Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United States Transportation

Chuck Schumer Wants To Replace Every Gas Car in America With an Electric Vehicle (theverge.com) 713

With the $1.9 trillion COVID relief bill signed into law, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) is ready to tackle the next major challenge: President Joe Biden's call for a massive infrastructure bill. As part of that package, Schumer said he plans to include his ambitious proposal to get every American to swap their gas-guzzling car for an electric one. From a report: "It's a bold new plan designed to accelerate America's transition to all electric vehicles on the road, to developing a charging infrastructure, and to grow American jobs through clean manufacturing," Schumer told The Verge in a brief interview this week. "And the ultimate goal is to have every car manufactured in America be electric by 2030, and every car on the road be clean by 2040."

The top-line details of the "cash for clunkers"-style plan haven't changed much since Schumer first proposed it in an op-ed in The New York Times in late 2019. But the political landscape has certainly shifted in favor of the Democrats, breathing new life into the idea. Under the proposal, anyone who trades in their gas car for an electric one would get a "substantial" point-of-sale discount, Schumer says. He wouldn't say how much of a discount, only that it would be "deep." A spokesperson later confirmed they are eyeing rebates that are "more generous" than the current $7,500 federal EV tax credit. He also wants to provide direct incentives to auto manufacturers to phase out their production of internal combustion engine vehicles and tax breaks for property owners to install EV chargers at their homes or apartment buildings. Lastly, he proposes to send direct subsidies to local governments to improve and expand the nation's network of EV charging stations. Schumer would deploy $45 billion in grants to upgrade the nation's charging infrastructure and $17 billion to encourage manufacturers to retrofit their facilities for EV production.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Chuck Schumer Wants To Replace Every Gas Car in America With an Electric Vehicle

Comments Filter:
  • I'd love an EV (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Arthur, KBE ( 6444066 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @05:32PM (#61169530)
    But there's no charging at my apartment or work. And I get it, there's no gas station in either location, either. But I won't go to a public charger every two days and sit around for two hours either. So until my office or apartment installs chargers, It's not viable ATM. And I asked the office and apartment managers when they plan to install chargers - their answer (both) "Never".
    • Charging at stores (Score:4, Informative)

      by SpiceWare ( 3438 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:04PM (#61169680) Homepage

      Anything at the stores you frequent? The newest Tesla Supercharger in the Houston area was installed in the parking lot of an HEB grocery store [tesla.com]. While I usually charge at home, I stopped there to charge on the way back from a trip and noticed quite a few people bringing groceries back to their Tesla. I've also used Volta chargers while shopping at various malls around Houston. [voltacharging.com]

      Same is happening in San Antonio, the Leon Springs [tesla.com] and the Schertz [tesla.com] locations are also at HEBs.

      • by bjwest ( 14070 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:17PM (#61169718)

        Anything at the stores you frequent? The newest Tesla Supercharger in the Houston area was installed in the parking lot of an HEB grocery store [tesla.com].

        Yeah, it's nice to live in a big city isn't it? I live in a town of ~10,000. There's no way in hell we'll be getting a charge station in the local Brookshire's within the next decade or so.

      • by _xeno_ ( 155264 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:19PM (#61169734) Homepage Journal

        There are two charging stations at one of the supermarkets I go to.

        One of them was installed broken. It took them over two years but they finally fixed it. Maybe. I'm actually not sure. It sort of doesn't matter because now that the broken one has been fixed, the plug on the one that used to work is now broken, and that hasn't been fixed for months.

        The other thing is that public charging stations tend to either be free (the supermarket ones are ad supported) or charge hilariously high amounts for power. Most of the charging stations around here that aren't free charge $0.50/kWh for level 2 charging. That's easily more expensive per mile than gas. (Level 1 is "plug into your wall," level 2 is the "220V/40A" AC charging that will take hours to charge a Tesla to full.)

        Oh, and that's the other thing, most of the chargers I've seen are the level 2, "technically will charge but will take forever" types. They're perfect for home use (where you can let the car sit overnight) but worthless for charging on the go.

        But the major problem is that even where there are chargers, you have to contend with there not being anywhere near enough for everyone to drive an EV and the fact that there's no money being spent on maintaining them. All the money is being spent on building new ones, because everyone loves new things being installed. Once they're there, they're left to rot.

        Where I work used to have car chargers that were installed as part of a big "we're going green!" initiative that also installed solar panels. Despite the fact that they charged $0.50/kWh, they were frequently used, until eventually, they broke. Then, after years of them being left broken, they finally removed them rather than fix them. (All this was pre-COVID if you're wondering.)

        So while I'm all for going electric (no, really, electric cars are a lot of fun to drive), the infrastructure not only isn't there yet, there are no plans to maintain the infrastructure that is.

        • by SpiceWare ( 3438 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:57PM (#61169970) Homepage

          That's disappointing.

          Yeah, I've noticed the non-Tesla chargers tend to be pricy, and much slower. Going from Houston to Wisconsin cost me $40.47 [twitter.com] using Tesla's superchargers and free charging at hotels. Most charging occurred while eating or sleeping, the few times we had to wait added about 30 minutes, comparable to the time I spent standing next to the pump on prior trips

          Using A Better Routine Planner they current show a trip to my brother's in my Model 3 [abetterrouteplanner.com] would cost $51 to charge with total trip time of 23:35; while a Chevy Bolt [abetterrouteplanner.com] would cost $100 and at 29:43 the trip would take over 6 hours longer.

          • by amxcoder ( 1466081 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @10:31PM (#61170840)
            This is what I don't get. You can't fill up gas for free at a hotel, so why should you get subsidised by all the other hotel guests so that you can plug in and charge your car for free?

            better yet, how long with that last, when a hotel has 50 guests that all want to charge for FREE while they are there. Obviously hotels and stores will not be able to sustain this for long, they will either not be able to afford additional chargers to keep up with demand, or they will have to charge, either directly to those using it, or raise all prices for a night at the hotel to cover the cost of charge stations and electricity.
            • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Thursday March 18, 2021 @12:10AM (#61171072)

              This is what I don't get. You can't fill up gas for free at a hotel, so why should you get subsidised by all the other hotel guests so that you can plug in and charge your car for free?

              better yet, how long with that last, when a hotel has 50 guests that all want to charge for FREE while they are there. Obviously hotels and stores will not be able to sustain this for long, they will either not be able to afford additional chargers to keep up with demand, or they will have to charge, either directly to those using it, or raise all prices for a night at the hotel to cover the cost of charge stations and electricity.

              Do they raise prices for the housekeeping or the cable TV?

              It's not a subsidy for EV drivers, it's a promo that attracts EV driving guests.

              The hotel isn't a charity, in the short term the hotels with free EV charging stations probably make money off the extra business.

              Long term it's yet another thing that's baked into the price of your hotel stay.

      • "While I usually charge at home" OP wants to charge at home. OP cannot charge at home. So until chargers can be installed for everyone who doesn't own a home, then this is a no go.
      • If you can't charge at home it's not a good idea.
    • Re:I'd love an EV (Score:5, Informative)

      by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:12PM (#61169696)
      Right, that's the point of this:

      "He also wants to provide [...] tax breaks for property owners to install EV chargers at their homes or apartment buildings. Lastly, he proposes to send direct subsidies to local governments to improve and expand the nation's network of EV charging stations. Schumer would deploy $45 billion in grants to upgrade the nation's charging infrastructure "

      • Property owner: "But I don't want to spend any money at all. I'll do it if it's free. Is it going to be free?"
        • Re:I'd love an EV (Score:4, Informative)

          by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:28PM (#61169798) Journal

          Property owner: "But I don't want to spend any money at all. I'll do it if it's free. Is it going to be free?"

          City: no, it's not going to be free, and by the way, if you want to get a permit for anything at all, we are going to insist that you install EVSEs (what people commonly, but inaccurately refer to as EV chargers).

        • Re:I'd love an EV (Score:4, Insightful)

          by MikeMo ( 521697 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @07:23PM (#61170134)
          As a past property owner with nearly 300 units under contract, I can tell you that we were barely scraping by after paying the mortgages, utilities, management fees, and upkeep. We would have done better if it weren’t for the roughly 15% of tenants who refused to pay their rent and had to be evicted, which can easily take a year and cost $1000’s in lawyer fees, plus the lost rent.

          I know the image of the landlord is close to the little Monopoly guy, but nothing could be farther from the truth. Most landlords are Mom and Pops who are just scraping by.

          Adding chargers to parking lots could easily cost millions what with tearing up and resurfacing the lot, buying the equipment, burying lines, probably adding capacity, and the charging systems themselves - which would also become a maintenance burden. Why would a landlord do that when it would likely bankrupt him??
          • Re:I'd love an EV (Score:4, Insightful)

            by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @09:13PM (#61170610)
            We could be having this same conversation with the same words in 1930 about basic electricity. Why have covered parking? Why have a pool? Why have anything?
          • Re:I'd love an EV (Score:5, Insightful)

            by ghoul ( 157158 ) on Thursday March 18, 2021 @03:09AM (#61171422)
            Why does the landlord have running water and an electric connection? Without them he wont be able to rent the property. Same will soon be true for EV charging. I dont get the obsession with keeping people in business who clearly dont know how to run a business. if you cant make a profit without govt subsidies maybe you shouldnt be running a business and get a job.
          • Re:I'd love an EV (Score:4, Informative)

            by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Thursday March 18, 2021 @06:16AM (#61171794)

            Why would a landlord do that when it would likely bankrupt him??

            As a property owner myself, why would a landlord attempt to meet minimum expectations? The answer is to make rent. If you're providing low income housing you may be very right, but me I'm counting down the days before my tenants ask me to install a charging station and I start making a calculated decision as to whether I comply or I'm forced to lower rent as potential tenants move elsewhere.

            The world is changing. The question isn't why would a landlord install a charging point. The question is when. Depending on where you live, that could be within a couple of decades, or it could be 50 years from now.

            • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

              I am no longer a land but I agree it is a question of when. However I suspect we are no where near the lower rent point yet (at least not based on EV chargers being provided).

              The question I'd ask is when will I no longer be able to find prospective tenants who don't care about EV chargers. Right now the market is such that you can probably charge a slight premium if you offer EV charging, but that will quickly evaporate. I suspect fairly shortly in most markets you will have a bifurcated group of renters -

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • But there's no charging at my apartment or work.

      As we go from 1% EVs to 100% EVs, perhaps sometime during the transition more chargers will be installed.

    • Re:I'd love an EV (Score:5, Insightful)

      by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:37PM (#61169862) Journal

      If only you had read the summary:

      He also wants to provide ... tax breaks for property owners to install EV chargers at their homes or apartment buildings.

      It's almost like someone came up with solutions to your complaints before you had them. Isn't that convenient?

      • Re:I'd love an EV (Score:5, Insightful)

        by burtosis ( 1124179 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @07:02PM (#61170006)
        Ahh. I see you haven’t been a tenant. Unless the tax breaks include not only the cost, but money on top, or are cost neutral and they are forced by law to install, it will never happen when the basis is capitalism and the bottom line. In fact, even with those it would likely be an install and let it rot situation even if it made minor amounts of money.
      • Re:I'd love an EV (Score:5, Insightful)

        by flatulus ( 260854 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @08:11PM (#61170388)
        Tax breaks means you have income on which the tax can be offset. What if you are retired and on a small income?

        My car is 8 years old with less than 25K miles on it. My wife's is 15 years old with a rebuilt engine installed 3 years ago. Our plan is to drive them until they die, hopefully not long before we do. Because we will not have anywhere near enough income to make car payments.

        The problem with this plan seems to be that Schumer assumes anyone with a car can afford the payments (of course, if you give me an EV for free, I might take it. But I live in a manufactured home park and even though I have a driveway, getting a charging circuit may be simply impossible).

        Of course the government may just deem that people like me should just take the bus (we don't have bus service where I live), walk (which assumes an older person has this capability) or if nothing else, just die (that, I can do - but not fond of doing so for the sake of the government - or even the environment).

        Sigh...
    • And I asked the office and apartment managers when they plan to install chargers - their answer (both) "Never".

      Once these numpties realise they can arbitrage the cost of gasoline and electricity by sticking a cheap low power overnight charge port in each car parking space, they will change their tune. If you are a rent seeking landlord, having your tenants basically forced to either use your 'gas station' at usurious prices, or stand around in a remote carpark for 2 hours, is a gift horse.

    • Re:I'd love an EV (Score:5, Interesting)

      by PPH ( 736903 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @07:36PM (#61170230)

      Seattle is pushing for new apartment/condo construction to be zero parking. To encourage the use of mass transit. A few new buildings went in near some friends of mine. The result? The competition for on street parking is becoming a circus. Chairs and traffic cones are being used to reserve choice spots. I anticipate fights breaking out when someone moves someone elses lawn chair soon.

    • Re:I'd love an EV (Score:4, Informative)

      by Local ID10T ( 790134 ) <ID10T.L.USER@gmail.com> on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @08:15PM (#61170400) Homepage

      Chicken v egg problem.

      They are not interested in installing chargers because there is not sufficient demand for chargers.

      -When the landlords are having difficulty filling the apartments with tenants because the prospective tenants are unwilling to pay the asking price for an apartment without EV charging they will install chargers.

      -When desirable employees are turning down employment offers because the competition offered a parking place with free charging as a perk the company will install EV chargers.

      It takes time to reach a tipping point where things like this happen often enough to matter. This timespan can be shortened by government action. Action such as the proposed legislation.

  • Fewer cars (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Atmchicago ( 555403 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @05:37PM (#61169552)

    How about we stop subsidizing cars, period?

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by dmay34 ( 6770232 )

      Republicans: I hate all government subsidies. Let the free market decide!

      Also Republicans: I need a $60,000 tax credit to buy my "commercial" truck.

      • Re:Fewer cars (Score:5, Insightful)

        by garett_spencley ( 193892 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @05:54PM (#61169648) Journal

        Republicans: I hate all government subsidies. Let the free market decide!

        Also Republicans: I need a $60,000 tax credit to buy my "commercial" truck.

        I'm not letting Republicans off the hook, they are absolutely guilty of meddling in the economy despite claims of being about free market.

        However, I can't resist the temptation to point out that a tax credit is not the same thing as a handout / subsidy. Not taking your money in the first place is very different from giving you money that was taken from someone else.

        • by Somervillain ( 4719341 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @09:48PM (#61170704)

          However, I can't resist the temptation to point out that a tax credit is not the same thing as a handout / subsidy. Not taking your money in the first place is very different from giving you money that was taken from someone else.

          Not taking YOUR money? Fuck off with the attitude pally. You use government services. You owe the government a certain amount of money for existing within its borders and consuming its benefits. You use the roads, you rely on the gov, they probably paid for your education...even if somehow you levitate across the earth, not touching any roads and are immune to crime, invasion, and fire through mystical powers, you depend on a lot of people who do use gov services.

          You can say "the gov is taking MY money," but you'd not have the capacity to earn what you did without them. Your customers rely on them...their customers/employers rely on them. It's all interconnected. You're much less independent from gov spending than you think. I have a private sector job, but all I have to do is look through my employer's customer list and I quickly find companies that get a lot of money from gov subsidies directly or indirectly.

          Addressing your point, it's no different than staying at a hotel. Whether the hotel hands you $20 or takes $20 off your bill, it's the same in the end. A tax break is a handout. It's no more righteous than a subsidy or welfare....it's just unlike welfare, which gives great returns on investments, tax breaks, particularly to the wealthy are piss poor investments as the wealthy tend to save money (they're good at it, that's why they're wealthy) or get invested overseas or in all sorts of stupid things. Poor people take handouts and pay off existing debts or immediately spend in the local community, a huge portion of which ends up right back in the gov coffers as savings on police dealing with crime or evicting people as well as direct tax revenue from all the local businesses getting increased sales.

          A dollar given to Jeff Bezos is likely lost. A dollar given to one of his warehouse employees will be spent immediately, most likely in the local economy.

          A handout is a handout....you can call it a tax break, a subsidy, gov assistance, or even SNAP/foodstamps....they're ALL the same. Don't fool yourself...taking a tax cut is no different than collecting food stamps.

  • In principle I like the idea, but 2030 is far too ambitious.

    1) Most manufacturers don't offer 300+ between charges vehicles
    2) Long trips are still a consideration

    I also worry that this is simply a way to move money around that can then be skimmed at each step.

  • by dmay34 ( 6770232 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @05:43PM (#61169584)

    How about some real choice. Like redesign our infrastructure to accommodate and encourage safe walking and bicycling and moped'ing and motorcyclinging.

    • Like redesign our infrastructure to accommodate and encourage safe walking and bicycling and moped'ing and motorcyclinging.

      You should see my city (in California). Most of the streets have a bike lane which is demarcated from car traffic by a 2 or 3 ft hatched area. After marking the bike lanes, the hatched areas now have plastic posts preventing cars going into the bike lanes. Also, major intersections were modified to make them safer for bikes.

  • by kerashi ( 917149 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @05:47PM (#61169602)

    The average gas pump pumps 10 gallons per minute, which means I can go from empty to full on my 20-gallon tank in 2 minutes.

    Electric cars cannot recharge from zero to full in 2 minutes. It's simply not possible.

    As I tend to take a lot of road trips, it is important that refuel or recharge happen in a reasonable amount of time. Reasonable to me is under 5 minutes from zero to full.

    Add to this the fact that there are often lines to use the gas pump. Think how bad that will be when you transition from a 2 minute refuel to a 2 hour charge. There simply isn't enough real estate to accommodate such a scenario. I mean sure, you could possibly charge at home, but that doesn't do you much good when you're not home.

    • Electric cars cannot recharge from zero to full in 2 minutes. It's simply not possible.

      As I tend to take a lot of road trips, it is important that refuel or recharge happen in a reasonable amount of time. Reasonable to me is under 5 minutes from zero to full.

      Not yet, but they are working on it. 20 years ago the fastest a EV charged was overnight http://www.evchargernews.com/C... [evchargernews.com] . 10 years ago, the fastest a EV charged was 3.5 hours https://saxton.org/tom_saxton/... [saxton.org] . Today, a EV can charge to 80% in 15 minutes https://www.chargepoint.com/bl... [chargepoint.com] . So it’s gotten much better. I would bet by 2031 we will have EVs that can give equivalent range for the amount of time it has charged, about a 200-300 mile range with just 1 minute of charging.

    • As I tend to take a lot of road trips, it is important that refuel or recharge happen in a reasonable amount of time. Reasonable to me is under 5 minutes from zero to full.

      There is always at least one snowflake that shows up in EV discussions to say how EVs won't work for him or her.

      But let's look at your specific complaint. Apparently, you never stop for coffee or bathroom breaks while on a long trip. 5 minutes is the minimum, best case time to fill up and get back on the road when filling gas into a tank.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      A mid price EV will do 3 hours of driving on the motorway before you need to charge, and then charge in about 30 minutes. By the time you have taken a comfort break and stretched your legs the car is ready to go again.

      Of course bigger batteries are available and getting cheaper all the time.

  • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @05:49PM (#61169616)
    You need serious investment into infrastructure before all-electric car future can become reality. This means building nuclear power plants, transmission lines and rewiring all urban centers.
    • There is exactly zero chance of anything like this proposal of becoming law. It's just a tactic to weaponize the politics of division and blame the other side when nothing comes of it.

    • You need serious investment into infrastructure before all-electric car future can become reality.

      Not really. Most charging is done in the middle of the night when there is plenty of spare capacity.

      By spreading out demand, EVs make more effective use of the infrastructure we already have.

      My EV is programmed to start charging at 2 AM.

  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @05:49PM (#61169618)
    https://www.upi.com/Archives/1... [upi.com]

    This was the first I'd heard of Chuck, and I haven't heard anything to change my opinion of him since. Overrated blowhard.
  • The grid at 6pm (Score:4, Insightful)

    by dicobalt ( 1536225 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @05:53PM (#61169642)
    will collapse everyday. Better get moving on that smart grid thing.
    • The economy will collapse first.

  • add right to repair and no forced subscription fees to it.

  • by Sethra ( 55187 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:00PM (#61169668)

    Solar, wind, geothermal, and hydroelectric wouldn't come anywhere near the capacity needed to power that many electric cars. So what's the plan, burn fossil fuels to generate the power, lose some of the efficiency at the charging station, lose more efficiency in the batteries, lose more efficiency in the motors. So now we're burning more fossil fuel than ever before.

    And that doesn't even take into consideration the enormous costs involved in simply replacing your car with an EV. Is the government going to pay for that? Tell me again where the government gets its money from? They produce nothing so... oh yea, they take it from the citizens. So now, for honestly no good reason, my taxes explode because perfectly good low pollution ICE vehicles have fallen out of favor with a small group of politicians who happened to have huge stock investments in Tesla and other EV producers.

    Look, the only way this would even stand a chance is if we turned right now towards nuclear power, and I mean big time. That's the ONLY way you will get sufficient non co2 producing electrical energy in the long run. And you will have to find a way to retrofit existing ICE vehicles with electric. The insane amounts of waste that would be produced if you just trashed existing cars would be yet another environmental disaster.

    And of course, you have to convince people that waiting 12 hours to "fill your tank" when it used to take five minutes is in their best interest. God help you if you're driving across the country to visit relatives or on business - instead of stopping for gas and then continuing, you'll have to stop for the day.

    This kind of lunacy only comes from people and politicians who are completely and utterly detached from the real world.

  • Great! I’d love an EV. However, I’m not ditching fossil fuels until I can replace my F-150 with 700 mile range max on a tank and 11,000# tow capacity. Trucks are expensive, and especially with towing require a much larger battery than a regular car, just like my 36 gallon gas tank would sink a normal cars suspension with no one on board but dead dinos. But until the price including battery drops to be more reasonable, you won’t get any quick mass adoption for cars and I like a ton of peo
  • by PastTense ( 150947 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:05PM (#61169682)

    The people who buy new cars aren't driving old junkers on their last legs before their new car purchase; they are driving cars with a lot of miles left on them. So sending these types cars to the junkyard means there will be a substantial decline in good used cars for purchase by the poor and moderate income--resulting in a substantial increase in price for used cars.

    And no, the poor and moderate income can't afford to pay $25,000 for a new EV even after a $10,000 discount.

  • 1.9 Trillion is only 38 million Teslas. That is not nearly enough for the whole USA. Chucky would buy new cars for everyone in New York only, but at the current production rate, it will take 76 years...
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Major_Disorder ( 5019363 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:17PM (#61169720)
    Electric cars are coming, You WILL probably own one someday. Things will change to support EVs. Accept it and learn to adapt. Or be left driving a 20 year old POS that is nearly impossible to get service or parts for.
    A few years back I visited my mother in Manitoba, I noticed at the airport that there was an AC outlet in front of every parking space, for block heaters. If they can do it for an entire airport parking structure, they can do it for your work parking, and your apartment.
    The second the owners clue in that it is a revenue stream that they are missing out on. The electricians will be working 24/7 installing outlets.
  • by mschuyler ( 197441 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:24PM (#61169772) Homepage Journal

    It's not about you. It's about most of the people most of the time. Everyone can point to an outlier situation and say, "See! It won't work!" And you are correct. For those people who drive 1,000 miles a day, indeed, it won't work. For those people "forced" to use public charging stations, it will at least be inconvenient if not downright frustrating. OK. We get that. It won't work for you so I'm guessing an EV is not in your future in the next couple of years. Nobody but Schumer cares.

    However, the average commute is 40 miles a day. The average EV gets well over 200 miles a charge. Most all of them are closing in on 300 miles and a new Cybertruck clocks in at 500 miles--on a single charge. I think it is fair to say that's enough for a week's worth of commuting and a few grocery runs. and at least the way I commute is fill it up once a week. And it's the same with your average EV, charge it once per week, overnight when rates are low, for about 120 mpg equivalent.

    So for every one of you who claims such a situation won't work for you, there are a dozen of me who say that sounds pretty good. And with gas prices going up (Nearly $5.00 in SoCal I hear?) people will begin to do the math, and when they finally figure it out, they'll be moving over in droves. It's an economic decision. We do not need Schumer to make this work. It's going to work anyway. With or without you.

  • Sorry I don’t trust big brother, so my main concern is not being allowed to use a fast, road-side charger if big brother turned off my charging account, which would significantly reduce people’s ability to peacefully assemble.
  • by magzteel ( 5013587 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:32PM (#61169832)

    "Cash for clunkers" is a terrible policy. It subsidizes people who can already afford cars, while simultaneously making it harder for poorer people to afford used cars.

  • by theshowmecanuck ( 703852 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @06:36PM (#61169850) Journal
    Just like business users trying to tell the technical teams how to implement the solutions, JUST FUCKING STOP IT! Give the specifications ONLY. In this case, just specify how fuel (carbon if you want) efficient you want the vehicles to be. And include the cost/impact of manufacturing as well as providing the energy source. Why do they think that electric is the only option or even the best option in every place. Jesus H Christ.
  • Wont work. (Score:4, Informative)

    by Dusanyu ( 675778 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @07:01PM (#61169998)
    his plan ignores a couple huge issues issue 1 Poor people who drive old road beaters because they live week to week and can't afford car payments, and before you say "public transportation" you try carrying a weeks worth of groceries on a bus or waiting at a bus stop when it is below zero out. Not to mention that there are many areas in the US like smaller towns where it is completely non-existent Until there is affordable road beater electric cars available there will always be gas cars on the road. The big problem with this plan is it reduces the number of road beaters what will become affordable for these poor people to be able to use issue 2 people with car lones will this program pay off their car loan or will they get saddles with a larger car payment for a smaller car than what they already had? Issue 3 types of available EV's there is a few gaps in the availability of types of EV's for example does anyone may an electric van for people who need a wheelchair lift? a or contractors who need to carry tools, ladders building materials etc? and so fare there is one pickup truck available for farmers and people who need to haul feed pull trailers and the like
    • One thing I don't see in the article about Schumer's plan is what happens to the old ICE vehicles. Are they scrapped? Converted to electric? Paying an incentive to trade an ICE vehicle for an EV is all well and good, but then the dealer has to absorb the cost of doing something with the old vehicle. That cost would have to be covered also, since they obviously can't just resell them. Even selling them for parts would defeat the purpose of the plan. Scrapping them seems wasteful if the vehicles still h
  • This is so typical of Washington and technologists who live in major cities. They have no clue how things work in the rest of the country. No, you're not going to find a charging station in BFE, Nebraska. Nobody is going to have a spare battery in their trunk to put in your EV when it runs out of fairy-farts in the middle of nowhere. Oh, and people are going to be pissed when they discover that they have to replace a rather expensive battery in a few years.

  • Just curious (Score:3, Insightful)

    by kenh ( 9056 ) on Thursday March 18, 2021 @12:30PM (#61172764) Homepage Journal

    When will politicians stop offering us 'free' things by having our children pay for it?

    The promised rapid succession of Trillion dollar spending bills will do little more than use our children's money to buy Democrat votes today.

    Cash for clunkers took perfectly serviceable vehicles off the road, replacing them with new vehicles that were produced in polluting factories - the net impact of the Cash for Clunkers program was a hit to the environment, but hey - it sold a lot of cars, subsidized with deficit spending.

  • The whole reason manufacturers are interested in "working with the government" to push electric vehicles is that they are ultimately less labor intensive to manufacture. GM won't hire anyone to make electric motors in the USA. They'll just buy the motors from China and slap them in their vehicles. Meanwhile, everyone in Mexico and the USA working on 4 cylinder to 8 cylinder engines is going to be given the pink slip and Progressives working in banks and universities for a living casting everyone who is angry about this as some sort of a racist who should be ideally just going for the welfare program.

Our OS who art in CPU, UNIX be thy name. Thy programs run, thy syscalls done, In kernel as it is in user!

Working...