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by Drunk_Engineer
2380 days ago
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Looking at the application, Skip appears to have been screwed over on other categories too. They got a low score on "sustainability" even though they rebuild/repair broken scooters instead of throwing in the trash (like many of the other applicants). And they have actual employees instead of contractors, yet they scored low on the employment metric. The broader issue is why even have an artificial limit for scooters? Imagine if SFMTA limited roads to just 2 car manufacturers and a set number of vehicles... |
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As to the second question, despite being pretty pro-regulation myself, I don't know whether the artificial limit is really worth imposing at this point. A year and a half ago, I would have said maybe it was, based on the way scooters had become a borderline menace in San Jose -- but there don't seem to be nearly as many of them now, I suspect in part because the novelty has worn out and in part because, as someone else noted in this comment section, the prices have substantially jumped compared not just to the $2-for-30-minutes rental bikes (when they're available, granted) but to Uber/Lyft.