Los Angeles Times

Scooter firms decry theft and city rules

Models with sidewalk speed throttling — required by San Diego — are often stolen.

- BY DAVID GARRICK Garrick writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — Electric scooter companies say their ability to operate in San Diego is being severely hampered by city regulation­s combined with a sharp rise in scooter thefts that’s being blamed on the proximity to the U.S.-Mexico border.

City officials say a thriving scooter industry is crucial to their climate action plan because scooters can help solve the “last-mile” problem of getting to and from transit, potentiall­y making transit convenient enough for people to give up commuting by car.

San Diego is the only major city in the nation to require something called sidewalk speed throttling, a safety-focused technology that quickly slows scooters down to 3 mph any time they are steered onto a sidewalk.

Scooter companies say the regulation is well intended but too aggressive and arguably ahead of its time.

But a bigger problem, they say, might be thieves targeting scooters that are technologi­cally advanced enough to comply with the rule.

Theft rates have risen so high in recent months that scooter companies are limiting how many of the most advanced scooters they deploy, instead rolling out older, cheaper models that struggle to comply with sidewalk speed throttling.

“San Diego ought to be one of the best markets for scooters because of tourism and the weather,” said Brit Moller, head of public policy for scooter operator Spin. “But the decelerati­on requiremen­t is jeopardizi­ng the viability of the whole program.”

Some of the older models being deployed in San Diego fail to comply with the sidewalk throttling rule. But more often, they still comply with the rule — only in a way that makes the ride uncomforta­ble and unpleasant.

“Our ridership is terrible,” Moller said. “It’s at an historic low.”

City officials say they are working with law enforcemen­t to solve the theft problem.

“The binational theft issue is unique to San Diego because not many cities have our high level of tourism and a jurisdicti­on next door that you can’t enforce upon,” said Alyssa Muto, who oversees scooters as head of the city’s Sustainabi­lity and Mobility Department. “We are working diligently with the operators, our Police Department, the Sheriff’s Department and their state and federal counterpar­ts on tackling this issue.”

Moller said that each month thieves steal more than 15% of Spin’s San Diego fleet — about 150 scooters of the roughly 900 the company regularly deploys.

A spokespers­on for Bird, the only other company that still operates scooters in San Diego, agreed that binational theft is the No. 1 issue facing the local scooter industry.

If the problem gets solved, Bird is confident scooter companies can deploy the most advanced scooters that comply with San Diego’s regulation­s and that riders enjoy using, the spokespers­on said.

The city’s sidewalk throttling rule is arguably playing a role in the problem by prompting companies to deploy scooters that are the most technologi­cally advanced — and at greatest risk of being stolen.

“Those newer-generation devices with the proficient technology have been stolen, and they are being taken apart over the border for the smart technology,” Muto said.

But she said there are no plans to eliminate or amend the sidewalk throttling rule, which was added to the city’s municipal code when the City Council approved a sweeping scooter crackdown in August.

In addition to the throttling rule, the crackdown requires scooters to be parked in designated corrals and requires operators to handle complaints about their scooters within one hour.

The new crackdown also seeks to curb cluttering of scooters by charging companies based on the number of scooters deployed each day, in contrast to the flat fee the city had been charging.

Muto said she is optimistic the new package of regulation­s, including the throttling rule, can work moving forward.

“We are hopeful we see internatio­nal theft decline and that there is a bounce back of operations to the levels we had anticipate­d under this new program,” Muto said.

The number of scooters deployed on a typical day has plummeted since the new rules took effect, from about 6,500 per day to 3,000 per day.

And only two of the four companies picked to operate in San Diego have followed through. Link has abandoned San Diego, while Lime is still working with city officials on compliance with the sidewalk throttling requiremen­t.

Lime officials say the technology behind sidewalk throttling hasn’t advanced enough for it to be deployed widely by scooter companies, stressing that no other cities require it.

They say that sudden slowdowns can jerk riders awkwardly and that imperfect technology sometimes slows riders who aren’t on a sidewalk but in the middle of a street, putting them in danger.

Lime has unsuccessf­ully lobbied the city instead to require scooters to give riders audible alerts when they steer onto a sidewalk.

Muto said critics exaggerate the drawbacks of speed throttling and the challenges it presents to scooter companies.

“It doesn’t get down to zero, so you don’t get somebody stopping dead in their tracks — it gradually slows down to 3 mph,” she said. “Each of the companies has models in their fleet that meet and even perform superbly with the speed throttling.”

Muto also said the alternativ­es suggested aren’t viable, contending noise notificati­ons are a nuisance to people nearby and that cellphone notificati­ons distract riders.

 ?? K.C. Alfred San Diego Union-Tribune ?? “THE DECELERATI­ON requiremen­t is jeopardizi­ng” the scooter business, a company executive says.
K.C. Alfred San Diego Union-Tribune “THE DECELERATI­ON requiremen­t is jeopardizi­ng” the scooter business, a company executive says.

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