First Name: | Michael |
---|---|
Last Name: | Keating |
Email Address: | michael@scoot.co |
Affiliation | Founder & CEO, Scoot Networks |
Subject | Parking preference for shared and electric vehicles and thinking outside the car |
Comment |
To the Air Resources Board, After reviewing the presentations and materials from Wednesday's workshop, I have a few comments: First, thank you for helping to make California a leader in reducing emissions from transportation and creating jobs in low-and zero-emission transportation. Second, I believe the power of parking policy to shift transportation demand and behavior is underestimated in workshop materials. When California began allowing electric vehicles in HOV lanes, electric vehicle sales spiked. If California cities gave preference in parking to electric vehicles and shared vehicles, sales and use of such vehicles would increase radically and combustion-powered VMT would drop noticeably. Parking is a very touchy subject, especially in cities where there isn't enough of it, and much parking policy is decided locally, but the state should encourage preferential parking for electric and shared vehicles in whatever ways it can. By preference I mean exemption from time limits and/or exemption from parking meter fees. Third, I was sorry to see no mention of electric vehicles smaller than cars in the workshop materials. For local trips (which are the majority or all trip and all VMT), electric bikes, electric mopeds, electric motorcycles, and neighborhood electric vehicles are viable, and in many cases superior, substitutes for car trips. To date the State has offered little support for the purchase, use, or sharing of such vehicles. This is a pity because a dollar of subsidy goes much further when spent on a light electric vehicle than when spent on a Tesla. Light electric vehicles could grow much more quickly as a share of the State's transportation mix than will electric cars with the same level of subsidy. Just as importantly, a subsidized Tesla is still only affordable to the rich, but a subsidize light electric vehicle is affordable to almost anyone, especially if it can be shared as part of a service like Scoot. Scoot is the largest private electric transportation service in the US, with over 500 vehicles in San Francisco and tens of the thousands of riders. We are adding 150+ American-made electric mopeds to our fleet every month. It costs only $3 to rent a scoot for a one-way ride in San Francisco, and scooting is the fastest way to get around the city, even though the scoots are capped at 30 MPH to allow them to ridden by people without a motorcycle license. Most Scoot riders have their first experience of electric vehicles with Scoot (most have never and likely will never see the inside of a Tesla). Most are transit riders who use Scoot as a last mile solution or a way to get places when they are in a hurry and can't afford to hire a taxi or Uber. We employ 45 people full time, including many, such as some of our mechanics, without a bachelors degree. Scoot has never received any incentive, grant, tax credit or other financial support from any agency of the State of California. We wish we could be a part of the State's solutions to climate change, but we will never offer cars to our customers, so for now, it seems we are not a part of the plan. Respectfully, Michael Keating Founder & CEO Scoot Networks |
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Date and Time Comment Was Submitted: 2016-09-16 10:58:55 |
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