San Francisco Chronicle

S.F. anticipati­ng new disruption­s in transporta­tion

- Carolyn Said is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: csaid@ sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @csaid

ly hopped on board, pedestrian­s and others complained about blocked sidewalks. San Francisco, which lacked laws for the vehicles, rushed to respond — impounding improperly parked or ridden scooters, issuing cease-anddesist orders to the companies, and then on Tuesday adopting a oneyear pilot plan that creates a permit system and caps the number of scooters.

Besides the e-scooters, San Francisco is awash in all kinds of “emerging mobility” services, including bike sharing (Ford GoBike, Jump), scooter sharing (Scoot), car sharing (Turo, Getaround, Maven, Zipcar), carpooling (Scoop, Waze Carpool), commuter vans (Chariot), ridehailin­g (Uber and Lyft), autonomous-vehicle testing (Cruise Automation), and courier services (Caviar, Good Eggs, Grubhub, Instacart, Postmates, Omni, Amazon’s Flex).

It’s pretty much guaranteed that other disruptive transporta­tion ideas will come along.

“I don’t even want to speculate what it will be — dockless jet packs?” said Jeff Hobson, the transporta­tion authority’s head of planning. Whatever it is, the goal is to be ready with a comprehens­ive strategy “that says, ‘Here’s how to work with the city. Please come talk to us before you land, and we commit to work on it expeditiou­sly.’ ”

Companies that partner with the city make life easier for everyone, the two planners said, citing examples such as the Jump dockless e-bike service, which got an exclusive permit before starting service here and has now been acquired by Uber.

Of course, the biggest examples of disruptive mobility are Uber and Lyft, both of which barreled into San Francisco and other cities without asking for permission and now have thousands of cars on the streets. Because they are regulated by the state Public Utilities Commission, the ride-hailing companies are fairly impervious to San Francisco-specific rules, but the city may be able to dangle incentives to win cooperatio­n on its goals.

“The city has a lot of assets these companies want to use, whether that’s roadways or curbs or sidewalks,” Hobson said. “I think we can come up with a curbmanage­ment strategy that works better than the status quo.”

Because Uber and Lyft would like more designated drop-off/pickup spots, they may be willing to do something in return, such as providing more data or giving more training to drivers, he said.

Besides getting startups to play nice, San Francisco has a range of other transit goals. They include collecting comprehens­ive data from mobility companies; ensuring access for disabled people, late-night riders and residents of underserve­d areas; supporting public transit expansion; enforcing safety such as the Vision

Zero goal to end all traffic deaths; and managing congestion on the street, sidewalks and curbs.

San Francisco may consider congestion pricing, charging more for peak-period road use in core areas, a strategy used in New York, Seattle and London.

“We’ll seek guidance from the board on whether and how to implement such a strategy,” Logan said.

“Over the past decade, we’ve seen a lot of different services popping up on our streets,” Logan said. The agency developed 10 guiding principles so that when new services arise, “We can say, ‘Hey, here’s what we stand for’ and evaluate how the services perform against our goals.”

“I don’t even want

to speculate what

it will be — dockless jet packs?”

Jeff Hobson, S.F. County Transporta­tion Authority, on next modes of transporta­tion

 ?? Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle ?? After startups deposited hundreds of scooters on San Francisco sidewalks without approval, the city is trying to plan for the next new invention to arrive.
Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle After startups deposited hundreds of scooters on San Francisco sidewalks without approval, the city is trying to plan for the next new invention to arrive.

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