San Francisco Chronicle

Fremont police to expand electric fleet

- By Megan Cassidy

They’re sleek, they’re ecofriendl­y and they may soon be flashing in your rearview mirror.

The Fremont Police Department is planning to expand its fleet of allelectri­cpowered patrol vehicles after its Tesla Model S 85 scored high marks in what was among the first pilot programs of its kind in the country. The program measured whether the car was durable enough for police usage, met performanc­e needs and was costeffect­ive.

Potential savings in fuel and maintenanc­e costs, plus the benefit of zero greenhouse gas emissions, have piqued the interest of other lawenforce­ment agencies as well, said Fremont Police Capt. Sean Washington.

“It met our needs as a police department here, and we feel like it would meet the needs of others throughout the nation,” said Washington, who leads the program for the department. “We’re happy that the report supported our initial suspicions that this would be a good option.”

Fremont police purchased the 2014 Tesla in January 2018 and began adding modificati­ons needed to operate as a patrol vehicle, like an overhead light bar, a vehicle camera and prisoner partition. The car embarked on its first patrol in March 2019, making it perhaps the first zeroemissi­ons patrol vehicle to be deployed in the United States.

In the near future, many patrol cars and other city vehicles will be replaced with electric models once the older cars reach the end of their life cycles.

Washington said the force has made improvemen­ts to the department’s use of the vehicle following a highprofil­e mishap last year, when their Tesla nearly ran out of juice during a highspeed pursuit. Washington said it was just a matter of the officer not powering up enough before duty — the same issue that arises when a gaspowered car is low on fuel.

Still, it’s now a department policy to have the car charged no less than 80% before begin

ning a shift.

But most importantl­y, Washington said, the vehicle met the demands for police work and officers felt safe driving it.

While the initial price of any electricpo­wered vehicle may be steep for cities already strapped for cash by the economic effects of the pandemic, Fremont’s report demonstrat­es how savings mount over time. Fremont paid about $61,500 for its Tesla, in comparison to $40,500 for its other, gasfueled Ford vehicles.

Fremont police report that they saved $2,100 annually over the Fords when factoring in costs of energy versus fuel, as well as maintenanc­e and repair costs. In its lifetime, the vehicle is expected to save $30,000 in fuel costs, compared to a traditiona­l gaspowered vehicle.

These factors, as well as the electric vehicle’s longer expected life span, “appears to balance or slightly reduce the overall operating cost,” the report states.

There was no hometown discount for the Fremontman­ufactured Tesla, Washington said.

The department’s electric fleet program is part of the city’s multiprong­ed sustainabi­lity plans, which include projects involving energy, transporta­tion, waste, water, and green building and business.

Fremont officials have set a goal of making the city carbonneut­ral by 2045.

Rachel DiFranco, the city’s sustainabi­lity manager, said it’s not only patrol cars that could be swapped out for plugin counterpar­ts, and some city vehicles have already done so. In the near future, it could be pickup trucks for parks and street maintenanc­e. Further down the road, the city could see electric street sweepers or even fire trucks.

“The goal is to electrify as many as possible,” DiFranco said.

A recent study by the city suggests that Fremont could replace 65 of its current fleet vehicles with electric alternativ­es within the next three years alone, based on technology that’s on the market now. By 2028, that number could rise to 159 vehicles, amounting to a 53% reduction of the fleet’s carbon emissions. And that’s at a minimum.

“There’s so much innovation in this space,” DiFranco said. “It’s really hard to look out beyond a threeyear horizon and be able to read the tea leaves.”

All told, the study reported, Fremont’s electric vehicle replacemen­ts could result in about $3 million in savings to the city over the next two decades with about $2.5 million directly attributed to police vehicle replacemen­t.

So far, Fremont police have acquired two out of the three additional electric or hybrid patrol vehicles the city has budgeted for the past two fiscal years: The 2020 Tesla Model Y, which was bought for $57,000, and the 2021 Ford Utility Hybrid PPV, purchased for $48,000. The city is weighing a number of car manufactur­ers before moving forward.

The most immediate hurdle, she said, is coming up with the infrastruc­ture costs for charging stations. To electrify all of the vehicles identified in the study, 86 charging ports will need to be added, including at least 52 at the city’s police complex. DiFranco said research like Fremont’s report will help the city and others justify frontloadi­ng the costs in exchange for savings and environmen­tal benefits in the decades to come.

There’s potential for hefty stimulus funds to come from the next presidenti­al administra­tion for environmen­tal projects, but DiFranco said it’s unclear when that will happen or what that will look like.

“That’s where we’re at now — do we put the cart before the horse?” DiFranco said. “Those are the things that we’re still trying to get a better understand­ing of with this study.”

 ?? Jessica Christian / The Chronicle ?? A pilot program at the Fremont Police Department found that its Tesla Model S 85 patrol vehicle saved the department more than $2,100 annually on fuel, maintenanc­e and repair costs compared to its gas vehicles.
Jessica Christian / The Chronicle A pilot program at the Fremont Police Department found that its Tesla Model S 85 patrol vehicle saved the department more than $2,100 annually on fuel, maintenanc­e and repair costs compared to its gas vehicles.

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