Popular car-sharing service Car2Go wants to scale back its Twin Cities service area, potentially leaving parts of Minneapolis and St. Paul in the dark.
The changes, which haven't yet been publicly announced, would reduce the availability of the service for the more than 22,000 people in the Twin Cities who use the blue-and-white Smart cars for short, one-way trips. City officials have embraced such services, since they make it easier for residents to abandon their personal cars.
The potential rollback taps into larger tensions between the economics of new shared transportation services like Uber, Car2Go and Nice Ride, which perform best in denser urban areas, and City Hall goals of reducing racial disparities around the city.
Car2Go cars can now be parked anywhere in either city. Some Minneapolis areas possibly on the chopping block include much of the North Side and areas south of 50th Street, where usage is less prevalent, council members briefed privately on the changes said Tuesday. The company confirmed they were analyzing their service areas in Minneapolis and St. Paul, but declined to offer specifics since nothing is final.
"Basically what they want to do is concentrate in the area that was making money for them," said Council Member Blong Yang, who was told service would not extend north of West Broadway in his North Side ward. "That just seems unfair and inequitable."
The reconfiguration would echo similar moves the company has made this summer in Columbus, Ohio, Portland, Ore., and Austin, Texas.
During a committee discussion of car-sharing Tuesday, city staffers said they hope to ultimately implement some type of "border to border program," ensuring cars are available throughout the city. One solution Car2Go has tried in other cities establishes reserved hot spot spaces outside the primary service area.
Minneapolis leaders also said Tuesday that they will seek state law changes reducing the taxes levied on car-sharing rides, which can reach 21 percent, largely due to state taxes traditionally geared toward long-term rental cars.