Hytch is providing car-pool incentives in South Bend (© Chris Dorney | Dreamstime.com)

The US city has identified that a lack of reliable and affordable transportation is a primary barrier to finding - and maintaining – a job for approximately 10,000 residents. 

Hytch says its mobile app will verify shared rides in real time and allow users to earn up to 50 cents per mile when car-pooling with friends or co-workers who are involved in the Commuters Trust transportation initiative. 

This public-private venture offers free or discounted transport options in and around South Bend. The city is funding the project via a $1 million grant through the Bloomberg Philanthropies Mayors Challenge.

Aaron Steiner, programme director for Commuters Trust, says: “The lack of dependable transportation – or no vehicle at all – makes it difficult for some people to consistently get to work on time, or forces them to turn down work opportunities when public transit options aren’t available."

"Our programme solves a specific problem around access to employment. Ultimately, we think Hytch Rewards will become an important piece of the puzzle, to provide local workers more options to commute to work and reduce transportation as a barrier to employment.”

Mark A. Cleveland, co-founder of Hytch, says: “By directly rewarding people for networking within their most familiar communities, we inspire car-pooling at scale, avoid the fixed costs of mass transit and carve out the venture-capital-funded middleman.” 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Avoiding the call of the wild
    June 29, 2018
    Hitting an animal on a rural road can be fatal for all parties involved – but detecting and avoiding them requires clever technology. Andrew Williams carefully scans the horizon for details. Wildlife-vehicle collisions are an ever-present threat in rural areas around the world, and there is certainly nothing funny about suddenly finding an angry moose in your headlights on a sharp bend. A variety of detection and avoidance systems are currently in use or under development to help prevent your vehicle being
  • ITS World Congress 2021: making it real
    August 17, 2021
    ITS World Congress 2021 will be held in Hamburg, Germany, in October, and will focus on showcasing the reality of ITS innovations now, says organiser Ertico-ITS Europe
  • Slow development of Europe's road user charging
    April 24, 2013
    Delegates convened in Brussels for Europe’s 10th annual Road User Charging Conference in March, when both positive and negative developments came to light for advocates of more widespread introduction of RUC. Jon Masters reports. Goings on across Europe in recent months have again demonstrated how very sensitive road user charging (RUC) is politically. At the 10th annual Road User Charging Conference in Brussels at the beginning of March, a Danish delegation was notable for its absence, but Belgian governme
  • Synthetic data v the real thing
    January 9, 2023
    ITS and smart cities thrive on data: but does all the data need to be real? Steve Harris of Mindtech explains why the answer could lie in combining elements of the real world with the synthetic