• Michigan State University Bike Project is an effort dedicated to transforming recycled bicycles into a fun, economical, environmentally friendly and healthy transportation alternative for the MSU campus community. The eventual goal of the project is to provide free bikes for hundreds of riders on campus; the initial aim is to make free bikes available to departments and programs. Each unit will lease one or more bikes for a year-long term, and will be responsible for making it available to people within the unit: www.msu.edu/bikes
• Tulane University Office of Environmental Affairs has initiated a program to make the campus more friendly for bike riders and to promote the use of public transportation on and off campus: www.tulane.edu/~eaffairs/greentrans.html
• UB: In 2001, UB ran 30 of its campus vehicles and 4 buses on compressed natural gas, which runs cleaner than gasoline. UB also has a natural gas refueling station and is a member of the Clean Communities of WNY campaign to promote alternative fuel vehicles: wings.buffalo.edu/services/recycling/content/programs/other/main.html
• University of Colorado provides various transportation programs, groups, and options available to CU Boulder students and faculty/staff, as well as the general community; provides links to access these options on the Web; provides access to university transportation policy documents, and displays various transportation-related publications produced by the CU Environmental Center:
www.colorado.edu/cuenvironmentalcenter/transportation/index.html
• Washington State University is currently developing an alternative transportation program. Options for the future include: gasoline-electric hybrids, pure electric vehicles, hydrogen-powered cars and buses, and battery-operated personal transportation devices (e.g., the Segway): www.campusecology.wsu.edu/page_022.htm