http://ecomento.com/2015/07/16/indianapolis-electric-car-programs-cause-political-friction/
Indianapolis electric-car programs cause political friction
July 16, 2015 | Stephen Edelstein

[image  
http://cdn.ecomento.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/blueindy-electric-car-sharing-indianapolis-740x425.jpg
(BlueIndy EV)


video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ioILoTnI0xA
Blueindy : See the service in action 
autolibfr  May 14, 2014
]

Indianapolis is rapidly becoming one of the leading U.S. cities for electric
cars. Thanks largely to efforts by Mayor Greg Ballard, the city now hosts
the BlueIndy electric-car sharing services, boasts a network of charging
stations, and plans to electrify a large portion of its municipal fleet
vehicles.

Republican Ballard’s measures initially received little opposition from
Democrats on the Indianapolis city council, but as the charging station and
BlueIndy plans continue to roll out, issues are arising that could become
fodder for some political clashes, reports the Indianapolis Star.

Business owners are now saying that newly-installed charging stations are
eating up precious parking spaces, and Democratic legislators are
complaining that neither they nor the public was consulted about the
location of the charging sites.

While the city says all charging stations will be open to any electric-car
owner, most of them are reportedly being used for the BlueIndy car-sharing
fleet, and legislators are also questioning whether so many spaces should be
taken up by a private operation. BlueIndy is a division of France’s Bolloré,
which operates car-sharing services in Europe as well.

BlueIndy President Hervé Muller said the company used public input from an
online survey and hundreds of write-in suggestions to help determine where
charging stations would be located. He noted that placing stations in
high-traffic areas to increase accessibility, and cited research showing
that car sharing can increase available street parking by cutting
private-vehicle use.

Mayor Ballard’s press secretary, Brad Jacklin, said pushback is expected
with any new program as large as BlueIndy, but that the eventual benefits of
electric cars and car sharing will ultimately make any short-term
inconvenience worthwhile.

Indianapolis signed its contract with BlueIndy last April, and has been
demonstrating the service’s Bolloré BlueCars since then. BlueIndy will
formally launch later this summer.
[© 2015 ecomento.com]
...
http://www.blue-indy.com/
BlueIndy EV program



http://www.indystar.com/story/news/2015/07/11/electric-car-charging-stations-light-fire-mayor-councilman/29995235/
Electric car charging stations light fire between mayor, councilman
John Tuohy  July 11, 2015

[image  / Charlie Nye / The Star
http://www.gannett-cdn.com/media/2015/07/11/Indianapolis/B9318036705Z.1_20150711172730_000_GC6BALERR.1-0.jpg
(BlueIndy EVs parked along curb)
]

The curbside charging stations for electric cars being installed across the
city are seen by Mayor Greg Ballard as key to an environmentally friendly
future — electronic charging stations where, for a couple of bucks, drivers
can juice up their Teslas and Volts overnight.

But some small business owners, living in the here and now, say the stations
— dedicated mostly to the BlueIndy electric car-share vehicles — are
gobbling precious parking spots in premium locations and could cost them
customers.

“It hurts us because we’re the type of place where people run in and out and
like parking for just a few minutes,” said Joe Vuskovich, owner of Yats, a
Cajun restaurant at 54th Street and College Avenue, a few steps from five
just-installed chargers. “If people have to park three or four blocks away,
they might not come at all.”

The dispute is one of several signs of growing tensions over the BlueIndy
electric car-sharing program, one of Republican Ballard’s major initiatives
to make the city more “green” and position it as a leader in alternative
transportation. When the program is at full strength, BlueIndy will have 500
electric rental cars perched at 200 locations, each with five chargers.

The city signed its contract with BlueIndy in April 2014, with little
objection voiced by the Democrat-controlled City-County Council. But since
then, opposition has been building, as council members question the process
by which the deal was reached, the size of the city’s financial commitment,
the safety of the cars and, now, the construction of the charging stations.

In a dramatic but largely symbolic gesture to register his displeasure,
Democratic Councilman Zach Adamson will introduce a proposal at Monday’s
City-County Council meeting to tow away five BlueIndy demonstration cars
parked on Washington Street at Meridian Street. The cars have been parked
there all year and are available to the public for test drives.

“That section of Washington Street is a no-parking, no-stopping and
no-standing zone at all times,” Adamson said. “It is not legal to park
anything there.”

Adamson conceded the council is powerless to stop the charging stations from
being built, but said he wanted to send a message to Ballard that he and
other council members were angered that neither they nor the public were
consulted on the sites.

BlueIndy’s success depends on having several stations spread across the city
so a car is never too far away from a user. Customers can rent and return
the cars to any station — so the more stations there are, the more places
drivers can go.

The city says the chargers will be available to all electric car owners, so
years from now, when electric cars are more widely used, the chargers will
have a broad public benefit.

Adamson, chairman of the public works committee, said such a potentially
long-lasting infrastructure needed time for additional public debate.

“Had they gauged some businesses before they started building these things
maybe they would have found some better locations nearby,” Adamson said.

The councilman also objects to setting aside so many parking spots for a
private car-sharing business. BlueIndy is a subsidiary of the French
conglomerate, Bollore Group, which is investing $41 million into the
project, while the city is spending $6 million.

Ballard press secretary Brad Jacklin said pushback is expected with any new
program as sprawling as BlueIndy. But, he said, that doesn’t negate the
benefits of car-sharing.

“It is incumbent upon us to inform businesses of the benefits, and we are
open to feedback,” Jacklin said.

He said car shares, bike shares, trails and app-based car services such as
Uber are essential to attract and keep young workers who demand those
options.

Tight fit in Broad Ripple
Outside Yats, on North College, five chargers are wrapped in plastic,
waiting for the BlueIndy grand opening. Until then, parking is off-limits to
other cars.

“This neighborhood has really picked up the last few years and keeps
growing,” Vuskovich said, “and the last thing we need is fewer parking
spaces.”

Two blocks south, on 52nd Street and College, Luna Music owner Todd Robinson
wondered why two charging stations were so close together.

“We’ve got one right down the street. I don’t see the wisdom in that,” he
said. “I’m sure there are some big sections of the city that won’t get any
so why have two right here?”

Robinson said he has used Bollore’s car share program in France and supports
the concept, but he said he doesn’t think the stations “should jam up busy
intersections.”

“As you can see parking here is at a premium,” Robinson said.

But across the street at the SoBro Cafe, head chef Luke Weber said the
station, which is directly in front of his restaurant, would help business.

“Most of our customers walk here or ride their bikes anyway,” he said. “And
I see it as good advertising for us because people parking here will
discover us.”

Could increase parking space
BlueIndy President Hervé Muller said the company gathered input from the
public through surveys on its website, www.blue-indy.com and hundreds of
people gave suggestions. In addition, he said 2,000 people subscribe to a
newsletter which gives frequent updates on construction.

Muller said it was most practical to put the stations in population centers
where the most people can see and use them, rather than hard-to-find side
streets.

“Just as bus stops are located in places where they are visible to make them
convenient to access rather than in back alleys, for BlueIndy serving the
needs of the many is helped by making sure folks see these cars and use them
often,” Muller said in an email. He added that studies have shown that in
the long run, car-share programs increase street parking spaces because they
decrease private vehicle driving.

Downtown on Walnut Street, near East Street, the pavement has been marked
for a charging station. At Henry’s Coffee Bistro, 627 East St., owner Mike
Penley said the chargers are going to squeeze parking for his customers.

He shares a tight, eight-spot parking lot with two neighboring businesses
and said, “A lot of customers prefer street parking because the lot is so
small and often full.”

He predicted the loss of parking spaces would also increase the number of
drivers who illegally park in his lot.

Penly said he wasn’t told the chargers were coming and “what the city did
was rotten.”

“They should have had community hearings on this,” he said.

At the Nestle Inn, a bed-and-breakfast next door to Henry’s, proprietor
Leesa Smith said she thinks the e-car spaces will help her business.

“I look at it as an amenity,” she said.

But she said the spots were often used by guests to unload and load their
cars, and she has asked Adamson about getting a dedicated loading spot in
front of her B&B.

Adamson said the request is an example of how the charging stations can lead
to more requests like Smith’s.

“How many other businesses are now going to run to their councilors and ask
for dedicated spaces because we gave so many to this private company?” he
said.

Department of Public Works spokesman Scott Manning said many businesses
already have street parking reserved for them, including hotels,
restaurants, carriage rides, Lucas Oil Stadium and Bankers Life Fieldhouse.

“This is the way businesses have been operating for many years,” he said.
“It would be bad precedent to change the ordinance because you don’t like
what one company is doing.”
[© indystar.com]




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