With horse-drawn carriages ordered off the streets of San Antonio by 2030, metropolis council members are contemplating a plan that might permit a brand new sort of carriage journey.
For the reason that ordinance phasing out carriages was handed in 2024, no less than two of town’s three carriage homeowners have requested to introduce horseless, electrical car (EV) carriages.
Now a pilot program is taking form, one that might hold the carriage corporations in enterprise whereas additionally opening up the marketplace for newcomers to the enterprise.
In December 2024, San Antonio Metropolis Council permitted a plan to part out horse-drawn carriages from metropolis streets. The ban affected three homeowners of 5 corporations that maintain 25 horse carriage permits from town.
The primary part took impact instantly and no new carriage permits have been allowed to be issued and Animal Management Companies not licensed new horses. Then, hours of operation have been diminished by 20%.
Beginning Jan. 1, 2030, no horse-drawn carriages can function within the metropolis middle.
However the council on the time additionally requested metropolis workers to convey again specifics on how a horseless number of carriage at the moment working in just a few different cities might assist present carriage operators transition their enterprise.
In a proposal introduced just lately to the council’s Transportation and Infrastructure Committee assembly, Rick Riley, assistant director for the San Antonio Police Division, stated there are some value benefits to electrical over horse-drawn.
Whereas the price of an electrical carriage can run about $20,000, the annual working expense is about $3,500, in comparison with $15,000 for a horse-drawn carriage, Riley stated.
Within the proposal, electrical carriages can be permitted below the identical guidelines that govern the electrical automobiles generally seen on downtown streets, he added.
One exception is they might not be required to have a windshield.

As for what number of carriages could possibly be allowed, 4 choices have been positioned on the desk.
The primary Riley mentioned was a one-for-one trade of horse allow for electrical carriage allow, which might lead to a most of 25 permits. Any exchanges would void the horse-drawn carriage allow.
Another choice is comparable however would level-set the permits so that each operator has the identical variety of permits. “We’ve one proprietor proper now that has 5 permits [and] the opposite two homeowners have two corporations with 10 permits every,” Riley stated. “This might permit that proprietor to maneuver up 5 extra EV permits, and would lead to a attainable 30 new EV permits.”
The third choice would restrict permits to seven for the 2 homeowners that at the moment have 10 permits every, and lift to seven the variety of permits the third proprietor (who at the moment has solely 5) might have, bringing the full to 21.
Another choice would permit solely 5 permits per proprietor.
However carriage homeowners say evaluating horse-drawn carriages to electrical is like apples to oranges.
“The kind of rider that’s keen to pay $75 for a horse carriage journey, they’re there for the expertise of a horse [not] Ubers,” stated Artwork Martinez de Vara, an lawyer representing the homeowners. As well as, “the common full-time driver earns over $100,000 and the common EV driver goes to earn far much less. And we’re very involved about our drivers — their mortgages and their life right here in San Antonio.”
District 2 Councilman Jalen McKee-Rodriguez, who serves as committee chairperson, stated he prefers a plan that might doubtlessly enhance the variety of carriages for rent to 30.
Councilwoman Sukh Kaur, whose District 1 encompasses downtown San Antonio, stated she needed to make sure town was not giving preferential remedy to corporations that have already got probably the most permits or have been first on the scene, thereby creating an setting the place, “nobody else can are available in to play within the sand.”
“I feel that we should always open this as much as the group as nicely,” Kaur stated, including she thinks that every one EV corporations have equal entry to the permits.
Metropolis workers additionally ought to help the present carriage operators with understanding how and the place to accumulate EV carriages, stated District 9 Councilwoman Misty Spears.
McKee-Rodriguez agreed that town, as a result of it voted to part out the horses, must be as useful as attainable within the transition, and steered a pilot program that might begin this 12 months with short-term permits as quickly because the operators are prepared.
