Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

E-bikes for loan in South L.A.

Program offers 250 two- and three-wheel vehicles at no charge for next six months.

- By Andrew J. Campa

South Los Angeles resident Channing Martinez recalls the days years ago when he couldn’t find enough change for the bus and was forced to hop on his bicycle.

Martinez, 36, co-director of the Labor Community Strategy Center, a think tank and advocacy organizati­on for working-class families, rode roughly seven miles to El Camino College in Torrance from his home near Florence Avenue and Crenshaw Boulevard. He then transferre­d to Otis College of Art and Design in Westcheste­r, which was a nine-mile trek.

“It was a heck of a ride that I’ve never forgotten,” Martinez said. “But in those days, I had no choice. I had to get to school.”

Today, Martinez’s community organizati­on is one of several groups behind a plan to bring transporta­tion access to South Los Angeles in the form of e-bikes.

The Los Angeles Cleantech Incubator and L.A.’s Department of Transporta­tion, aided by nearly $3 million in funding from the California Air Resources Board, debuted their e-bike “lending library” Tuesday at Leimert Park’s Ride On! Bike Co-Op.

The library was christened the “South Central Power Up” and was bolstered by the delivery of 250 e-bikes that are immediatel­y available to the public.

“We are very excited to

launch this pilot, which will meet an essential need for the community, making checking out a clean, reliable e-bike as simple as getting a book at the library,” the incubator’s president and chief executive, Matt Petersen, said in a statement.

The bikes will be placed at seven locations throughout South Los Angeles and will be available for rental for up to one month.

Michelle Kinman, the incubator’s senior vice president of market transporta­tion, said the 250-unit fleet comprises 215 commuter bikes, 29 cargo bikes and six adaptive bikes, including tricycles.

The service will be free for the next six months. The incubator and community partners, including People for Mobility Justice and Mercado La Paloma, are developing a fee for the future. The bikes, however, are expected to remain free for lower-income riders.

“E-bikes can support a wide range of personal transporta­tion needs while reducing car trips, pollution, and overall congestion on streets,” Laura RubioCorne­jo,

general manager of the Department of Transporta­tion, said in a statement. “The e-bike lending library will make this option affordable and accessible to residents of South L.A.”

The library is part of a two-year pilot program funded by $2.7 million from the state Air Resources Board. The money covered the purchase of the e-bikes and insurance along with maintenanc­e and repairs, obligatory and complement­ary training for all participan­ts, and additional support.

Kinman noted that one advantage of e-bikes over non-motorized bicycles is the less-strenuous, lowerimpac­t physical activity. They are equipped with a motor to enhance and ease pedaling.

Tricycles are also available for those uncomforta­ble with two wheels, Kinman said.

After the initial two years of funding end, grants will be provided by the state’s Strategic Growth Council under its Transforma­tive Climate Communitie­s Program.

For Martinez, the e-bikes not only address mobility issues, but also enable people of color, particular­ly the Black community, to circumvent the historical ills of the bus and Metro system.

Martinez, a longtime Bus Riders Union member, said his group found that half of all arrests and citations made in Los Angeles transit over the last decade or so involved Black passengers.

“This is an opportunit­y to break away from those systems of criminaliz­ation and dehumaniza­tion,” said Martinez, a member of the Garifuna people and the queer community.

Martinez believes that as more people grow comfortabl­e using the e-bikes, such a movement will force the city to implement more bike-accessibil­ity projects.

“The infrastruc­ture is not there yet in Los Angeles,” he said. “But if we continue to grow, things will have to change.”

 ?? Max Chen ?? THE E-BIKES will be placed at seven locations in South L.A. and available for up to one month.
Max Chen THE E-BIKES will be placed at seven locations in South L.A. and available for up to one month.

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