Albuquerque Journal

One and done: Zagster scoots out of ABQ

E-scooter fleet has been offline through pandemic

- BY JESSICA DYER JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

As Albuquerqu­e emerges from a COVID-19 shutdown, its transporta­tion landscape will look a little different.

Zagster, the first and only company to launch an e-scooter program in New Mexico’s largest city, has decided to cease the operations, according to a city spokeswoma­n.

The Boston-based company had suspended Albuquerqu­e service in March due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, during which its one-year pilot program with the city had ended. Zagster told the city it did not plan to stay in the market.

“We had a discussion with Zagster (in April) in which they told us that Spin was not coming back to Albuquerqu­e,” city Planning Department spokeswoma­n Maia Rodriguez said. “Prior to that we were under the impression that the suspension was temporary.”

Zagster has also ended its Albuquerqu­e area bike-share program, the Rio Metro Regional Transit District announced this week. It has also discontinu­ed bike-share programs in many other communitie­s throughout the U.S.

Multiple Journal attempts to reach a Zagster representa­tive were unsuccessf­ul.

No other vendors have city approval to rent e-scooters in Albuquerqu­e, though Rodriguez said the city is interested in new partnershi­ps.

“We were pleased with what we saw of the program and thought it was a success,” she said in an email.

Zagster launched its Albuquerqu­e service in May 2019 with 250 Spin-branded, orange vehicles. That fleet generated more than 20,000 trips in the first month.

The company expanded its fleet to 750, placing vehicles not only in Downtown and Nob Hill but also areas like Uptown and the Northeast Heights.

Ridership fell after last summer, and the company shrunk its fleet in the winter. But it was planning to grow again when the pandemic hit.

“The Albuquerqu­e fleet will be scaled up over the next two months as we come out of the winter riding season,” the company wrote in its January ridership report to the city.

 ?? JESSICA DYER/JOURNAL ?? Zagster has ended its e-scooter program in Albuquerqu­e about a year after it began.
JESSICA DYER/JOURNAL Zagster has ended its e-scooter program in Albuquerqu­e about a year after it began.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States