FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact Natalie
Dreyer, +541 344 1197,
edcoord@catoregon.org
Cargo Framebuilding Apprenticeship Program Officially Accepting
Applications
The “Human Powered
Network” Invites Applicants To Make Some
Real
Change, One Cargo
Bicycle at a Time
EUGENE, OR, November 10, 2009 – With one month remaining for its first
class,
the Center for Appropriate Transport (CAT) announced today that it is
officially accepting applications for the second class in its ongoing
apprenticeship program. The three current apprentices are now skilled
in TIG
welding, CAD design and frame fabrication. Nearing the end of their
time in the
program, they are currently building their own cargo bikes.
This apprenticeship program teaches the fundamentals of bicycle frame building, with particular emphasis on the construction of cargo bicycles, tricycles and trailers. CAT also provides participants with hands-on instruction for starting and operating a successful cargo bicycle delivery service—a 100% CO2-free method of urban cargo transportation. Participants in this five-month apprenticeship take home the skills and designs needed to build their own manufacturing business and delivery service.
Utilizing
the principles of social enterprise, sustainability, and appropriate
technology, graduates of CAT’s apprenticeship program can join a cargo
bicycle
business network that will be based on concepts derived from micro and
social
franchising, as well as flexible manufacturing networks. “We are an
organization committed to community involvement in manufacturing,
using, and
advocating for sustainable modes of transportation—and local business,”
said
Jan VanderTuin, director at the Center for Appropriate Transport, “What
we have
done in our community, we are certain graduates from this program can
do in
theirs. Our intent is to create a Human Powered Network.”
The bicycles that participants learn how to build are based on European
designs
researched by VanderTuin in the early 1980s. CAT uses the cargo bikes,
tricycles
and trailers it builds to operate Pedalers Express, Eugene, Oregon’s
first and
only year-round, all-weather, cargo bicycle delivery service. Pedalers
Express
has been providing its community with fast, dependable, weatherproof,
same-day
deliveries since 1992—saving an estimated 25,000 pounds of CO2
annually. For
more information about the program, application and the Center for
Appropriate
Transport, visit www.catoregon.org/
About the Center for Appropriate Transport
The Center for Appropriate Transport (CAT) is a non-profit organization
committed to community involvement in manufacturing, using, and
advocating
sustainable modes of transportation. The first organization of its
kind, the
Center was founded in Eugene, Oregon in the fall of 1992. More
information
about the Center’s many projects can be found at www.catoregon.org/
High resolution photos available on request.