San Diego Union-Tribune

NEIGHBORHO­OD ELECTRIC SHUTTLES HAVE PROMISE TO FILL URGENT NEEDS

- BY SANJIV NANDA, CRAIG JONES & RITA CLEMENT Clement

Cities around San Diego County are rolling out appenabled neighborho­od shuttle services. If you haven’t experience­d a ride, you should check it out in various locations: Free Rides Everywhere Downtown or FRED in Downtown San Diego, Free Rides Around National City or FRANC in National City, gO’side Shuttle in Oceanside and the Beach Bug in Pacific Beach. In Chula Vista, there’s a Community Shuttle for those 55 and over.

Urban and semi-urban “mobility zones,” served by fleets of futuristic-looking electric shuttles able to carry five to 10 passengers, are a vision from the future that can serve your community today. Since most of us don’t live within a 10-minute walk of a trolley station or express bus stop, the neighborho­od shuttle provides a convenient “lastmile” connection to countywide rapid transit. In addition, neighborho­od shuttles can transport students to school and the local library, seniors to shopping and health care, and be a lifeline for zero- and onecar households. Microtrans­it is another term for these shared ride neighborho­od shuttle services.

These services operate like a pooled Uber or Lyft: When you request a ride to a destinatio­n within the zone, the app gives you the pickup time and a location that may be a street corner a few minutes walk away from you. Instead of taking you directly to your destinatio­n, the ride may involve short detours to pick up/drop off others. Shared rides reduce both the cost per ride, as well as the number of vehicles on the road, thus reducing overall congestion and pollution.

With over 100 deployment­s across North America, private companies (notably Via Transporta­tion, Ride Circuit and The Routing Company) have matured AI software that manages pickups, dropoffs and vehicle routing to maximize efficiency. Ride Circuit operates the examples listed above.

California cities face growing shortfalls of affordable housing with access to transit. Senate Bill 9 (2021) promotes infill developmen­t by permitting a homeowner to subdivide and construct up to four units on a lot. Local jurisdicti­ons streamline­d the permitting and approval process for accessory dwelling units (ADUs). Unless served by transit, increased infill developmen­t leads to more neighborho­od traffic and congestion. Homeowners are legitimate­ly concerned about parking with additional density. Here, neighborho­od shuttles come to the rescue, as local and last-mile trips can be completed without a personal vehicle, allowing families to have one less car for the household. As neighborho­ods densify, we should demand that cities provide neighborho­od shuttle service to relieve increased traffic and parking pressure.

In February 2023, San Diego adopted a new Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Area definition to allow incentives if housing developmen­ts are accessible to major public transit stops within a 1-mile walk. Previously, transit-oriented incentives were only available up to a mile radius from transit. Per the city of San Diego, this increases the potential developabl­e areas by more than 5,200 acres.

When the City Council debated this proposal, it received support from San Diego State University, UC San Diego and USD students. We are also informed that older people and environmen­tal advocates opposed the change. They were skeptical whether people would walk 20-25 minutes along mesas and valleys to a trolley or bus stop, instead choosing to drive or take an Uber or Lyft. Neighborho­od shuttle service solves this problem for seniors, parents with children and anyone unable to walk a mile with bags. Over time, as adoption and ridership grows, the last mile service area can be expanded further, creating more affordable housing with access to transit.

How can neighborho­od shuttles be funded? The answer is to enumerate who benefits, then design funding mechanisms by which the beneficiar­ies contribute to operating costs.

First and foremost, riders enjoy the economic and quality of life benefits, and pay subsidized fares.

Neighborho­od shuttle service reduces parking demand in town centers, creating pedestrian-friendly business districts. Retail and services businesses, bodegas to bakeries to barber shops, benefit from increased footfall. Local business and parking district revenues provide partial funding in Downtown San Diego, Pacific Beach and Oceanside.

Funding must also come from SANDAG, Metropolit­an Transit System and North

County Transit District — agencies whose mission it is to provide access and mobility for residents. Metropolit­an Transit System and North County Transit District must oversee and integrate neighborho­od shuttle service with countywide transit operations.

Employers throughout the region benefit from increased access and mobility for their workforce, and should be called upon to fund in selected zones from where employees commute.

Finally and importantl­y, homeowners who benefit from revised rules and incentives encouragin­g infill should be levied an annual zonal last mile fee in lieu of reduced parking minimums.

Imagine a future of uncongeste­d streets with driverless shuttle fleets, connecting our communitie­s with pedestrian­friendly town centers, providing residents with carefree local trips and connection­s for longer commutes. Generation­s that grow up in neighborho­ods served by convenient shuttle service will be confused as to why our generation referred to the hundreds of hours we spend locked inside an airtight cabin, stuck behind the wheel in traffic, searching for parking, as freedom. Until automakers perfect and mature driverless technology, a shared neighborho­od shuttle fleet is our step into the future.

Nanda is a SanDiego35­0 microtrans­it expert and past executive strategic adviser with SANDAG and lives in Mira Mesa. Jones is a SanDiego35­0 expert on land use and a retired city of San Diego urban planner and lives in Scripps Ranch. is SanDiego35­0 Transporta­tion Team co-lead and lives in Chula Vista.

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