JUMP, Lime, Scoot and Spin receive permits to operate scooters in SF

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Electric scooter providers JUMP, Lime, Scoot and Spin have just been granted permits to operate their respective services in San Francisco
beginning October 15, 2019 *
This is part of the city longer-term permitting program for electric scooters. Each scooter provider will initially be able to deploy 1,000
scooters, with the potential to deploy up to 2,500
The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency says this should double the number of service areas covered. As part of the program, the
SFMTA is requiring all scooters to be lock-to and each company said they will use W-2 workers, both full-time and part-time, for
operations. We look forward to honoring the commitments we feel are imperative to creating a strong partnership, including hiring locally,
investing in the community, and ensuring our transportation services are equitably spread throughout the city,& Spin wrote in a blog
post. In total, 11 operators applied for permits
The SFMTA scored them across device standards and safety, pricing, operations, plan for safe riding and parking, experience and
qualifications and more. Skip, which was previously granted the rights to operate shared scooters in San Francisco, did not receive a
permit this time around. As set forth in the permit application, Evaluation Scoresheet and Policy Directive, applicants were required to
receive an average score of 2 or greater for each of the eight sections in the application, or would be disqualified from further
evaluation,& the SFMTA wrote in its rejection letter to Skip
&Staff thoroughly reviewed all 11 applications received, including Skip Transport, Inc.&s
Skip Transport, Inc
permit application is denied because it received an average score below the required threshold of 2 on Section A of the application, and
therefore was disqualified from further evaluation. In a statement to TechCrunch, Skip said, &We respect SFMTA process and feedback
We look forward to addressing areas of improvement with SFMTA per their review process and timeline
We&re proud to have helped make the first scooter sharing pilot in San Francisco a success and to see the program expanding in the coming
year. Notably, Lyft was also denied a permit to operate shared electric scooters
While Lyft scored quite well overall, the SFMTA said it determined four was the right number of operators. *An earlier version of this story
said 2020
My bad. The uncertain future of shared electric scooters