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Date: August 29, 2024
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By Mobility Portal
United States

With a budget of $15 million, Rhode Island will boost the installation of 206 charging stations

Senators Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse, along with Governor Dan McKee, announced the new federal funding for the Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT). As a result, the 206 new chargers will be installed at 85 sites.
With a budget of $15 million, Rhode Island will boost the installation of over 200 charging stations

Rhode Island’s efforts to increase publicly available electric vehicle (EV) charging stations and make it more convenient for drivers to charge up their cars is getting a 15 million dollars jolt in federal funding.

U.S. Senators Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse and Governor Dan McKee announced the new federal funding for the Rhode Island Department of Transportation (RIDOT) to help install over 200 new stations at convenient locations across the state.

The funding is made available through the U.S. Department of Transportation’s (DOT) Charging and Fueling Infrastructure Discretionary Grant Program, which was established by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which Reed and Whitehouse helped enact in 2021.

RIDOT and its partners, the Rhode Island Office of Energy Resources (OER) and the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (RIDEM), will use the federal funds to boost the state’s infrastructure through its statewide plan: Charging Ahead: Rhode Island Working Together for Electrification.

Charging Ahead is an interagency project that aims to further the design, installation, management, and maintenance of EV stations in public and accessible locations throughout the state.

Funds would support increased public awareness of EVs and their benefits through community engagement, education, and workforce training in support of the state’s EV network.

The 206 new chargers will be installed at 85 sites across Rhode Island.

“Charging an electric vehicle should be as easy as filling up at a gas station. This new 15 million dollars investment will grow the state’s electric charging infrastructure network in a smart, sustainable way that reduces pollution and helps people lower their fuel costs,” says Senator Reed, a senior member of the Appropriations Committee.

He continues: “It will accelerate 24/7 access to public stations that are convenient, affordable, and reliable for Rhode Island’s growing population of EV drivers.”

“As we get more electric vehicles on the road, drivers need to be supported by convenient and accessible charging options,” states Senator Whitehouse, a senior member of the Environment and Public Works Committee.

“After working to get EV charging station funding into the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, I’m pleased to see this new investment coming to Rhode Island,” he adds,

“This new federal funding will complement Rhode Island’s ongoing investments in electric vehicle charging infrastructure, building upon the work already being done through the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Program,” said Governor McKee.

“These additional funds will help accelerate the expansion of charging stations across the state and support workforce development initiatives while contributing to our Act on Climate Change objectives,” he adds.

Charging Ahead aims to expand community-based EV charging infrastructure and bridge gaps.

The project will utilize various community locations such as public road parking lots, municipal office buildings, public schools, and public parks.

These locations have been carefully selected with a focus on Disadvantaged Census Tracts identified for Justice40, aiming to serve residents’ trips to nearby commercial and recreational areas.

RIDOT and its partners envision a unified statewide network of EV charging locations accessible through a single smartphone app and maintained by a designated contractor.

In this two-phase project, RIDOT will collaborate with OER as a subrecipient to design, install, manage and maintain publicly-available electric vehicle (EV) charging stations on publicly accessible properties, ensuring affordable and accessible charging options for Rhode Island residents and visitors.

The Ocean State is demonstrating progress on EVs

Recently, Rhode Island became the first state in the nation to complete Phase 1 under the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Program, having implemented a total of eight Direct Current Fast Chargers and six Dual-Port Level 2 charging stations along I-95’s Alternative Fuel Corridor.

Reed and Whitehouse helped include 2.5 billion dollars for the Charging and Fueling Infrastructure Discretionary Grant Program over five years in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to strategically deploy publicly accessible EV charging and alternative fueling infrastructure in the places people live and work, in both urban and rural areas, including downtown areas and local neighborhoods, particularly in underserved areas.

This charging infrastructure program will ensure all American communities have access to affordable, reliable, clean electricity anytime, anywhere.

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