 Bug stands for Bike User Group and it's a group of students who are brought together by their common interest in bicycles. Bug represents the movement for a sustainable ability. Our bike share is at the Davis Center. We have these fixed-year bikes. They're very sturdy and you can go to the Davis Center information desk. And you can use your cat car. You can just rent out a bike and go for 24 hours and bring it back to the Davis Center. The goal of the bike share program is to give access to people who don't have bikes and that is helping us promote the culture of bikes. We want to share the goodness that bikes bring to people. I ride because it makes me feel independent. I don't have to pay for parking and I have to pay for gas. I can leave my house 10 minutes before class starts and get here 5 minutes before class starts. You get to see things at a different pace and you get to feel the wind on your face, see trees and foliage and it's a better pace I think. This is the bike shop and students can come here. Generally the hours are 1-4 and get their bikes fixed and learn how to fix their bikes. Before a bike leaves here, there's a few things you check. That's the brakes and the stem here. And I guess the last one would be the seat. So basically to make sure that the basic safety mechanisms of the bike are in order. The reason I wanted to join Bug is probably for the social community. The community here is really great for cycling. The Halloween ride is a community event and Bug volunteers for it. It was a way to show Burlington and the roads that bicycles are present and we want to make the streets safer. We really believe in cycling as a form of alternative transportation. There's so many benefits to riding a bike. It's efficient. I don't need to rely on anyone for it and it's fun.