West Hollywood City Council Will Consider Putting the Brakes on WeHo Pedals

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West Hollywood will put the brakes on its WeHo Pedals bike-sharing program if the City Council on Monday approves a proposal by council members John D’Amico and Lauren Meister.

A memo accompanying the proposal suggests the city instead test a dockless bike share program like those being evaluated currently in Santa Monica and Los Angeles. The dockless bike share program would be operated by a for-profit company and not subsidized by the city.

The memo calls out a January 2018 report from City Hall that says that over 12 months WeHo Pedals cost the city $344,750 and generated revenue of only $133,771. The city had anticipated revenue from those who used the 150 rental bikes and from advertising on the 21 stations where they are located. It notes that while WeHo Pedals was expected to generate 263 trips per day, it only generated an average of 40 per day over a 12 month period at an average cost to the city of $25 a trip.

WeHo Pedals has a number of pricing plans, including one that charges $7 for the first hour of a ride and then 12 cents for each minute after, and one that charges $99 a year for a rides of up to 90 minutes per day.

The council members’ proposal says the program, which was approved by the council in August 2016, “remains an underutilized program and an inefficient use of resources.”

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A dockless bike share program would allow private companies to offer shared bicycles for rent on sidewalks and private property with a license from the city. The bikes would not need to be locked to a standard rack or be located at designated stations or hubs. They would be accessible via a mobile app through which the user could pay for his or her ride.

The model that D’Amico and Meister ask the city to consider is currently used in a pilot project in Santa Monica, which has granted Bird, Lime, Jump and Lyft permission to operate a set number of dockless bikes in certain areas of that city. Santa Monica also has given those companies permission to test dockless electric scooters, whose rental within West Hollywood has been banned by the city council and which isn’t recommended in the D’Amico/Meister proposal. Santa Monica Mayor Ted Winterer has described its test of dockless bikes and electric scooters as “another chapter in our long history of commitment to being a multimodal city where the car is not the only option to get around, and fossil fuel transportation doesn’t threaten our planet.”

In both Los Angeles and Santa Monica operators of dockless transportation vehicles pay the city an annual fee of $20,000 and $130 per device. Los Angeles also requires those operators to share data on the usage of the vehicles and to provide access to those without smartphones and those with low incomes. The operators will have to have liability insurance of at least $5 million that covers both the companies and their customers.

The proposal to the city council states that closing WeHo Pedals could save the city $400,00 a year and that the city might be able to recover some costs by selling the bikes and other related equipment.

The City Council will meet at 6:30 p.m. on Monday in the City Council Chambers, 625 N. San Vicente Blvd., south of Santa Monica. Parking in the adjacent five-story parking structure is free with a ticket validated at the council meeting.

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story said the average cost per trip of West Hollywood’s WeHo Pedals program was $7. The actual cost was $25 and the story has been corrected.

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Ty Geltmaker
Ty Geltmaker
6 years ago

From beginning these useless bikes were a public relations ploy, playing into the Duran Dream of New Urbanists flying in from Paris and after breakfast in New York, cycling through West Hollywood. Gimme a Break. They sit alone waiting for a rider.

Bells, Horns & Lights
Bells, Horns & Lights
6 years ago

Dockless bikes and scooters are the latest mechanized version of litter for the lazy. Just leave it anywhere and take no responsibility. Walking would surely improve one’s life.

Whatever the city considers and eventually authorizes, please require it to be equipped with some type of bell/horn and lights…..not the intimidating and blinding light on current scooters which is like a permanent high beam on a car.

Ben
Ben
6 years ago

Such local government programs demonstrate only one thing: that the city of West Hollywood is overfunded and seeks (in most cases useless) projects to fund with taxpayer money. De-fund the city of West Hollywood!

David Larson
David Larson
6 years ago

What really gets me is the city bought into and put these bikes all over town all at once without any trial period or public test–literally hundreds. Why didn’t they start with just a few at key locations to see how it went?

Anonymous
Anonymous
6 years ago

No one wants to ride the bicycles. Get your act together Weho! Why is WeHo really not approving the eScooters? What happened to being the creative city and moving forward?

BK
BK
6 years ago

This is comical, to say the least. The council was way too late to bring a bike program to the city which had worked in many other major cities such as NYC and Miami 5 years ago. Now they are thinking a dockless mobile, which will allow a bike to be parked anywhere the same complaint as scooters along with people riding a bike on the sidewalk. Humm, there are clearly no signs of sanity returning anytime soon here. However, what is even more comical, is why would I or anyone else pay $7.00 for the first hour, only being… Read more »

Ted
Ted
6 years ago

The only ones making money are (1) the bike manufacturers and (2) the bike & ride companies selling this rediculous and misguided concept of local bike transportation to local government agencies seeking alternative sources of income and transportation solutions. If West Hollywood wants to help lower income people get around town there are more credible alternative ride share solutions that don’t bleed money from city coffers and require implementing unsightly infrastructure.

Larry Block
Larry Block
6 years ago

The birds scooters killed the bike program but I do agree w Alan that government programs are not run for profit. A small loss with increasing ridership might take 2 or 3 years to break even. No bikes means more scooters? Please let’s have some enforcement of these scooters on sidewalks and all over the place.

Manny
Manny
6 years ago
Reply to  Larry Block

Sorry Larry. This program was dead way before scooters.

Alan Strasburg
Alan Strasburg
6 years ago

Government programs are not run for a profit, or even to break even, government programs serve the public good. We subsidize public transportation for myriad reasons, all having a root in societal benefit, including providing options to low-income folks, to those who see the environmental benefit of options other than a car, and importantly in this city, to have fewer cars clogging the roadways. Let’s get over the dollars and cents analysis and focus on whether or not there’s a public good in having sensible transportation options such as shared bike programs. I’m even a supporter of the scooters, but… Read more »

Christopher Roth
Christopher Roth
6 years ago
Reply to  Alan Strasburg

I agree with Alan but I would add this to consider.
You can’t ride them out of West Hollywood so this limits your trip to basically Santa Monica Blvd. I wrote to WeHo Pedals in the beginning suggesting that a docking station at Hollywood and Highland would be a good idea. I assume the new dockless bike program will also have the same limitation. The Metro Bike Share program which has stations all over Los Angeles would be a better fit. Let them maintain it and they have electric bikes too!

Manny
Manny
6 years ago
Reply to  Alan Strasburg

Scooters aren’t bad, it’s the on-demand nickel and diming and lock-less technology business model that corrupts the product.

If you want a real “Transportation Alternative”…….buy a scooter! (and stay off the sidewalk)

Martin
Martin
6 years ago
Reply to  Manny

You really don’t get the benefit of the scooters. It’s exactly the independence from being constrained to having a scooter or any mobility device that makes it so great. It allows us to explore the city (in my case Santa Monica and Venice) without having to worry about parking meters, theft, or what we want to do. I do like to run from Brentwood to the beach and then down to Venice, go to the gym, then take a bird back home. I prefer not to do that while carrying a scooter on my back 😉

Manny
Manny
6 years ago
Reply to  Martin

Slow down, take it all in……Try walking.

kab1200
kab1200
6 years ago
Reply to  Alan Strasburg

Bravo Alan!

PS
PS
6 years ago

Get rid of those stupid bikes. They take up space and I hardly ever see people using them. Most likely because the pricing structure is too ridiculous in the first place; it’s just too expensive. I’m much more of an advocate of a *regulated* scooter program like Bird, Lime or Lift. They’re actually fun to ride, cost effective and encourage locals to consider alternative methods of transportation.

Manny
Manny
6 years ago
Reply to  PS

Scooters can never be “regulated”, it would defeat their purpose of a reckless and throw away joy ride.

This local is very content with walking.

rary42
rary42
6 years ago

I appreciate the city trying this concept. It just didn’t work. And it’s not the cities fault, though they were too pricey and needed a sponsor. Let’s move on from it.
Thank you.

90069
90069
6 years ago

Meister seems to have no problem with the heavy subsidy of Cityline and Dial a Ride. At least the bikes are good for the environment.

WeHo Mikey
WeHo Mikey
6 years ago
Reply to  90069

Those serve the elderly.
I’m guessing nobody’s grandma will be using a scooter to get up our hills.

Tia
Tia
6 years ago
Reply to  90069

Yes Councilmember Meister has no problem funding Cityline and Dial-a-Ride! Thank you. Those programs are effective and heavily used by our senior and disabled comunity.

90069
90069
6 years ago
Reply to  Tia

According to Wehoville’s reporting, the City spends $44 per trip for a Dial-a-Ride trip, and ridership is about the same as those that use Weho Pedals but more than six times the cost. CityLine trips are subsidized $13 per trip – still more expensive than the bikes, which are not contributing to more pollution and traffic. I am not saying that these transit options should be banned but we should be honest about the “effectiveness” of taxpayer money. Obviously, Meister doesn’t want to mess with the very expensive subsidies targeting older voters due to self-preservation.

Randy
Randy
6 years ago
Reply to  90069

West Hollywood’s older population deserves that service. West Hollywood has a huge surplus of money, tax revenue from visitors every weekend, and from people staying in hotels. I have zero problem with them giving money back to take care of our senior population. And I don’t care if people see it as politically motivated. I’m proud to live in a community that takes care of our senior population.