And the Settlement Agreement advances our policy goals around stationless bike share as well and were particularly excite ford the potential of ebikes. And theres different operators. Jump was the first operator that was eligible for a permit under our program. Jump submitted its initial application in july of 201 prior to any other company. It developed as the first and only company to fulfill all the permit requirements with the november 2017 submittals. One requirement was the data sharing requirement. Thats something we heard a lot of reluctance from from other companies and jump was the first to operate ebike. Was there a set of criteria about what the sfmta was looking for . Did it say in october when these got ahead of Transportation Technologies did you say to the potential world of stationless bike sharing companies, we are looking for e bikes. That is a criteria. Were looking for data sharing as a criteria. If you do not have these youll be considered incomplete. Yes. We developed permit application materials based on the legislation that were very detailed in what we were requiring from the operators including detailed data sharing provisions and making sure they had a plan for us that made sense to us about how theyd maintain the public right of way. One of the things were happy that jump provided is the bicycles have integrated e locks which are shown on the slide there. They lock right to the bike rack so they dont take up the sidewalk. It looked like the agreement i have a question, supervisor cohen theres communication to all the companies and were they notified, all the other applicants . Was there only one Ebike Company . We didnt promise anything about number of permits it could be zero or any number. We never made any promises. Did this go to all the companies or Just One Company or no companies . We provided the same information at the same time to all the different operators. Do you have more to your presentation . I have one more slide i think. The main thing i wanted to end with is the pilot evaluation. Theres an important piece of this. We are really hopeful to use the 18 month period to learn how stationless bike shares fits into the San Francisco context and how it can play an Important Role in our Transportation System and make amendments to the program as required. The pilot evaluation really falls on two different axis. First is what kind of Transportation Service is really be provided. Is the demand high and whos in the system and where are they going. Fundamentally its stationless bike share is it filling a gap in successful travel options and the second is whether theres secondary impact including blocked sidewalks, broken bikes, proliferation of graffiti and additional costs for city crews and if theres any other impacts compared to transportation benefits. Ill stop so we can get into details i wasnt able to cover but my summary is were eager to promote bike sharing information and were confident our approach is starting with a similar pilot with bike sharing and commuter shut als to ensure were putting the Public Interest of people of San Francisco first in the process. That concludes my presentation. Thank you. Thank you for the presentation, mr. Parks. Thank you. I have about three and a half questions and has to do with my original question. Im under the impression and heard no one was advised of the terms of the settlement and the other companies were not advised it would be a onepermit ebike only and quite frankly applicants only became aware in january when mta issued a memo. It came out saying the permit was awarded to jump only. How do you explain the discrepancy. How do you substantiate the claim . The terms of the Settlement Agreement were not shared until january 8, 2018. That process was a confidential process was not discussed with any other companies while underway. Okay. My next question. The bike share universe is very different than the ones assigned between mta and mtc and the ford go bikes. At the time there was quite frankly fewer bike share operators interested in the space and now there are a number of companies and i understand mta recently signed an agreement that wed consider all ebike applicants. Following the execution of that Settlement Agreement why didnt you advise the industry youd only consider ebikes or put out a Public Statement at a minimum of this new position . Again, my issues are with the process. We shared the results of the Settlement Agreement as soon as we could and it take weeks to finalize the process and brief the Mayors Office and with the sudden death of the mayor there were a couple weeks delay in there in terms of getting the unsportsmanlike getting the information out there and at the Settlement Agreement we felt comfortable moving forward with the jump company and they were the only company that offered the settlement and fulfilled the term of our requirements after six months of discussions. And so we were eager to get start with the pilot and put something out in the street and get something going forward. In an email dated january 8 from director you state the vection for jump was quote, based on the thorough review of the permit application documenting it meets or seeds all San Francisco stationless bike share permit requirements, end quote. If you could describe for me this thorough review, i would appreciate it. Was this a comparative review that included other companies or just a review on the individual application itself . It was not a comparative view just based on our legislation and thats how we reviewed all the applications and reviewed independently from each other. The specifics of the application itself theres a lot of detail in there. Several of the key things that were looking for that were i think challenging for some of the operators to come up were detailed lab testing documenting the safety of the vehicles used and insurance requirements and data sharing requirements shared and not let some data be withheld. Affordable membership for lowincome members. The jump system offers a 5 annual pass that offered one hour of reuse for the day. That met our affordable membership requirement. And to a broad geographic area. Those were some of the key things we looked for and happy to provide more detail on that or the application submittal itself if thats of interest. How did you know jump was the best company for San Francisco . They were the First Company to meet our requirements and we wanted to proceed cautiously with the program and not issue a large number of permits. You didnt do a comparative analysis with the other companies so how can you discern one is better than the other when you dont take into consideration the others . The other Companies Application materials were also reviewed. But they didnt know the criteria. The requirements meeting all 47 permit requirements or whatever was in there those were shared with all companies and they were all aware of those requirements. I think my point is they didnt know youd only approve ebikes. Its a little bit flawed and unfair. I just want to get on the record or clarify, were other companies notified, yes or no there was a requirement to have ebikes . At the same time . They were all given the same requirement at the same time and would not dispute the ebike permit we were grant. I oversee jamies work in the Bicycle Safety and since this is such a key point nor for the committee i want to clarify. There was policy discussion at we reviewed the applications from what other peer cities were experiencing. Sorry, whats your name . Luis montoya. And your role is . I oversee jamies work and hes our Bicycle Program major and i oversee his work as well. Based on what we were seeing in the industry we were prepared to make a recommendation that as jamie described this was the best fit for San Francisco. However the decision hasnt been made to issue jump a permit until january. As jamie mentioned there were intentional discussions about that and motivate indicated they may have a problem with issuing permits for a stationless bicycle. Thats why they initiated the settlement negotiations per the contract. So we had to clarify with them what San Franciscos intentions might be and then we had to confirm what San Francisco intentions were and it wasnt until january the policy call was made to give jump the permit. We were steadying it up to that point and once the decision was made the permit was issued, we offered the same information to all the applicants at that time. If i can hop in and i have the same memorandum i received twice, as far as i can tell just paging through it, it speaks to everything youre talking about. The is dated december 11. And the second is dated january 8. The december 11th one seems to come to the conclusion you came to not in january but in december that there was only one company that you recommended which is jump. Are you referring to the email from jamie to ed. From ed through tom mcgwire, luis montoya to jamie parks and the staff and interested parties. As far as i can tell the exact same memo. It seems to me you call came to the come conclusion. We had done the natianalysish the recommendation but hasnt issued the permit. Im trying to get to the point of the permit issued and we shared the information more broadly. If i can from a highlevel policy standpoint as the author of the legislation and thank you to all my colleagues who voted to have a permitting scheme for stationless bicycle in the onslaught and i think we wanted to get ahead of the technology and you promulgated your own internal legislation in the code we oversee. I realize i was not on the board at the time we have this exclusivity arrangement with motivate. What i think im hearing from supervisor cohen and what all members of the panel share, is that whatever went down was done fairly. I think the concern is if you have other parties that didnt know the rules of the game or until the Settlement Agreement that the primary criteria was electric assisted bikes in addition to data and safety and other provisions. I dont want to put words in my colleagues mouths but i think thats the source of concern youre hearing and maybe the right thing is what youve done which is whoever won it fair and square gets 18 months of stationless rights exclusivelity. Im not pushing back on that. Im pushing back on the one criteria, ebikes had to be apart of their application. If other folks didnt know that, that might be a problem in terms of a fair playing field. Okay. So supervisor peskin is somewhat correct. Its important to note you came to the decision in november and thats the same day the settlement was signed. Its almost like a cya move. In the same january 8 email it states jump was recommended for approval and i can show you i have a table to share with you on the same day the Settlement Agreement with reached with motivate. When did you and the team decide jump would receive the exclusive contract . And again, were talking about a memo the decision wasnt made on 11 27 and dated on january 8 and get approval for a jump. If i may let me try i feel like were getting the same questions and getting answer arent quite meeting the mark. So i want to reemphasize after the board of supervisors adopted the legislation to authorize the permit program the directors then approved legislation that laid out the requirement of the and this was all at the same time and i think up to six different applications one of which the first one in was the first one complete and the only one complete and then it was in the intervening time that because of the dispute resolution mechanism that was invoked with the contract the board of supervisors authorized the city to enter into with motivate and then dc that we arrived at the Settlement Agreement. The Settlement Agreement essentially what it says is that motivate will not object on the basis of their information of the excusivity provision in the contract exclusivity provision issuing a permit for ebikes for the others there. Our signing the agreement did not preclude us from issuing our permits legally. Its just an agreement acknowledging our ability to issue this oneebike permit not specifying who the provider would be without compromising the exclusivity clause. That was the resolution of the dispute resolution process that was invoked i dont remember fit was invoked by motivate or ntc. Throughout the process we were communicating closely with folks in the Mayors Office because the whole contract came about through the Mayors Office and approved by the board of supervisors. We wanted to make sure we were keeping in line with the policy intent of the motivate contact to be the regions bike share provider recognizing the industry had significantly change from 2015 to where we were in 2017. So the time lag from the signing and the authorization of the single permit and the notification to the rest of the providers that that was our intent to finalize our deliberations whether we wanted to issue just one permit or more and we were engage the mayor office and undergoing changes of this administration and thats the lag between the Settlement Agreement was approved and notified all the providers at the same time this was our intent. We did not have a requirement for ebikes at the start but after we approved the Settlement Agreement we decided the best panel with you to start slowly and modestly and it was the one permit application that was complete it was ebikes that distinguished themselves and the bikes locked to an existing bike rack and that was the basis and we notified the industry of that information all at the same time. Director, are you saying you did notify or communicate the decision to the people analyst in the queue. To everybody in the beginning of january. I actually now compared the december 11 and january 8 memoranda together. Do i have permission to do that . Yes. Theres one line thats different and the one line is so this is table one on page 3, summary of stationless bike share permit applications and theres a list of the six operators where they have an ebike, yes or no and locking mechanism, yes or no and the status and the one thing thats different is for the second one line bike it indicates on december 26, 2017, advise application was received. Was that substantially different than their original application from july . In other words, did they get a memo to be competitive they need to have ebikes . They made a number of changes to their application with the december 26, 2017 submittal. The data sharing they were suggesting a different way that wouldnt allow us to access the data. They were some of the lab testings related to the safety of the bicycles and insurance requirements they did not submit as well. It was revived substantially but still did not meet all requirements. Supervisor safai waiting patiently. Its been good to listen and have the Settlement Agreement in front of me. The real problem i have with all of this is it seems like it start started with an outcome you tried to back your way into it. This is the problem when have you an exclusive monopoly for one group and thats fine, that was negotiated 2015. But here we are very with one company with technology with removing from private spaces and since then the technology has changed rapidly and theres multiple companies doing this around the world not only in the public right of way but sidewalk. One question i have is how many of the other companies doing stationless bikes are electric . Currently zero. So theyve expressed an interest. According to the says settlements were made to theyll be competitive in the 18 month period. It doesnt seem to me, who i represent, which is the public, which is the people who put us in this seat. It doesnt seem like a good deal for the public but ford go bike and maybe the msnts but not the general public trying to gain access to bicycles. What i dont understand is if you had an intended outcome and wanted to choose one group why not have everyone apply and have a certain date and choose the company on the parameters you set but what i heard from colleagues based on information and other information provided to us you continued to adjust until you finally got to where you wanted to be. That does not seem fair to anyone, the public, other companies, other organizations, and then that gets me to my last point. Supervisor peskin and i put forward a Charter Amendment to put forward a way to deal with things exactly like this. It seems to me this was being driven by one branch of government to appease a contract before i was even on the board and now were faced with choosing and jump might be the right company. They might be the best one. They may be the one the public deserves to have and have access to but the process by which you got to this point does not seem defensible. Ive listened for 35 minutes, the same question was asked by all of us and all the answers should have been was no. Thats what the answer should have been instead we have different explanations to get to the point where you started at the conclusion you wanted to back into is what it seems like to me. And i understand have you an exclusive agreement with one company youre trying to avoid litigation but the sidewalks are the sidewalks. Maybe you need to litigate that and we need more competition and choice for the general public. We put forward a piece of legislation now interim to our Charter Amendment that allows or an appeal process on curb management and rightofway. I would encourage you to not approve this and go back to a Better Process and allow all the companies to apply and you still may end up with the same conclusion and that would