News

New program lets some public employees ride electric bikes.

  • Craig L. Moran/Las Vegas Review-Journal

    Las Vegas Councilman Ricki Barlow, right, and Councilman Steve Ross lead other electric bicycle riders away from the Bonnevill Transit Center on Monday. The city is part of a new program that encourages employees to use the bicycles instead of cars for short trips around downtown. » Buy this photo

By Alan Choate
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: Jun. 13, 2011 | 5:57 p.m.

Let's say you've got an appointment to get to, so you go to the car, pull out of your parking space into traffic, drive, deal with traffic, drive some more and then find another parking space -- but it's all for a destination just a mile or two away.

It's a situation downtown workers face a lot, but a new program gives some public-sector employees an option: electric bicycles.

Las Vegas, the Southern Nevada Water Authority and Clark County's Air Quality Division have joined the Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada for a program that promotes the use of pedal-assisted bicycles instead of cars.

"We want to avoid getting into a car and driving a mile to go to a meeting," said Jacob Snow, general manager of the Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada, which is in charge of the E-Bike effort.

Las Vegas officials noted the city's participation in the E-Bike program Monday with a short bike ride from the Bonneville Transit Center to City Hall. The RTC has been using its bikes since November, while the other entities joined within the past few weeks. There are 25 bicycles in the E-Bike fleet.

They were bought as part of a $400,000 federal grant from the Federal Highway Administration to reduce traffic congestion and improve air quality. Most of the funding went to bike-friendly road improvements.

New construction on downtown streets has added wider sidewalks, bus-only lanes and bike lanes.

"A complete street is a street that is friendly to all modes of transportation," Snow said.

The new Bonneville Transit Station also has resources to make bicycle commuting more practical. There's a bike shop with storage racks, locker rooms and showers so that people can ride to work and then make themselves presentable.

"That is the issue" that keeps people from taking the final step to bike commuting, said Snow, who regularly rides a bike for his 19-mile commute from Henderson. The RTC has shower facilities.

For Monday's ride, Snow was joined by Las Vegas Councilmen Steve Ross and Ricki Barlow, Steven Brooks and Tyrone Cooper from Barlow's office, and Chief Sustainability Officer Tom Perrigo and Ron Floth from the RTC.

Councilwoman Lois Tarkanian attended as well.

The bikes are stored and recharged in lockers at various locations and are intended for use in a three-mile radius around downtown Las Vegas.

They have a top speed of about 25 mph and can be pedaled or run completely off a battery. The battery's charge lasts four to six hours.

"We want to push this so it's a big program with big participation," Tarkanian said, although there are no firm plans to broaden the program, and there are practical concerns to expanding such a program to the public.

Bike-sharing programs are common in many cities around the world, but using electric bikes introduces another element: the battery.

If someone brings back a bike with a drained battery, the unit is out of commission until it recharges, said Christopher Cherry, a professor at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. And if the user is responsible for ensuring the bike is plugged in, "it just takes a couple of absentminded users to really screw up your system," he said.

His university is opening a 20-bike electric bike pilot program on Thursday that initially will be open to 60 to 80 people.

They would be able to swipe an identification card at a station and check out a bike and battery, then return them and plug the battery into a vending machine-type kiosk for recharging. Eventually, there will be two storage-and-charging stations, possibly powered by solar panels.

"There's been a lot of questions about how viable electric bikes are in a shared system," Cherry said. "How many people will use it? How much will people pay?"

Snow said the Transportation Commission expects to save $100,000 on fuel and automotive costs from workers using the bicycles instead of pool vehicles. The bicycles cost about $2,200 each.

The RTC's bikes have logged about 1,000 miles since the program started in November. Charging a battery from empty to full will cost between 10 cents and 20 cents in electricity, according to estimates from NYCeWheels, a retailer that specializes in electric bicycles and scooters.

That's $3 to $6 a month if that much charging is needed every day.

Contact reporter Alan Choate at achoate@reviewjournal.com or 702-229-6435.

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  1. Raoul.N.Stone Jun. 14, 2011 | 4:46 p.m. Report Abuse

    Grumpy, "why can't they walk"? So you're saying you'd have np problem with public servants taking a full hour out of their day just for the time it takes to walk to and from a meeting? Surrrrrrre, you'd be OK with that. And gehrig would be fine with the extra time it would take to go via bus. And gehrig, you do know that buses don't provide door-to-door service, right?

  2. Raoul.N.Stone Jun. 14, 2011 | 4:44 p.m. Report Abuse

    Once again Alvin always tries to will reality out of existence. Yes Alvin, projects like this are based on a cost/benefit analysis. It might stretch Alvin's brain to look at projected usage and costs of e bikes vs fuel and other costs per mile of the vehicular fleet, but it's really not that hard, outside of Alvinworld.

  3. gehrig Jun. 14, 2011 | 11:22 a.m. Report Abuse

    more eco-sap folderol. let them take a bus. or is the bus only fit for the taxpaying, cake eating serfs ?

  4. Grumpy Jun. 14, 2011 | 11:10 a.m. Report Abuse

    Why can't these people walk 1 or 2 miles to a meeting??? Take this money and put it to some good use for gosh sakes. Lazy lazy LAZY!!

  5. Alvinjh Jun. 14, 2011 | 10:03 a.m. Report Abuse

    saves $100,000 per year in fuel? joke...right? you are kidding? they make up a figure like that and toss it out..demworld...

  6. Raoul.N.Stone Jun. 14, 2011 | 9:44 a.m. Report Abuse

    Let's see, if the grant is $400,000 and it saves $100,000 per year in fuel and automotive costs, it will pay for itself in four years. Sure, that's a boondoggle. Oh, those evil greenies!

  7. Irma.Frankenlander Jun. 14, 2011 | 9:07 a.m. Report Abuse

    Hey its Free Government money !!! Whipeee !!!! Wait till inflation hits this country you will all pay for your reckless spending.

  8. Mac Jun. 14, 2011 | 8:57 a.m. Report Abuse

    Another typical greenie scam.
    A FEDERAL GRANT!
    WHY IS THE FEDERAL government going broke? Could it be because of scams like this?

    Greenie agenda.
    "Under MY plan energy rates will necessarily skyrocket."
    (Obama)

    How very stupid. Look at these fools.

    And the LVRJ is taking it's info from a neutral source? Like a shop that SELLS these boondoggles?

  9. Ivanhoe Jun. 14, 2011 | 6:56 a.m. Report Abuse

    Whoopee!!! Our local politicians got $400,000 of free money from the federal government, so they can spend it on whatever lame brained idea they can come up with. And they did. The reality, however is that the $400,000 is not "free". It is from us, the taxpayers and our so-called representatives have wasted our money once again.

  10. Cynthia.Wentaway Jun. 14, 2011 | 6:56 a.m. Report Abuse

    By the way, the vendor mentioned in the article, NYCE wheels, may be the best source in the country for e bikes. Good choice. I know three other people who have gotten e bikes from them, and all three of them love their bikes. They ride them all year round, just like I do. And now, I'm really off to the grocery store on my bike.

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