Take a seat: How do Bird’s new Cruisers fit into KCMO’s approach to disruptive innovation?

June 25, 2019  |  John Jared Hawks

Bird Cruiser

With a cushioned seat for two, the new Bird Cruiser’s potential arrival in Kansas City this summer would ride within KCMO’s approach to emerging technologies and disruptive business models.

San Francisco-based Spin scooters

Featuring 20-inch wheels, the electric Cruisers travel uphill in areas like Kansas City’s downtown with ease, according to Bird, and are a new take on the shared fleet concept that debuted in summer 2018 in the metro. Such offerings throw a wrinkle into traditional transportation plans, but can help advance overall innovation strategies, Mayor-Elect Quinton Lucas told Startland.

“We need to be concerned with public transportation in the basic sense — a way for people to get from home to work, no matter what part of the metropolitan area they are heading to,” Lucas said. “Public infrastructure changes and private companies both help us achieve this goal.”

Bird has not announced when — nor confirmed if — the Cruisers will arrive in Kansas City, though teasers indicate test markets for the summer already have been selected.

“Bird’s introduction of shared e-scooters spurred a global phenomenon and mode shift away from cars,” said Travis VanderZanden, founder and CEO of Bird. “To further accelerate progress on our mission to make cities more livable, we are providing additional environmentally friendly micro-mobility alternatives — including Bird Cruiser. Starting this summer, people can move about their city and explore new neighborhoods together, without a car.

Click here for more details on the Cruiser.

Designed and engineered in California, Bird Cruiser is “an inclusive electric-powered option that is approachable, easy-to-ride and comfortable on rough roads,” VanderZanden added.

Bird Cruiser

Bird Cruiser

Keeping up with trends, technology

Kansas City officials are in the midst of understanding how to deal with such rentable electric scooters and e-bikes, a transportation phenomenon. KCMO recently partnered with Bird, Spin, and RideKC Bike and RideKC Scooter for a year-long program “to gauge how these motorized units best fit into our transportation system,” according to city officials.

Rick Usher, KCMO

Rick Usher, KCMO

The program is a step toward determining how to regulate category-breaking business models, said Rick Usher, KCMO assistant city manager for entrepreneurship and small business

“We’re now just over a month into that program,” Usher said. “The pilot is designed to help us figure out what kind of product we need to put in place. What a permitting process would look like, what licensing process would look like. So then in a year, we will take something to City Council for the creation of a permitting or licensing program.”

For Usher, a major facet of that process is understanding what a given business offers the community.

“In the case of scooters, it centers around access to transportation and shared mobility,” he said. “Of course, there is the environmental side of things, with the potential of reducing greenhouse gas emissions. We also have our community health improvement containing an economic mobility component that scooter would support in helping residents get to work, school, or shopping.”

Click here to read about an early safety report about scooters on Kansas City streets.

The ultimate goal for the KCMO pilot program is to create a flourishing environment for both entrepreneurial startups and the city’s transportation culture, Usher said.

“Technologies are changing, so we’re trying to make sure terminology and regulatory models keep up with the terminology,” he said. “We want to build toward certainty of government regulations.”

Adding to the mix

The movement is also seeing cautious support from the highest levels of city government.

Quinton Lucas

Quinton Lucas, Kansas City councilman 3rd District

“It is exciting to see transportation tech coming to KC,” Lucas said. “I have had the chance to ride the scooters and enjoyed it — I actually rode one from downtown to the stadium last year.”

In Lucas’ vision, however, private transportation tech should augment, not replace, public infrastructure.

“We must invest in the public infrastructure changes necessary to ensure that everyone in Kansas City has access to safe and reliable transportation,” he said. “Private companies like Bird and Spin are an exciting and fun way to increase transportation options, but should not take the place of public infrastructure.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2019 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Missouri Gov. Mike Parson border war kc

        Missouri governor signs bill to end KC ‘border war,’ awaits Kansas response

        By Tommy Felts | June 12, 2019

        Missouri Gov. Mike Parson signed a bill Tuesday placing restrictions on tax incentives offered to businesses moving from certain counties in Kansas to Missouri. The bill represents a step toward ending the economic development “border war” between the two states. “This is really about being competitive with real competitors,” said Parson, who was in Kansas…

        Jeff Jones, H&R Block

        Wave’s $405M acquisition a move toward ‘bigger, bolder, faster’ H&R Block, CEO says

        By Tommy Felts | June 11, 2019

        The $405 million acquisition of Wave Financial wasn’t about H&R Block’s image — it was a move to join like-minded companies in the trenches of innovation, no matter the weight either surging business holds, said Jeff Jones. “We knew strategically that industry makes Wave a fit with H&R Block, and then it was a matter…

        Heather and Kyle Steppe, KC Hemp Co.

        Into the weeds: Your corner CBD store might’ve just lost its bank thanks to a slow-to-innovate industry

        By Tommy Felts | June 11, 2019

        Banking as a mom-and-pop CBD shop can be treacherous, said Kyle Steppe. “Our first week in business, our bank shut us down and liquidated all of our assets,” said Steppe, who operates KC Hemp Co. with his wife, Heather. Their downtown Overland Park storefront is one of many independent, regional CBD sites suffering from the…

        Graham Dodge, Garnish Health, Sickweather

        Crowdfunding sites won’t pay your medical bills, Sickweather CEO says, launching reciprocating donation platform

        By Tommy Felts | June 10, 2019

        Crowdfunding can help, but such tactics are unlikely to cover the medical bills of a person struggling with mounting healthcare costs, Graham Dodge said. “The unrealistic amount of self promotion needed to reach people outside your own personal network — which can happen if the media picks up on your story — is the main…