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A Conversation with Pete Buttigieg

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    Our electric vehicle infrastructure
    program, where we're distributing
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    $5 billion to states to establish
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    a car charging network along our highways,
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    as well as a companion program called
    Community Charging, which is another 2.5.
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    They do carry standards.
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    We don't want to dictate, of course, all
    of the particulars of charging stations
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    that will typically be owned
    and operated by the private sector
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    but we do need to make sure certain
    things are true about them.
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    We need to make sure that you are not,
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    for example, confined to an individual
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    network in order to
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    be able to purchase power
    from a given charging station.
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    Right now, that's often the case.
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    So it's as if, you know,
    you could only fill up at a Speedway
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    gas station if you were a Speedway member,
    but not if you were a BP member, right.
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    We need to make these interoperable.
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    And accessibility
    is one of the considerations
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    that's going into this as well.
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    And as we work with our counterparts
    in the Department of Energy
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    to lay out those requirements
    and expectations for
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    the states in their investments,
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    we're going to be, within reason,
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    laying out some
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    standards and expectations
    for how those chargers
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    ought to work.
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    Well, you know, one thing we're trying to
    support is active transportation.
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    So we need to make sure that people
    are able to walk or bike or roll
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    to wherever they need to be
    and I think that's something that has been
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    maybe more familiar for people
    living in city centers of dense
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    urban areas but can bring
    benefit everywhere in the country.
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    When we adopted a Complete Streets
    approach in my hometown of South
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    Bend, for example, that really opened up
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    what had been a road pattern
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    that was almost hostile to any traffic
    besides a vehicle.
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    Really opened that up to people
    and through that to small business too,
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    because it became a more inviting place
    to have a cup of coffee
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    or browse the store.
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    So all of these things add up to,
    I think, a more vibrant local economy,
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    and they add up to more ease for people
    getting to where they need to go.
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    Especially when you start
    from the principle of safety.
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    And that's really what's on our mind
    as we work
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    to make active transportation
    available to more Americans.
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    Many of our grant programs do just that.
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    E-bikes hold the promise of making it
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    more natural
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    for a lot of people
    to commute to work by bike.
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    I think that they present
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    an opportunity in terms of people
    who are maybe
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    don't think of themselves as athletes
    or aren't able to
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    bike longer distances on traditional bike
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    to now have a convenience to get around.
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    Again,
    safety has to be our guiding principle.
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    So, you know, local communities,
    I think, are dealing with the necessity
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    of managing the
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    shared spaces
    and just the rules of the road
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    in a way that it is safe
    because these e-bikes can go
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    obviously faster, not just farther
    than traditional bicycles,
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    but we see a lot of potential there
    and we want to support local community
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    visions for how they want
    to put these technologies to use.
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    The great thing about this role
    and the daunting thing about this moment
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    is that we need to be delivering
    improvements to every mode
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    of transportation in the country and,
    you know, we have provisions
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    in this new infrastructure law
    that touch on everything from
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    commercial aviation to pipeline safety.
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    We're administering a pipeline safety
    improvement program
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    that's not getting as much attention
    as some of the other things,
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    but it just gives you a sense of the range
    of what we do.
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    We work on commercial space travel, port
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    improvements, anything related
    to how people or goods move around.
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    We tend to have some role in it
    and what we're very proud of
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    with this infrastructure
    deal is the opportunity
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    to make more improvements than we have in
    certainly my lifetime.
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    Everything from the ASAP program
    that we're rolling out next week,
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    improvements to stations across
    the country for transit, accessibility
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    to the airport terminal program,
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    which also by the way,
    did a lot for accessibility.
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    A lot of
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    ADA improvements are coming to airports
    around America now through this funding,
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    and we're proud to be able to bring that
    to communities of different sizes.
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    By many measures, the U.S.
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    doesn't have a single airport
    in the world's top 25 now.
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    And that we want to change.
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    The president
    definitely wants to change it.
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    And it starts with the basics,
    making sure that airports
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    before we even get to the
    the finer points of the esthetics of it,
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    we just need to make sure they work well
    and that they work well for everybody.
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    So this round of terminal grants
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    alone was 84 different airports
    we're able to make a difference.
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    And there are big recognizable ones
    like L.A.X.
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    all the way down to
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    Chamberlain, South Dakota,
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    where they're general aviation terminal
    right now is a mobile home.
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    And we're funding them a new building.
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    But in places like in between,
    like Huntsville, Alabama,
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    which will get better restrooms and
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    finally be able to get
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    ADA compliance in areas
    where they hadn't before.
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    There was the Cash For Clunkers program,
    I think during the Obama administration,
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    the approach that we've pursued
    has had to do with
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    reducing the upfront sticker
    price of EVs through tax credits,
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    although unfortunately there's
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    been a lot of congressional,
    mostly Republican opposition to that.
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    So it hasn't passed,
    but we are seeing that the scale effects
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    are starting
    to pull down the cost of EVs too.
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    The cost of charging is a little different
    because it's in the hands of utilities
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    that there are 3000
    different utilities across the country.
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    But we're certainly interested to see
    what kinds of approaches will be taken
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    locally.
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    For example, you know,
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    I used to run a utility as mayor
    because I ever saw the water works.
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    And one of the uses that my successor put
    rescue plan dollars to was to reduce
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    or forgive utility bills for low
    income residents on their water charges.
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    So there are ways this can be done.
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    It varies from state to state,
    and it gets a little difficult
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    for us from the federal level
    on the transportation side of the House
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    to have all the visibility into that.
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    But we're certainly interested
    in approaches to make the charging as well
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    as the purchasing of electric vehicles
    more affordable for more Americans.
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    One thing that a lot of folks
    don't realize is that you can often charge
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    a vehicle with a
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    regular wall plug.
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    That's what
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    frankly, that's what Chasten and I do
    in Michigan with our plug in hybrid,
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    although it's quicker and more efficient
    if you can get a level two charger.
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    But that only helps you if you live in
    a single family home or you have a garage.
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    A lot of people in multi-family
    dwellings also live in areas
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    where it's not yet profitable
    for a company to install a charger.
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    For example, in the parking
    lot of your apartment building.
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    That's where we think the community
    charging funding that we're going to be
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    distributing can make a difference.
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    We buy down the difference
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    where it doesn't pencil out
    just yet for the private sector,
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    but when we get that charger up, it helps
    drive adoption and helps, of course,
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    people get in on the fuel savings
    that come with owning.
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    That's funded for this fiscal year.
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    We'll get the first of five years,
    which across five years
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    will be two and a half billion.
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    That will go alongside the 5 billion.
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    So about 1 billion a year that's
    going to the states for their own plans.
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    Those are more toward
    building out the network of
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    chargers across the U.S.
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    highway system.
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    You know, we do everything
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    from overseeing the Academy for Merchant
    Mariners at Kings Point, New York
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    to licensing commercial space launches
    and so I think everybody knows
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    we're the Department
    of Planes, trains and automobiles.
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    But even I am repeatedly struck by the
    sheer range of things we get to work on.
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    But they're all important and they're
    all there and they're all exciting.
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    And there's never been a better
    time to do this work.
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    Yeah, it's
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    you know, we're trying to strike
    an appropriate balance
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    in terms of our own travel,
    even just how I get around the city.
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    So one idea that I, to be honest, stole
    from Secretary Granholm was to convert
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    one of my security detail vehicles
    to an electric car so that I can
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    get around
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    DC on it on a zero emissions basis.
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    But of course part of my job is to travel
    to be in lots of different places
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    at once,
    we want to see, feel and experience
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    what's happening on the ground
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    so that we can make the best
    possible decisions as we guide
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    what's ultimately going to be roughly
    half of the $1.2 trillion of the
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    president's infrastructure plan.
Title:
A Conversation with Pete Buttigieg
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
ABILITY Magazine
Duration:
09:41

English subtitles

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