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Living News

Tripped up: Mixed reviews for Charlottesville’s scooter experiment

They appeared overnight the first Monday in December of 2018, long-necked robots on wheels, lurking in neat rows of three or four on street corners all over town.

Within a few days, the motorized scooters, which don’t have designated docking stations, were everywhere, and wherever.

Now, about five months in to the City of Charlottesville’s electric scooter pilot program with two different companies (Lime and Bird), opinions about the zippy modes of transportation are mixed.

For some, the scooters provide a little perplexing levity. Poet Raven Mack says that they’re always popping up at the bottom of a hill near his Hogwaller home. “[There’s] a steady supply of two to 12 that ebbs and flows, some of which have laid knocked over in the bushes for weeks at a time,” he says. “My children and I joke that they just live there, and breed, and the [kid scooters] run off to have their own lives somewhere else in town.”

The Instagram account @wheresmyscooter is devoted to locally-shot pictures of scooters “where they don’t belong”: discarded on train tracks, broken into pieces on dimly lit sidewalks, stuffed in trash cans.

But others have found the Birds and Limes a handy new means of transport. Ross Schiller, a teacher who also works at a restaurant on the Downtown Mall, recently forgot his glasses in his car before working a restaurant shift. He used a scooter to get to his car—which he has to park pretty far from the mall—and back to the restaurant in just a few minutes, without breaking a sweat or missing a moment of his serving shift.

Once you download the Lime or Bird app, you can use it to locate a nearby scooter. Scan the QR code to “unlock” it for $1, and ride for 15 cents a minute. When you’ve arrived at your destination, use the app to “lock” the scooter and leave it for the next rider.

At night, the scooters are collected and recharged, then put back out in the morning.

A few miles scooter ride costs a few dollars, so it’s cheaper than taking a Lyft or an Uber, and it’s faster than walking. There’s little to no wait time, not to mention more flexibility, so scooting can be more convenient than taking a bus.

While it’s unclear how many people are using the scooters (Lime says it won’t have numbers until the scooters have been in town for a year, and Bird didn’t respond to a request for info), it seems that almost everyone has an opinion.

“I find them a great alternative to public transportation, especially when you don’t want to or can’t drive,” says Ike Anderson, membership coordinator and dance instructor at the Music Resource Center, who says he rides Lime scooters often.

But the account administrator of @wheresmyscooter, who asked to remain anonymous, is opposed to the scooters for a number of reasons, namely that “they allow those with more disposable income to have access to yet another transit service that is inherently exclusionary.”

“We should all be supporting more robust publicly funded transit that serves working-class people and for those without access to transit of their own,” the administrator says. And indeed, scooter usage begins with a smart phone which, let’s face it, is still a luxury item.

Alan Goffinski, director of The Bridge Progressive Arts Initiative, says he understands folks’ concerns about the scooters but welcomes any alternative to a car. “To those who are concerned with them littering the landscape, I say, ‘What about cars’? We devote half the land in any given city to parking space,” he says.

Others are alarmed by personal safety issues, such as people riding scooters on the sidewalks and the Downtown Mall (which isn’t actually allowed), texting while scooting, scooting without a helmet, or scooting while drunk. And increasingly, people are voicing concern over scooters obstructing sidewalks for those who use wheelchairs or other mobility aids to get around.

Docking stations or designated scooter parking areas might help, and a city-wide survey, which collected a couple thousand responses and closed May 1, may suggest more solutions. The pilot program ends July 31, so city councilors must decide before then whether the scooters stay or get the boot. But for now, the jury’s still out.


Scooter tutor

The city has a web page dedicated to scooter regulations and safety suggestions, but we’re left wondering if riders are actually aware of the rules. Here are the basics:

  • Scooters must be ridden on streets, not on sidewalks or trails (or the Downtown Mall), and riders have to abide by the same laws as motor vehicle drivers in terms of posted traffic regulations, signs, and signals.
  • When parking your scooter, do not block travel lanes, driveways, fire hydrants, walkways, sidewalk curb ramps, pedestrian call buttons, bus stops, or entrances to buildings (including ramp and walkway railings and ADA door push buttons).
  • For crying out loud, don’t text and scoot, or drink and scoot. And wear a helmet—that’s a must if you’re under 14, and a should for everyone else.

Categories
News

In brief: City complaint app, UVA sexits, bus fires and more

Got a complaint? The city has an app for that.

MyCville. Ever heard of it? We hadn’t, either, until the city encouraged residents to digitally report their delinquent neighbors who hadn’t shoveled sidewalks following the recent dumping of about a foot of snow on Charlottesville.

There’s nothing like a (mostly) unexpected snowstorm to put the town into a tizzy. Last week, city residents entered 47 snow-related requests on the app, according to city spokesperson Brian Wheeler.

MyCville is an online and smartphone program that allows users to request services, “identify quality of life and environmental issues,” and report them, according to the city’s website.

Nearly 1,000 requests have been entered since MyCville launched in April, and 96 percent of all requests made since November 30 are complete, according to Wheeler. They were submitted by 231 users, who were able to track the status of their requests from the app.

The majority of requests, or 183 of them, have been for overgrown landscapes, according to Wheeler. Trailing closely behind at 136? Dead animals. And litter comes in third with 119.


Quote of the week

“We trust the United States Forest Service to ‘speak for the trees, for the trees have no tongues.’” —The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals quoted the Lorax in a ruling that blocks the Atlantic Coast Pipeline from crossing the Appalachian Trail and two national forests.


In brief

John Casey. Cramer Photo

Casey quits

National Book Award winner and longtime UVA English professor John Casey resigned after a disciplinary review panel found evidence that he inappropriately touched undergrad student Lisa Schievelbein in 2001, called his behavior “reprehensible,” and recommended he be fired. The panel did not find evidence that the pair’s repeated sexual liaisons were without her consent, as Schievelbein claimed. Casey, 79, insisted the affair was consensual, but “regrettable,” the Washington Post reports.

Darden settles

Research associate Carla Manno claims she was asked about her sex life and marriage history in a 2016 job interview with an adjunct professor at the Darden School of Business, and that the school retaliated against her when she filed a Title IX complaint. The school settled with her for $26,000, and she’s leaving her position December 31.

Exit Chinn

Mike Chinn. S&P

S&P wunderkind Mike Chinn, president of S&P Global Market Intelligence, says he’s out effective January 2. Chinn started at SNL when he was fresh out of UVA, in 1994, and was CEO when S&P acquired the company in 2015. According to S&P, Chinn, who pulled down nearly $3 million last year, has no immediate plans. More than 400 people work for S&P in Charlottesville.

Bus on fire

A Blue Ridge School bus went up in flames December 16 on Seminole Trail. The driver was taking more than 30 students to do some Christmas shopping when he noticed smoke coming out of the vents. All students were safely evacuated, as they were in other recent bus fires: A Fluvanna school bus caught fire August 9, and the bus carrying the Monticello High swim team ignited on I-64 in January 2017.

Bird is the word

About 200 rentable Lime bikes and electric scooters have just found their way onto Charlottesville sidewalks, and now the city has approved another 100 to join them in January. The new dockless mobility devices will be owned by a company called Bird.