Puebloans could soon zip around town on an electric scooter, at a safe speed and wearing a helmet, of course.
The Pueblo City Council considered a first presentation on an ordinance to approve a license agreement between the city and Bird Rides, the shared electric scooter company that is proposing to bring a fleet of 200 scooters to town.
The ordinance calls for Bird to pay the city an initial annual license fee of $500 and renewal license fees of $200 each year after. Additionally, Bird would pay the city 10 cents per ride completed during the preceding year when they apply for renewal.
ATLIS Motor Vehicles Appoints Former Bird Rides Executive to Chief Financial Officer
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MESA, Ariz., April 12, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Atlis Motor Vehicles (ATLIS), a start-up mobility company that is developing a 500-mile electric work truck, electric vehicle (EV) batteries, and charging ecosystem, announced today that John Stilo has joined the company as chief financial officer. Stilo brings to ATLIS an extensive background in the electrification, mobility, and finance industries.
Most recently, Stilo led the finance and accounting team at Sure, a VC-backed Insurtech Software as a Service (SaaS) fast-growing start-up. Prior to Sure, he led the financial planning and analysis team at Bird Rides, the micromobility company based in Santa Monica, California, that operates electric scooters in hundreds of cities across the globe. Stilo developed the first budget and headcount plan required for the company s hypergrowth when Bird Rides
Electric scooters heading to Wauwatosa cbs58.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cbs58.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Bird Scooters will return to Columbia soon, after unanimous council vote
COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)
UPDATE 9:15 p.m. : Bird scooters are on their way back to Columbia, after city council approved an agreement with the University of Missouri and Bird Rides, Inc. Monday Night.
The unanimous vote in support of the dockless scooters came after a line of questioning about past issues like placement, logistics and financials.
Leaders say 500 scooters will come back to the city. There is not set timeline right now, but the city says it could be within the next month.
Bird Rides will pay an initial fee of $10,000 each to the City of Columbia and the University of Missouri and $2.00 per scooter in operation each day. That would be split with the University and the city.
It is unclear why the truck was stalled. The collision caused multiple train cars to be derailed.
MoDOT says Route A between Route AA and Highway 63 will be closed overnight and into Tuesday.
Yearwood is coming from Manor, Texas, just northeast of Austin, where he is chief operations officer for the Manor Independent School District. He has worked in education for about 30 years, as a professor, coach, principal and assistant superintendent, according to a district news release.
Yearwood will start officially July 1. But he plans to get to know the district before that, according to the release.
Yearwood plans on working with board members and staff to schedule school visits. He also plans to schedule meetings with parents, staff and community members.Â