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Power Transportation United States

North Carolina Looks To Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably To the Trash (caranddriver.com) 239

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Car and Driver, written by Ezra Dyer: Politicians have to run on some kind of platform, and Ben Moss -- my incoming state House representative here in North Carolina's District 52 -- decided that his animating principle is Being Mad at Electricity. To prove his animosity toward this invisible menace, he's sponsoring House Bill 1049, which would allocate $50,000 to destroy free public car chargers. It contains some other enlightened ideas, but that's the main theme: We've simply got to do something about these free public chargers, even if it costs us $50,000! Those things cost tens of cents per hour, when they're being used.

Of course, there's a caveat here. Moss isn't saying that free public Level 2 chargers -- of which there are three in my town, with plans in the works to convert to paid kiosks -- definitely need to get crushed by a monster truck. That rule only comes into play if a town refuses to build free gas and diesel pumps next to the EV chargers. So anyway, warm up El Toro Loco, we're smashin' some car zappers! But what about private businesses? you ask. Don't worry, Moss hasn't forgotten that a business might put a charger on its property as an inducement for EV owners to patronize the establishment. And small business is the heart of the local economy. That's why he's staying out of the way when it comes to private property. Just kidding! Ben Moss cares about the consumers being harmed by these hypothetical free chargers -- namely, any customer who arrived via internal-combustion vehicle, or on foot, or in a sedan chair. Why is someone else gaining some advantage based on a decision they made? That's not how life works.

Thus, House Bill 1049 decrees that all customer receipts will have to show what share of the bill went toward the charger out in the lot. That way, anyone who showed up for dinner in an F-150 (not the electric one) can get mad that their jalapeno poppers helped pay for a business expense not directly related to them. It's the same way you demand to know how much Applebee's spends to keep the lights on in its parking lot overnight, when you're not there. Sure, this will be an accounting nightmare, but it'll all be worth it if we can prevent even one person from adding 16 miles of charge to a Nissan Leaf while eating a bloomin' onion -- not that restaurants around here have free chargers, but you can't be too careful. Now, there is a charger at the neighborhood Ford dealership, which is marking up Broncos by $20,000. Coincidence? I think not.
"Critics of this bill might point out that increasing the number of electric cars could actually benefit owners of internal-combustion vehicles, thanks to reduced demand for petroleum products," adds Dyer. "Electron heads, as I call them, also like to point out that electricity is generated domestically, so your transportation dollars are staying in the U.S. rather than going to, say, Saudi Arabia."
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North Carolina Looks To Remove Public EV Chargers, Probably To the Trash

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  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Friday July 08, 2022 @07:24PM (#62686376)
    ...of 'Murica's elected representatives are contrarian dickheads? Asking for a friend.
    • Well, given that all of them are politicians, and that politicians only take that job when they have no other life skills, I'd say roughly 57% are contrarian dickheads, and the only 43% are morons who are in office because it's cheaper than day care.

    • by TechyImmigrant ( 175943 ) on Friday July 08, 2022 @09:19PM (#62686636) Homepage Journal

      ...of 'Murica's elected representatives are contrarian dickheads? Asking for a friend.

      75%.

      100% of the repubs and 25% of the dems.
      There is a minority in the middle who haven't been corrupted completely yet, but give it time.

      • ...of 'Murica's elected representatives are contrarian dickheads? Asking for a friend.

        75%.

        100% of the repubs and 25% of the dems.
        There is a minority in the middle who haven't been corrupted completely yet, but give it time.

        I love working out this math.
        Assuming there are three mutually exclusive categories into which a voter may fall (Repub, Dem, or Otherwise), and working with your numbers:
        the percentage of people who are dickheads AND Otherwise is around 120%.
        This isn't meant to be an attack on your hyperbole; I take away that it's kind of nice to know that the whole temptation to put people into Us-vs-Them camps leads to ridiculous results.

        • ...of 'Murica's elected representatives are contrarian dickheads? Asking for a friend.

          75%.

          100% of the repubs and 25% of the dems.
          There is a minority in the middle who haven't been corrupted completely yet, but give it time.

          I love working out this math.
          Assuming there are three mutually exclusive categories into which a voter may fall (Repub, Dem, or Otherwise), and working with your numbers:
          the percentage of people who are dickheads AND Otherwise is around 120%.
          This isn't meant to be an attack on your hyperbole; I take away that it's kind of nice to know that the whole temptation to put people into Us-vs-Them camps leads to ridiculous results.

          I spend some of my day working out entropy equations for physically unclonable functions.
          I needed some light relief where I could be wrong in many ways.

  • There's no shortage in pinheads willing to get bent out of shape over shit like this. If he keeps amping it up he could be president.

    Don't forget to bitch about toilets and shower heads. The Venn diagram works in your favour.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday July 08, 2022 @07:38PM (#62686406)
    And so they have to come up with increasingly bizarre wedge issues to get people interested in voting for them. They're very good at running fun rallies, doing exciting advertisements and generally whooping up a crowd. But if you want someone to actually run the government and if you want things to run smoothly in your day-to-day life you vote Democrat. 96% of all jobs in America or created during Democratic administrations. Seriously look it up. The problem with the Democrats is they are absolutely terrible at advertisements and rallies. Democrats are boring. Boring as fuck.
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by tomhath ( 637240 )
      Democrats consider buying votes with tax dollars good governing - not just giving away free car charging, but also student loan forgiveness, bailing out union pension funds, etc.
    • by PsychoSlashDot ( 207849 ) on Friday July 08, 2022 @10:17PM (#62686734)

      And so they have to come up with increasingly bizarre wedge issues to get people interested in voting for them. They're very good at running fun rallies, doing exciting advertisements and generally whooping up a crowd. But if you want someone to actually run the government and if you want things to run smoothly in your day-to-day life you vote Democrat. 96% of all jobs in America or created during Democratic administrations. Seriously look it up. The problem with the Democrats is they are absolutely terrible at advertisements and rallies. Democrats are boring. Boring as fuck.

      I participate on a muscle-car forum where folks seem to lean pretty heavily R. It's... interesting.

      Now, I grant that a forum for high-displacement internal-combustion cars isn't the right place to expect many proponents of EVs, but that topic seems deeply offensive to many people in a way that say... high-RPM, low-displacement "rice-burner" cars never will be. They say they're just pissed because EV "is being forced on us" and "we want to be able to choose", but when you dig deep enough, you find most are like this Ben Moss guy. They want the freedom to choose only what they want, and nobody else should be able to choose anything they don't want. There's zero room for compromise, hybrids, or a transition over time. Nope. EVs are evil and should be banned, ICE is godly and emission laws (especially Californian ones) are the enemy.

      Mind-blowing. But these are the same guys whose answer to "what kind of an alarm should I get" is "a Glock". Because taking a human life isn't at all disproportionate to having a car stolen... in their minds.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        It's because they don't just want a choice, they want their preferred choice to be cheap and popular enough to have a community built around it. They worry that if EVs become popular and combustion engines become niche, their hobby will change or die off.

        Everyone else has to make the same choice as them, otherwise things might change and they fear change.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by argStyopa ( 232550 )

      I believe you genuinely believe this; this is what's so pernicious about political dogma in 2022.

      Here is a reasonably intelligent person who has convinced himself that half - half of the American body politic - is utterly incompetent or malignant or both. As factual to him as the rising of the sun.

      Now, this is objectively implausible. We have in the op a ridiculous bill, I would agree. But to extrapolate that as an assertion of proof takes an astonishing level of cognitive blinders. We just had a widely

  • Does North Carolina have a law that requires a business which validates parking to disclose the amount of a person's bill used for that fee? Many business validate parking, and the parking is not owned by the business, which means the business pays some amount to the owner of the parking lot/ramp. People using public transportation or that walk to the business should be in anger!!!

    Also, this law assumes the cost of the free charging is passed onto all patrons. Are they saying that a business would not be al

  • by NotEmmanuelGoldstein ( 6423622 ) on Friday July 08, 2022 @08:49PM (#62686564)

    ... build free gas and diesel pumps next to the EV chargers.

    Where customers get $1.00 worth of fuel, just like the electric chargers. I'll pass that (legislative) bill. Of course, then businesses can report what share of the bill covers the cost of storing highly flammable chemicals and fire-suppresion chemicals.

    ... what share of the bill ...

    Customers' ICE car spewing soot and carbon monoxide into the air isn't a business expense: So this demands that businesses don't contribute to protecting the environment. A less discriminatory bill would start charging a polution tax to create parity but we can't take money off 'rich' people, even though an EV costs more than a ICE vehicle.

  • The forced sterilization of black people back in the day... they may have been on to something. Only instead of black people, it would target people like this asshole and his family, who very clearly should not be breeding for the good of the species. If you have a perfectly functional brain, but choose not to use it, you and your immediate family will be sterilized for the good of the human race. Willful stupidity will no longer be tolerated.

  • Guessing it's the one where being a violent mental patient escapee is considered a resume-builder for political office.
  • The guy sponsoring this bill is a moron and so are the people of North Carolina that elected him. This state is full of morons. It's depressing. And the trumpster has turned a lot of merely, not so bright people into raging morons. It's also interesting that the guy sponsoring this bill is from New Jersey. My goodness, what has happened to my people?
  • by LostMyBeaver ( 1226054 ) on Friday July 08, 2022 @10:22PM (#62686740)
    I live in Norway. There are chargers EVERYWHERE. 6 years ago municipal chargers were free, but you had to use a fob to activate them. Now, we pay for them.

    No one pays for slow chargers unless they are using them for a full work day. There is no value to them for less than 3 hours. But no one complains about paying to use chargers at shops or street parking. I honestly have never seen anyone use chargers at the grocery store which are free because you do not get enough of a charge to bother with them.

    That said, when you are out of juice, it is great to be able to get a few extra km to make it home or to a fast charger.

    I am also a smoker and as a smoker, I understand the effectiveness of EVs better than most. Before Oslo went almost all EV… and we are so far beyond all other countries on that front that it will take a decade for others to catch up… but I cannot light a cigarette anywhere without upsetting people. The air quality has improved so much that a cigarette or a woman with strong perfume is insanely obnoxious at a distance. Thanks to electric vehicles, I actually use an electric scooter to get me 100m or more from the nearby houses to keep from people smelling my cigarettes while they sleep.

    I am now on vacation in the US and all I smell is tail pipe and my cigarettes are not nearly as offensive.

    But, to each their own. If people do not care about clean air, keep driving those ICE vehicles.
  • If it's breaking even then everybody should be fine.
  • Making rolling coal mandatory? Banning math from schools?
  • by Lady Galadriel ( 4942909 ) on Friday July 08, 2022 @11:46PM (#62686810)
    Freaking easy to work around. Simply put a usage charge on the formerly free electric chargers. Some kind of EV charger parking meter. The charger does not function until you put in an U.S. coin. And to say screw you North Carolina, allow ANY coins, including a penny. Thus, this meets the requirement that it not be a free charger. The EV car people will enjoy the *ell out of that, sticking in a penny into an EV charger!

    To make it extremely clear it's a PAID service, print a receipt for each charge. And send a recording of the payment to a central location, which then prints another receipt.


    And if the law comes into play before you have the EV charger parking meters in place, simply have the EV chargers locked up. But, have an alarm on anyone parking in the spot. Then send out an employee with a receipt paid and key to un-lock the charger. Employee accepts payment, (a penny!), then writes up a receipt, (with license plate to make it official), gives 1 copy to customer, keeps one copy on site, and a third copy sent to a central location at the end of the week.


    I am guessing that their is no requirement for the amount that an EV charger charge per charge, (hmm, that actually makes sense?!).
    • by kenh ( 9056 )

      Brilliant! You've actually come up with a way to make the free EV chargers even more expensive! Now we have to hire people to collect the coins, replace the receipt paper,, etc. Brilliant.

      The private business thing is stupid, but using taxpayer dollars to benefit on a handful of the community's richest residents is kind of a bad idea, don't you think?

    • by swilver ( 617741 )

      Charge $0.001 instead. Not free, but we'll round it down.

  • Free public chargers (Score:2, Interesting)

    by kenh ( 9056 )

    he's sponsoring House Bill 1049, which would allocate $50,000 to destroy free public car chargers. It contains some other enlightened ideas, but that's the main theme: We've simply got to do something about these free public chargers, even if it costs us $50,000!

    Let's call them what they are taxpayer-funded charging stations that mainly benefit those community members that can afford an EV. Who paid for the land they are on, prepared the engineering diagrams, prepared the permits, hired the electricians, pays for the electricity provided, and who covers the maintenance & upkeep of them? Largely, it's people that don't drive EVs.

    Those things cost tens of cents per hour, when they're being used.

    Cute, ignore every cost to put the thing in a parking lot and ignore the cost of the electricity pouring out of the charger, let's focu

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Saturday July 09, 2022 @06:37AM (#62687280)

      The cost of maintaining a system to pay for the chargers outweighs the cost of charging for their use. If you have a product that costs cents, it's often cheaper to give it away for free than to charge for it.

      You like inefficient government, then jump onto your high horse and make those rich people pay those few cents. That's good use of your tax payer funds right? Paying for nothing but the principle of being angry that someone gets something insignificant for free.

  • by LeeLynx ( 6219816 ) on Saturday July 09, 2022 @01:32AM (#62686946)
    By my count there are currently five bill sponsors looking to do this. I really thought North Carolina had more people than that.

    Seriously, this is a draft bill that got its first referral to committee. It may have more support, but it isn't apparent from the article, so calm down.

    Also, for all you folks smugly painting this as simply a measure to prevent EV owners from unfairly benefiting from taxpayer dollars, kindly read *everything* else the bill does. Moreover, government at all levels has used financial incentives like this to encourage rollout of technology for the lion's share of the US's existence. The network you jackasses are using to bitch about this wouldn't be here without the government handing out money to build up systems that initially benefit only those members of society wealthy enough to access them.
  • unless the county or city provides gasoline and diesel fuel for motor vehicles through a pump to the public at no charge.

    So make it a "free gas program" where proven EV Owners at the city charging stations can get a non-transferrable one-time coupon to visit an out-of-the way "partner station" during very limited hours and obtain 0.04 Liters of their choice of gasoline or diesel fuel from a pump at no charge (Obviously, other than the cost of any fuel to drive to the free gas station, which would obvio

  • by joe_frisch ( 1366229 ) on Saturday July 09, 2022 @10:24AM (#62687726)
    What dose "free" mean? Is the government providing free electricity at tax-payer expense? If so, that is a problem because owners of electric cars are typically higher income and this is a pretty regressive policy. Does it prohibit businesses from putting in free chargers if the business pays for the electricity, or only if they want the govt to pay.

    Putting in chargers (similar to parking spaces) where people can pay to charge their cars is fine. Providing free electricity for cars, but not say for low income hosing units seems problematic.

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