Chicago Sun-Times

New Uber offering to further alter how Chicagoans get around

- mdudek@ suntimes. com | @ mitchdudek BY MITCH DUDEK, STAFF REPORTER

Uber is launching a new service in Chicago Thursday that seeks to get more people in the same car at the same time — and could possibly eat into CTA’s ridership as well as customers from direct competitor­s Lyft and Via.

Express Pool requires customers to walk up to two blocks to meet up with their ride, which will be shared with other random customers who are headed in the same direction. And the app will spend up to five minutes processing a request in order to most efficientl­y pair riders who are going the same way. Riders won’t be dropped off at their exact destinatio­ns but within a twoblock walk.

The walking and the extra computing will reduce the often circuitous and frustratin­g routes experience­d by UberPool customers who are each picked up at specific locations after being matched with other riders just moments after requesting a ride.

The new service will operate throughout Chicago but not at its two airports.

The rides have been up to 40 to 60 per- cent cheaper than UberPool rides in the eight U. S. cities that currently offer Uber Express. The new service is not completely unique. The ride- sharing company Via began offering Chicagoans a similarly cheap, notquite- door- to- door service in 2015. There’s also Lyft Shuttle, which operates more like a bus, offering fixed routes.

Uber spokesman Ethan Stock noted that he “absolutely expects” that as more people share rides in the same car, the need for individual rides in UberX cars will decrease, resulting in less traffic congestion.

Uber, like other ride- sharing companies, claim their services are compliment­ary to CTA.

But last year, CTA President Dorval Carter cited a loss in ridership to ride- sharing companies as one of several reasons behind a 25 cent fair increase that took effect in January.

Transporta­tion expert and DePaul University Professor Joe Schwieterm­an said Uber’s new service could potentiall­y siphon off more CTA customers if the transit agency doesn’t respond with an increased sense of urgency “to boost speeds and improve service quality.”

He also cited a recent DePaul study that found room for the CTA and ride- sharing companies to foster a more symbiotic relationsh­ip. Two examples: allow ride- sharing customers to use their Ventra accounts to pay for rides and allow discounted rides to bus and rail hubs.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG/ AP FILE ?? Uber launches an Express Pool service in Chicago today.
ERIC RISBERG/ AP FILE Uber launches an Express Pool service in Chicago today.

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