El Dorado News-Times

Bolt taking over Gotcha scooters in Mobile, looks to grow business

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MOBILE, Ala. (AP) — A Miami-based company is taking over an electric rental scooter franchise in one Alabama city and is looking to expand to another.

Bolt Mobility Corp., launched in 2018, is picking up the establishe­d operations of Gotcha, which has been offering scooter rentals in Mobile since the beginning of 2020 and plans to operate in Birmingham as well, possibly bringing options such as sit-down scooters and e-bikes to both cities this year.

In Mobile, it was a common sight to see visitors using the scooters to tour downtown, or locals using them to get through the city’s entertainm­ent district. But Ignazio Tzoumas, the CEO of Bolt, said the general slowdown associated with the COVID-19 pandemic “did a lot of damage” to the micromobil­ity industry. Companies had depended on foot traffic and when that all dried up, some fell victim. Bolt Mobility acquired Gotcha’s assets in a foreclosur­e sale in December.

Tzoumas said Bolt was in a financial position to reinvigora­te Gotcha. He said that in Mobile, Gotcha users won’t notice much difference at first. They’ll still use the same app but may notice that it says Gotcha is “Powered by Bolt,” whose founding partners include Olympic medalist Usain Bolt, al.com reported.

Bolt plans to go beyond short-range stand-up scooters.

“We have the opportunit­y to provide a full suite of multimodal devices. So we can go from sit-down cruisers to standup scooters to electric bicycles,” Tzoumas said. “It’s just a question of what the city wants.” It’s hard to say exactly when these new options might arrive.

Partly it’ll depend on how long it takes for vaccinatio­n campaigns to make it safe for public activity to return to preCOVID levels. Partly it’ll depend on negotiatio­ns with the cities where Bolt plans to operate.

“The competitio­n came in with a blitz mentality, they wanted to grab as much market share as they could. And that really is not the right way to work with a city,” Tzoumas said. “We’re not going to push anything that isn’t what the city wants,” he said.

Mobile’s city administra­tion seems favorably disposed. A city spokespers­on recently said that “there’s no legal hurdle that would prevent Gotcha or its new parent company from expanding services in Mobile. In fact, Gotcha told us today that its current plan is to expand services in Mobile in 2021 to include electric bicycles.”

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