In Massachusetts, income-qualified residents can rent an e-bike for a dollar a day.

  • @[email protected]
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    52 months ago

    I don’t see rental bikes on a daily rate as a primary mode of transportation. Plenty of people only come into the city on certain days, or visit cities they don’t live in, or otherwise just need to get around a single place they would’ve walked. They need the ability to start and stop in arbitrary places, and not bring something with them.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 months ago

      Keep in mind that this program is for people who likely have no other means to get around, so it would be their main form of transportation.

      As a personal example, before my son could get a licence, he used an e-scooter to get to his school co-op placement on a daily basis. He would have used local rentals, but it was cheaper to own one.

      But from what I hear about places that offer rental prpgrams on a monthly program, they do get used very often as a main form of transportation. And plenty of people, regardless of their income, use a bike as their main form of transportation, too.

    • @njordomir
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      11 month ago

      That’s more in line with how I’ve seen these programs pitched in the past. Tourist bikes and downtown bikes to provide options in car-congested areas. I used them in Honolulu, Karlsruhe, Denver, and a number of other places and it was always because I was visiting without a car.

      Having said all that, I spoke with someone from my local bikeshare recently who told me they’re doing a low income program where you can actually own the bike after you’ve used the program a certain amount of time. We are very suburban with skeleton transit in most areas, so you can’t cover the distances without a car or bike.