Kayak plugs in with EV shuttles

By on Monday, April 15th, 2024 in Columbia Basin News More Top Stories

MISSION – (News release from CTUIR) Kayak Public Transit will soon offer shuttle service around the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation’s (CTUIR) Nixyáawii campus thanks to two electric vehicles it recently received.

Vicki Croes, CTUIR Public Transit general manager, said Kayak received two Polaris Gem E6 EVs about seven weeks ago as part of a Federal Transit Administration grant. Each EV has six doors, six seats and a storage pod in the rear for bags and small items.

She said with the EVs now adorned with Kayak’s branding, the shuttle service will run from the Kayak Transit Hub to Nixyáawii Education Center, Timíne North Apartments, Yellowhawk Tribal Health Center and the Nixyáawii Governance Center as soon as two drivers are hired.

“It’ll run from 7:10 in the morning till 5:25 In the evening, Monday through Friday. And then we will also utilize anytime there’s a sports event at the school. We’ll utilize the shuttles for parking, excess overflow parking,” Croes said. “Everyone is welcome to use the shuttle service. If we have a passenger with limited mobility or confined to a mobility device, we will respond with a paratransit van that has a lift and is parked here at the Kayak Hub.”

The two EVs are street legal with a top speed of 25 mph and battery range between 75 and 80 miles, depending on temperature, grade and payload. Kayak got the EVs to provide safe and reliable transportation for movement of tribal members and employees around the campus without using their private vehicles.

Eric Smith, Kayak transit fleet and safety manager, said Kayak got the EVs because they are environmentally friendly, and they will make for better campus transportation.

“We want to support more green initiatives. That’s important to everybody; it’s important to the tribe,” Smith said. “Also, these are going to be a pretty handy tool for here on campus, you know, for our elders that are going to appointments, our kids down here at school. These are going to be a big benefit for those two issues right there.”

Photo from CTUIR