Traffic:   3 Incidents
Weather: 70°F Go
  11:51am EDT, 08/28/08
Search:    wtic.com  Web  Audio
Posted: Saturday, 05 April 2008 8:27PM

Parents Turn to Internet for Help Shuttling Kids Here and There

GLASTONBURY, Conn. (AP) _ Wendy Burnham needed help driving her two children to and from basketball, choir, football and softball practice, swim meets, piano lessons and Girl Scout meetings.

Carpooling was the common solution, with parents calling each other in search of rides, she said.

That was before Burnham, the mother of an 11-year-old girl and a 9-year-old son, met Bryn Tindall at their sons' football practice. Tindall, who lives in Glastonbury, founded an Internet Web site last fall that organizes car pools for harried mothers and fathers.

Burnham, also a Glastonbury resident, has come to rely on the Web site www.dividetheride.com to not only find car pool partners, but also to organize her children's after-school commitments.

``This is just less of a hassle to get them places,'' she said.

The Web site, which was established last fall, has established a network that previously worked by telephone. It claims 13,000 registered users, with California, Connecticut, Florida among the top states.

``People start calling each other, sometimes in a panic,'' Tindall said. ``'Can you pick up my kid? I'll do you next time.' I watched the pattern, 15 cars coming in. What if we did this proactively?''

For Tindall, setting up the Web site was a logical step. The father of two boys, ages 8 and 4, is the oldest son in a family of 12 kids. ``That means I was the first driver,'' he said.

And because Tindall, 38, also founded his own marketing company, the idea of a carpooling Web site is ``actually quite old,'' he said.

``These kinds of things, you put them in the back of your head, they start to gel,'' Tindall said.

Using the Web site allows parents to send text messages and e-mails to cancel or make other changes to promised rides or remind parents of their commitments. And parents can use the site's spreadsheet calendar to schedule a cascade of events.

Tindall's older son is involved in activities six days a week and even his 4-year-old is already playing soccer and participates in swimming activities.

``It's a very, very competitive world,'' Tindall said. ``I've got to get them in it.''

The Web site also gives users access to maps showing where families in a car pool group live and their proximity to a school, athletic field or other sites where activities are scheduled.

Security was the immediate concern in setting up a Web site that details children's activities.

``Believe me, we talked about that a lot,'' said Bill Harper, chief technology officer of Tindall's marketing company who helped design security for the site. ``It had to be locked down tight.''

Parents who join the Web site are assured that access is available only to other parents who are invited by someone they know. Information is password-protected and car pool leaders who enter details about events do not have access to others' information, he said.

``Somebody would have to go through such incredible lengths to find out where your child is at 5 o'clock, it just boggles the mind,'' Harper said.

Nancy McBride, national safety director of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, would not comment specifically about the Web site, but questioned why an Internet site keeps information about children, their activities and their whereabouts.

``Nobody should collect data on a child and keep it in a database except the parent or guardian,'' she said. ``We can all say a Web site can't be hacked into, but we know it happens. Sexual predators look for access and opportunity so the parent has to be diligent.''

Steven Schoeffler, founder of eRideShare.com, a Web-based car pool for adults who share rides to work, said security and safety issues are legitimate, but problems are rare or even nonexistent.

``Everyone is concerned about stranger danger,'' he said. ``I don't think the Internet is an additional risk. I would emphasize the safety of it rather than the non-safety of it.''

Meanwhile, Burnham who credits the carpooling to reducing 12 car trips a week to two or three, said media reports and word-of-mouth are driving dividetheride.com.

``It was moms I know with sons who are friends of my son,'' she said. ``It wasn't really a hardship to pick up other kids. It makes sense.''

___

On the Web: www.dividetheride.com

 

(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)


Post this article to:
 
 
Print Page Email This Page
Best Local News On The Web
 
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
 
 
 
Top News
Toddler Wounded in Gun Accident in Jewett City
Mystic Firefighter Faces New Arson Charges
Assault Rifles, Body Armor Seized in Hartford Gun Investigation
UConn-Hofstra Preview
Former Husky Forward Abrosimova Signs With Connecticut Sun
Federal Judge Denies Schaghticoke Tribal Recognition
New Haven Shooting Victim Identified as UConn Senior
Second Human West Nile Case Reported in State
Inmate Pleads Not Guilty in Attack on Guards
Body of 73 Year Old Man Found at Old Saybrook Cottage; Police Investigate
Danbury Man Sentenced for Repeated Sexual Assaults of Teen
Percentage of Uninsured Drops in Connecticut
Judge Rules in Schaghticoke Legal Fight for Federal Recognition
Victims in Drive-By Shooting Identified
Bristol Police Investigate Suspicious Device
Lieberman Says He Doesn't Expect to Be Chosen GOP VP Candidate
Former UConn Recruit Says She 'Burned Out' on Basketball
Two Dead in Hartford Shooting
Former Governor's Stepson Dies at Age 23
Shays Cites Obama, McCain in Congressional Re-election Ad
Some Hartford Council Members Want Second Chance at Allocating Library Money
PHOTO GALLERY Connecticut Civil War Monument Unveiled
Civil War Monument Unveiled in Hartford, Headed to Vicksburg
Connecticut Report: More 'English Language Learners' in Schools
Hartford Youth Curfew Going into Effect
Three Dozen Protest Tropic Thunder in Middletown
Food Donations from Home Gardeners Banned
Special Probation in East Haven Fetus Assault Case
Waterbury Heart Center Fighting for Life
Vernon Couple Arrested for Alleged Child Beatings
Six Injured, One Dead in North End Shootings Following Parade
Motocross Rider Dies of Injuries After Stafford Crash
Report: DOT Costs on The Rise
Regulators Order CNG to Credit Customers
Congress Offers Some Relief from Property Taxes
State Issues Annual Water System Violation Report
Report: Scientist Linked To Anthrax Attacks Commits Suicide
Massachusetts House Vote: Allow Out-of-state Gay Couples to Marry
Woodbury Jazz guitarist Joe Beck dead at 62
Police: Westport Officers Shoot Suspect
Two Dead, Three Injured in Boating Accident
Mashantuckets Facing Credit Downgrading
Mansfield Woman Charged in Death of 7-Month-Old
Probate Court Administrator Resigns
Math, Writing, Science Scores Up in CAPTs
CBS Files Appeal over Connecticut Marine Interview
Gas Prices Hit $4.37 a Gallon in Conn.
Motorists Report Windows Shot Out on I-691
Cosby Speaks to Packed House in Hartford
Environmentalists Criticize Rell
Man Robbed Buying Drugs Calls Cops, is Arrested
Former DOT Engineer Pleads Guilty to Bribery
Freed US Hostage Denounces Colombian Rebels
Receiver Named for Four Haven Homes
Conn. AG Calls for Changes to Video Game Ratings
Teen Charged with Shooting Baby with Paint Ball
CRRA Makes it Easier to Recycle Trash
Lobby Group Seeks Lower Energy Costs for Seniors
Man Dies in New Milford Condo Fire
Stamford Police Find Bomb Materials in Home
Two Motorcyclists Die in Crash on I-91
GE Aviation Buys Czech Turboprop Engine Maker
No Prison Time for Pfizer Employee Embezzlement
State Offering $50K Reward in Milford Homicide
Poll: Rell's Popularity Drops
Man Dies, Son Injured in Voluntown Pond
Regulators Give CL&P OK to Boost Electricity Rates
Union Goes to Court Seeking Permit to Protest
Skier Settles Lawsuit over Steroid Flap
Waterbury's Holy Land Cross Dismantled
Hop Brook Lake CritterCam
Friend of Connecticut poets and writers has died

Due to delays in the WTIC streaming broadcast, listeners to WTIC online
stream may not be able to participate in any WTIC conducted on-air contests.