Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a very strong anti EV crowd in DC. When I bought mine I was expecting grief from the "rolling coal" crowd, but I have not seen any of that, simply condemnation from the "ban cars" crowd. Far more so than I used to personally witness when I road a gas car. I think that the bike/car banning crowd, saw a city with no cars in their reaches and now are seeing this popularizing of EV's. The easiest way to fight that is to make them as difficult as possible to own and make their ownership seen as some sort of equality denial indicator.
I think you’re overestimating the number of people in D.C. who want to ban cars and also the extent to which they thought that goal was actually achievable. It is true that some people working in this space think EVs are just a bandaid on the underlying problem of a society that’s organized to be too car-centric (a sentiment which I agree with to some extent, which is why I try to walk, bike, or take public transit rather than driving even an electric car when I can). But most policy makers and advocates would rather have electric cars than gas-powered ones, even as they also want to make it easier and more convenient to get around without any cars at all.
Anonymous wrote:There is a very strong anti EV crowd in DC. When I bought mine I was expecting grief from the "rolling coal" crowd, but I have not seen any of that, simply condemnation from the "ban cars" crowd. Far more so than I used to personally witness when I road a gas car. I think that the bike/car banning crowd, saw a city with no cars in their reaches and now are seeing this popularizing of EV's. The easiest way to fight that is to make them as difficult as possible to own and make their ownership seen as some sort of equality denial indicator.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC views EV's as a privileged nuisance. They do not see EV's as a way forward through greener or more efficient transportation but an impediment to ultimately a car free city.
They're not, or at least they're certainly not more space-efficient.
Larger interior cars for same outside space equals more efficient.
Anonymous wrote:There is a very strong anti EV crowd in DC. When I bought mine I was expecting grief from the "rolling coal" crowd, but I have not seen any of that, simply condemnation from the "ban cars" crowd. Far more so than I used to personally witness when I road a gas car. I think that the bike/car banning crowd, saw a city with no cars in their reaches and now are seeing this popularizing of EV's. The easiest way to fight that is to make them as difficult as possible to own and make their ownership seen as some sort of equality denial indicator.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've seen a few. At first I thought it was just something different. After having tripped over them a couple of times, I now accidentally kick them out
Good job! EV's should only be for suburban people that can afford to have a garage or carport.
I would start with: if you get an EV, you need to figure out a way to charge it without obstructing the sidewalk.
Yup. In DC, many, many people have parking spots and garages. buying an EV if you only have street parking seems like a real lack of forethought. Especially because most EVs are not particularly cheap and rarely available used, so the population we're talking about are not exactly hurting for cash.
Now, if EVs were more accessible to the broader population, I'd support installing charging stations on curbs to accommodate them. But as it currently stands, this would just be a convincing for people who are already extremely privileged. They can figure it out.
If the city had more widely available fast charging stations, this would be easier to pull off as a policy. But by effectively proposing that only people with off street parking can get EVs, you’re going to ensure that the underlying situation you identify — they’re mostly owned by rich people — continues. (You actually can find used Nissan Leafs or Chevy Bolts pretty easily, and they cost around $20,000 — not super cheap, obviously, but hardly out of reach for everyone.) The solution to EV cables blocking sidewalks is better EV infrastructure, not fewer EVs.
Unless you are willing to put up the capital to invest in charging stations in an area with extremely high real estate prices then I suggest what you are proposing is not realistic. Just as it is not the governments responsibility to build gas stations, it is not the gocernments responsibility to build EV infrastructure. However, it is the governments job to protect residents from nuisance on public right of ways. If you want better charging infrastructure, you would be better served petitioning Tesla or property developers. In the mean time people need to keep their cords off the sidewalk.
It's not the government's responsibility to provide charging stations, true, but it could get involved in incentivizing them, which it already does do for private owners. (I'll get a tax credit for the charging setup I installed for my EV, which we park in our driveway.) Or it could require private developers to put them in if they want permission to build. Electrify America, which is a Volkswagen spinoff, put chargers in the Walmart parking lot on Georgia Avenue -- that's the kind of thing that would help make it feasible to own an EV (which benefits all of us who breathe, since they don't emit anything while driving) without obstructing sidewalks (which also benefits us all, for obvious reasons).
I don’t care what your excuses are. Stop making a nuisance for everyone else, especially the elderly and disabled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC views EV's as a privileged nuisance. They do not see EV's as a way forward through greener or more efficient transportation but an impediment to ultimately a car free city.
They're not, or at least they're certainly not more space-efficient.
Anonymous wrote:DC views EV's as a privileged nuisance. They do not see EV's as a way forward through greener or more efficient transportation but an impediment to ultimately a car free city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've seen a few. At first I thought it was just something different. After having tripped over them a couple of times, I now accidentally kick them out
Good job! EV's should only be for suburban people that can afford to have a garage or carport.
I would start with: if you get an EV, you need to figure out a way to charge it without obstructing the sidewalk.
Yup. In DC, many, many people have parking spots and garages. buying an EV if you only have street parking seems like a real lack of forethought. Especially because most EVs are not particularly cheap and rarely available used, so the population we're talking about are not exactly hurting for cash.
Now, if EVs were more accessible to the broader population, I'd support installing charging stations on curbs to accommodate them. But as it currently stands, this would just be a convincing for people who are already extremely privileged. They can figure it out.
If the city had more widely available fast charging stations, this would be easier to pull off as a policy. But by effectively proposing that only people with off street parking can get EVs, you’re going to ensure that the underlying situation you identify — they’re mostly owned by rich people — continues. (You actually can find used Nissan Leafs or Chevy Bolts pretty easily, and they cost around $20,000 — not super cheap, obviously, but hardly out of reach for everyone.) The solution to EV cables blocking sidewalks is better EV infrastructure, not fewer EVs.
Unless you are willing to put up the capital to invest in charging stations in an area with extremely high real estate prices then I suggest what you are proposing is not realistic. Just as it is not the governments responsibility to build gas stations, it is not the gocernments responsibility to build EV infrastructure. However, it is the governments job to protect residents from nuisance on public right of ways. If you want better charging infrastructure, you would be better served petitioning Tesla or property developers. In the mean time people need to keep their cords off the sidewalk.
It's not the government's responsibility to provide charging stations, true, but it could get involved in incentivizing them, which it already does do for private owners. (I'll get a tax credit for the charging setup I installed for my EV, which we park in our driveway.) Or it could require private developers to put them in if they want permission to build. Electrify America, which is a Volkswagen spinoff, put chargers in the Walmart parking lot on Georgia Avenue -- that's the kind of thing that would help make it feasible to own an EV (which benefits all of us who breathe, since they don't emit anything while driving) without obstructing sidewalks (which also benefits us all, for obvious reasons).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've seen a few. At first I thought it was just something different. After having tripped over them a couple of times, I now accidentally kick them out
Good job! EV's should only be for suburban people that can afford to have a garage or carport.
I would start with: if you get an EV, you need to figure out a way to charge it without obstructing the sidewalk.
Yup. In DC, many, many people have parking spots and garages. buying an EV if you only have street parking seems like a real lack of forethought. Especially because most EVs are not particularly cheap and rarely available used, so the population we're talking about are not exactly hurting for cash.
Now, if EVs were more accessible to the broader population, I'd support installing charging stations on curbs to accommodate them. But as it currently stands, this would just be a convincing for people who are already extremely privileged. They can figure it out.
If the city had more widely available fast charging stations, this would be easier to pull off as a policy. But by effectively proposing that only people with off street parking can get EVs, you’re going to ensure that the underlying situation you identify — they’re mostly owned by rich people — continues. (You actually can find used Nissan Leafs or Chevy Bolts pretty easily, and they cost around $20,000 — not super cheap, obviously, but hardly out of reach for everyone.) The solution to EV cables blocking sidewalks is better EV infrastructure, not fewer EVs.
Unless you are willing to put up the capital to invest in charging stations in an area with extremely high real estate prices then I suggest what you are proposing is not realistic. Just as it is not the governments responsibility to build gas stations, it is not the gocernments responsibility to build EV infrastructure. However, it is the governments job to protect residents from nuisance on public right of ways. If you want better charging infrastructure, you would be better served petitioning Tesla or property developers. In the mean time people need to keep their cords off the sidewalk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've seen a few. At first I thought it was just something different. After having tripped over them a couple of times, I now accidentally kick them out
Good job! EV's should only be for suburban people that can afford to have a garage or carport.
I would start with: if you get an EV, you need to figure out a way to charge it without obstructing the sidewalk.
Yup. In DC, many, many people have parking spots and garages. buying an EV if you only have street parking seems like a real lack of forethought. Especially because most EVs are not particularly cheap and rarely available used, so the population we're talking about are not exactly hurting for cash.
Now, if EVs were more accessible to the broader population, I'd support installing charging stations on curbs to accommodate them. But as it currently stands, this would just be a convincing for people who are already extremely privileged. They can figure it out.
If the city had more widely available fast charging stations, this would be easier to pull off as a policy. But by effectively proposing that only people with off street parking can get EVs, you’re going to ensure that the underlying situation you identify — they’re mostly owned by rich people — continues. (You actually can find used Nissan Leafs or Chevy Bolts pretty easily, and they cost around $20,000 — not super cheap, obviously, but hardly out of reach for everyone.) The solution to EV cables blocking sidewalks is better EV infrastructure, not fewer EVs.