The city is seeking a vendor to provide standard, cargo and tricycle e-bikes and equipment including helmets and locks. The program, which is expected to start before the end of the year, will allow residents to check out the electric vehicles for up to three months at no cost.
"Cycling removes us from our bubbles and brings us into more human contact and connection," said Reed Sherlock, a transportation planner overseeing the Long Beach pilot.
The Long Beach effort reflects a surge in state and municipal programs to provide environmentally friendly modes of travel, including e-bikes, electric cars and zero-emission buses. The programs are intended to improve local transportation without adding to the emissions and noise generated by gas-guzzling cars and buses.
E-bike sales across the country have increased in the last several years, with many consumers choosing them as an eco-friendly alternative to driving without the hassle of finding parking.
But in at least one cities, the increase in e-bike riders has led to a rise in bike accidents, prompting local authorities to crack down on motorists who ignore safe-driving rules around bicyclists.
Experts also say that although owning an e-bike is significantly less expensive than owning a car, they are not cheap, requiring an investment of a couple of thousands of dollars.
In Long Beach, officials said the e-bike library program will increase familiarity and ridership of this zero-emission form of traveling. The bicycles are equipped with fully operable pedals and an electric motor for an extra boost. The cargo models include extra seats for children and space for groceries.
"Bicycling is a public good," Sherlock said. "Like access to books through libraries, bicycling can empower communities, regardless of age, and provide more possibilities for access to transportation."
Long Beach will reserve two-thirds of the bikes for residents enrolled in income assistance programs who "just don't have the financial capability to have a car as their primary mode of transportation," Sherlock said.
The California Air Resources Board plans to launch an e-bike incentive program this fall in response to growing interest across the state. The program will target low-income residents and those who live in "disadvantaged" communities, and will offer rebates of $1,000 off a standard e-bike, with an additional $750 discount for larger bikes.
E-bike pilot programs like this have already cropped up in cities across the state. Pasadena launched a pilot program in July that will provide rebates between $500 and $1,000 for residents who purchase an e-bike in the city. In Berkeley, more than 600 low-income residents applied to be part of an e-bike lottery program earlier this year. The project provided 56 households with bikes to use through next May.
"There is way more demand for this among low-income people than there's funding," said Laura McCamy, a communications specialist at the California Bicycle Coalition. "E-bikes provide critical transportation in places that are transit deserts, often poor or underserved suburban neighborhoods."
McCamy predicts that as more people ride bikes, vehicle drivers will become more likely to share the road with cyclists.
But some cyclists are wary about sharing the road with cars.
Encinitas in San Diego County declared a local state of emergency after a 15-year-old boy riding an e-bike was killed in a crash in late June. The city also launched a public education campaign that includes coordinating with school districts and private schools to relay traffic safety messages and add electronic messaging boards at high collision and traffic areas.
"It is the type of tragedy that makes you sit up in your chair and recognize that we need to do more," said Encinitas Mayor Tony Kranz.
The emergency proclamation will expedite city measures to protect the local bike-riding community, especially during the busy summer season, Kranz said. It is expected to end on Sept. 30.
One of those measures, enacted Friday, prohibits a person from riding a bicycle in a manner unintended for its design, such as sitting on it backwards. First-time violators can waive penalties if they take a bike safety course.
In Encinitas, collisions involving bicycles or e-bikes tripled since 2020, with 11 crashes already reported this year, city officials said. Bike incidents occurred more frequently in the summer months from June to September.
The proclamation notes that e-bikes, which are faster and heavier, can cause more severe damage than collisions involving regular bikes. But Kranz thinks it's worthwhile to continue supporting all cycling and greener transportation alternatives.
"In a city like Encinitas, where the weather is very favorable for riding a bike, it just makes a whole bunch of sense," Kranz said. "Our roadways are designed for the automobile, and we need to make some changes to increase mobility options."
Bicycling does make sense, considering that more than half of all daily vehicle trips across the country, including car, rail, transit and air travel, were less than three miles in 2021, and almost a third were less than a mile, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics.
Long Beach is not the only city trying to provide a creative green transportation alternative.
Sacramento officials launched a micro-transit service called SmaRT Ride in 2018 to better serve people living in the region's suburban communities. Riders can request a shuttle to pick them up and drop them off "corner-to-corner" via a smartphone app. A study by the Institute of Transportation at UC Davis found that more than half of the users were low-income residents and were more likely to have physical limitations.
Affordable housing complexes in Tulare and Kern counties began in 2019 hosting vehicle hubs for Míocar, an electric car-sharing program designed to improve transportation in the rural San Joaquin Valley.
San Francisco has California's largest zero-emission bus fleet and has among the lowest emissions per passenger in the state, according to a 2021 study by the U.S. Department of Transportation.
Across the bridge, officials in East Oakland launched a universal basic mobility pilot that provided some residents with funds for public transit and shared mobility services, such as e-scooters. About 1,000 residents in West Oakland will be eligible to receive up to $320 to use toward transportation in the fall.
McCamy is cautiously optimistic about the new sustainable efforts across the state.
"I think it could be revolutionary," she said. "I'm not saying it would be cheap or easy — it would take a concerted effort — but it is very achievable."
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