- What is the ideal density of available scooters to:
- enable scooters to serve our transportation goals,
- discourage scooters piling up on sidewalks,
- keep it economically viable for companies to operate equitably in the city?
- Major planning goal to reduce the number of people driving alone
- 3 rides (of 3 meters or more) per day per scooter is our baseline for ridership goals
- Original pilot program limited scooter density to 340 scooters per square mile
- Other cities have limited the number of scooters per block face
May data shape: (20292503, 9)
June data shape: (28046095, 9)
July data shape: (25075445, 9)
pubdatetime - date and time that the device was polled
latitude - latitude location of device when polled
longitude - longitude location of device when polled
sumdid - unique identifier for the device
sumdtype - one of two types (powered or standard)
chargelevel - battery charge level of the device when polled
sumdgroup - type of device (scooter or bicycle)
costpermin - the cost per minute of device use
companyname - the company that owns the device
Per ordinance:
All permitted operators will first clean data before providing or reporting data to Metro. Data
processing and cleaning shall include:
1. Removal of staff servicing and test trips
2. Removal of trips below one minute
3. Trip lengths are capped at 24 hours
Anecdotally, per metro ITS staff, some of these observations may still be in the data.
SUMD devices are thought to be of particular use in the Promise Zone to help mitigate the "last mile" problem that exists in connecting people where they live to public transportation.
Remember that you need to keep the shapefiles together. Even though you will point to the .shp
file to create polygons, that file references other files in the MDHA_Promise_Zones
folder to create the geoDataFrame.