The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

State to offer rebates for the purchase of e-bikes

Residents can receive up to $1,500

- By Michael Walsh

WEST HARTFORD — A new statewide rebate program has advocates hopeful that a new wave of e-bike riders will soon hit Connecticu­t’s streets.

Beginning June 28, those buying eligible ebikes from brick and mortar retailers can apply to receive $500 or $1,500 in rebates to help offset some of the cost of an electric bike, which can be more expensive than a traditiona­l bike. The program was created last year by lawmakers when they passed the Connecticu­t Clean Air Act.

Jay Stange, a West Hartford resident and the coordinato­r for the Transport Hartford Academy at the Center for Latino Progress in Hartford, is among those who advocated for the program.

“When you ride an ebike , it’s like being a superhero,” Stange said. “You start pedaling, and as you apply pressure to the pedals, the motor in the bike adds to your power. You turn a mild-mannered 50somethin­g dad like me into someone who can compete in the Tour de France.”

Stange expects the program, which is similar to other ones launched in states like Vermont and Colorado, to create a new generation ofe-bike riders.

“It’s going to be a game changer,” he said. “Everywhere else this has rolled out … those programs have been wildly successful. All these new riders would be out there advocating for better infrastruc­ture for transporta­tion other than cars in Connecticu­t and I think that’s a big net benefit for everybody, including drivers who might have less people on the roads in cars. Everybody wins.”

How the rebate program works

The rebate program is being rolled out and managed by the state’s Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection and is being overseen by CHEAPR, the same board that has handled the state’s electric vehicle rebate program.

Those interested in taking advantage of the rebate should first visit DEEP’s website to apply for a rebate. When the portal goes live at 9 a.m. on June 28, everyone in Connecticu­t will be eligible to receive a $500 rebate. Others will be eligible to receive an additional $1,000 depending on a few factors, including if they live in an environmen­tal justice community or distressed municipali­ty, participat­e in a state or federal income qualifying program or have an income less than 300 percent of the federal poverty level.

Once someone is approved for their rebate, they then can seek out a participat­ing store in Connecticu­t a rebate can be used at for purchasing one of the eligible bikes.

DEEP’s commission­er, Katie Dykes, is expecting a lot of interest during the first phase of the program.

“We expect it to be a really popular program,” Dykes said. “I do expect high demand for these vouchers. We are providing a certain amount of funding in this first phase and then we’ll assess where we are.”

The benefits of choosing an e-bike

As Stange said, hopping on an e-bike — something he loves to demonstrat­e to newcomers at the Center for Latino Progress’ West Hartford-based BiCi Co. bike shop — feels different than riding a traditiona­l bike.

“The bottom line about e-bike, for everybody who gets on one, it’s really fun, it’s really exciting,” Stange said.

But also, he said, ditching your vehicle for any kind of bike can help the environmen­t. He said studies have shown that 40% of greenhouse gas emissions in Connecticu­t come from vehicles.

“It’s one less tailpipe in Connecticu­t and that means everything,” Stange said about adding new ebike riders. “About one third of the trips that people make in Connecticu­t in cars are less than 10 miles. Half of those trips are less than 5 miles. In a lot of the towns and cities in Connecticu­t that geographic­ally aren’t huge, it’s possible to get to work, run errands or go to your kids soccer game with an e-bike instead of your car.”

Dykes said that’s another reason the equity piece, and providing additional rebates to residents who qualify for it, was important for DEEP.

“Those groups are largely folks who are living in communitie­s who experience much higher levels of air pollution than the rest of the state because they’re often adjacent to industrial zones or transporta­tion corridors,” Dykes said. “Those are communitie­s that have the highest rates of asthma or respirator­y illness.”

Kate Rozen, a sustainabl­e transporta­tion advocate and member of the CHEAPR board, got her first e-bike in 2019 with the intention of using it to commute to work.

“I live in a suburb of New Haven and I felt like it wasn’t fair to the people who live in that city to drive my car in and continue to pollute them,” Rozen said. “A traditiona­l bike wasn’t the right tool because of the number of hills I have to navigate. I’m often carrying stuff back and forth, so with a regular frame nonelectri­c bike, I would be arriving to my destinatio­n a sweaty, exhausted mess. It just was the perfect tool to be able to shift my own behavior and move around in this part of the state outside of a car.”

Rozen said there’s around $12 million in the CHEAPR rebate pool, but that’s split between e-bikes and electric vehicles, which have been purchased at at a 10% increase in the state according to DEEP. In Denver, Rozen said, they went through $9 million set aside for their e-bike rebates.

“When we were advocating, it was important to make an e-bike accessible for as many people as possible,” Rozen said. “The price point on e-bikes is more than a traditiona­l

bike. The spirit of the law was to get these down to a price point where a low income resident could get one of these. With housing and transporta­tion costs, that can be half of a person’s money. In our cities especially, like Hartford and New Haven, 30 to 40% of residents don’t own cars. Whatever we can do to support people being able to move around their communitie­s will be a really good thing.”

Advocates like Rozen and Stange also hope that road safety also becomes part of this discussion to increase e-bike riders, who may become advocates of their own as they ride Connecticu­t’s roadways.

Connecticu­t joins a growing national trend

Connecticu­t can now count itself among 10 states in the country who have ebike rebate programs. The first to do it was Vermont, with the other eight states having similar programs being California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Massachuse­tts, Minnesota, Rhode Island and Washington.

Ashley Seaward, the director of state and local policy for the Coloradoba­sed advocacy group People for Bikes, worked with Connecticu­t advocates to help get legislatio­n passed here.

“It’s one of the tools that policymake­rs are looking at for climate reduction benefits or equity benefits, and it’s because they’re seeing success from it,” Seaward said. “A lot of it came from Denver. So many people were participat­ing in the program that they had to segment it out. I think that’s where a lot of the inspiratio­n came from.”

Seaward said many states have a variety of programs featuring different tiers of incentives. Some have offered tax credits, while others have included different kinds of e-bikes, including larger cargo e-bikes or used ebikes.

“It’s really wonderful to see,” Seaward said. “I don’t see it decreasing at all. If anything, I see more diversity in the types of programs being created. I see this as a collaborat­ive process from beginning to end … working with the local advocates and the retailers to really create a program that works for their community. Connecticu­t just did it right.”

In Connecticu­t, there are nearly 40 e-bikes eligible for the rebate for phase one of the program. The bikes range in price from $999 to $3,000, which was the cap the state put on bikes that could be eligible. Bikes must also meet battery

safety standards.

Brick and mortar vs. online shopping

Walter Rochefort, the owner of the Bicycle Cellar in Simsbury, is interested in being one of those participat­ing retailers. He’s been selling e-bikes for over a decade now.

“We were selling them when no one else was and all the other bike shops were either making fun of us, or thought it was cheating,” Rochefort said. “Look what’s happened now.”

Rochefort said e-bikes have been popular with older adults or people who need alternativ­es to cars for a while now.

“Percentage wise, probably

70% of the people that are buying e-bikes from us are usually older adults that generally don’t have the ability to ride regular bikes anymore,” Rochefort said. “This gives them the opportunit­y to open the door for them to ride almost anywhere they want. The obstacles of hills and distance and stuff like that, they’re gone, they can go out there and enjoy them.”

Things are shifting, though, with younger people becoming more frequently interested in ebikes.

“It has changed, the landscape has changed dramatical­ly over the last five years because of the marketing,” Rochefort said. “If 10 years ago, someone who was 40 years old came in and was looking for an e-bike, I would say what are they doing. Now, I see ages 20, 30 and 40 year olds. Some people want to change the landscape of the world, they want to go green.”

Rochefort does have some concerns over the program, though. While he wants to be part of it, he also worries about having to compete with online retailers, which will be able to accept rebates during a later phase. Right now, during phase one of the program, consumers must purchase their e-bikes from participat­ing brick and mortar retailers in Connecticu­t.

“I’m going to be painfully honest and say if you look at the list of all the bikes that are eligible for the program, 95% of them are bikes you buy online. How’s that helping me?” Rochefort said.

Rochefort, after looking at the list of eligible ebikes, said there are some he said he isn’t even able to order as a brick and mortar retailer. But even those bikes that he can purchase for his shop can be bought online, which worries him when he comes to younger generation­s who prefer shopping that way.

“[Aventon] does sell online. They also will distribute through a bike shop,” Rochefort said. “There’s an opportunit­y for me … but … then again you can just buy them direct from Aventon and you can bypass me completely.”

DEEP said they hope that by starting with brick and mortar retailers, they can get a head start on the program and capture the business of customers who have been waiting months for the program to launch before buying an ebike.

 ?? Dan Haar/Hearst CT Media ?? State House Majority Leader Jason Rojas, D-East Hartford, on an e-bike at the state Capitol Wednesday. Connecticu­t is among 10 states in the country to offer rebates for the purchase of e-bikes.
Dan Haar/Hearst CT Media State House Majority Leader Jason Rojas, D-East Hartford, on an e-bike at the state Capitol Wednesday. Connecticu­t is among 10 states in the country to offer rebates for the purchase of e-bikes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States