San Barbara County has close to $5 million available as part of a $12 million effort to get roughly 1,000 new electric vehicle (EV) chargers installed in Ventura, Santa Barbara, and SLO counties.Ā
On Aug. 5, the California Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Project (CALeVIP) will start accepting applications on a first-come, first-served basis. And the money goes fast, according to Vince Kirkhuff, an air quality specialist with the San Luis Obispo County Air Pollution Control District (APCD), which contributed money to the fund alongside the APCDs from Santa Barbara and Ventura counties, Central Coast Community Choice Energy (3CE), the California Energy Commission, and other local agencies.
āIn the last few programs that they have opened, sometimes the funding is gone within hours,ā Kirkhuff said. āWhat seems to be the best course of action is for potential site hosts, if someone wants to put a charger on their property, that they contact a vendor ahead of time, ⦠get all of their ducks in a row before the program launches.ā

The goal is to help sprinkle 433 new chargers around Santa Barbara County, although Kirkhuff said the number of chargers will depend on the size of the rebates that get awarded.Ā
Level 2 chargers, which charge electric vehicle batteries more slowly and would be a better fit for something like an office parking lot or an apartment building, are eligible to receive program rebates between $3,500 and $6,000. While DC chargers, which can take a vehicle battery from a 20 to 80 percent charge in less than an hour and would be a good fit for a grocery store or restaurant, are eligible for between $30,000 to $80,000, Kirkhuff said.Ā
Higher rebate amounts will be allocated to chargers in low-income areas or multi-family buildings, he said, adding that around 50 percent of the money will go toward low-income areas of the county.Ā
āOne of the problems with getting the chargers out is something like 90 percent of EV charging currently happens at home, so people who have electric cars charge them at home,ā Kirkhuff said. āThis is a problem for people who donāt have a garage or a driveway, people who live in an apartment building ⦠so that is something that needs to be filled.āĀ
Giving people who donāt have an opportunity to charge at home a place to get their cars charged up should help get California to its electric vehicle goals, he said. The stateās currently aiming to have 1.5 million zero-emission vehicles on the road and 250,000 EV chargers around California by 2025, according to a press release from the Santa Barbara County APCD, which contributed money to the program for Santa Barbara County. By 2030, California wants 5 million zero-emission vehicles on the road.Ā
The South Central Coast Incentive Program will be the 11th that CALeVIP has launched since December 2017, CALeVIP spokesperson Laura Rehrmann said. The California Energy Commission is providing $200 million in funding for the program, and funding partners have already added nearly $34 million to that total, Rehrmann said.Ā
3CE contributed $1.75 million to the South Central Coast program, 3CE spokesperson Shelly Whitworth said. Itās the second EV charger program 3CE has collaborated on. In 2019, 3CE, CALeVIP, and local agencies offered $7 million for EV chargers in Monterey, San Benito, and Santa Cruz counties.Ā
Whitworth said the money was provisionally subscribed within an hour of the program opening. Rehrmann said that after all the applications were reviewed, there is still some money available.
āAny disadvantaged communities, anyone who is looking to be a part of this, really needs to have their application ready to go, refreshing the site and hitting submit pretty much in that first 10 minutes,ā she said, adding that 3CE has a couple of other EV programs available through September.
Those who want to apply for the CALeVIP program, should visit calevip.org/incentive-project/south-central-coast to learn more. 3CE customers can apply for Electrify Your Rideā$2,000 to $4,000 for new or used electric vehicle purchasesāand Charge Your Rideāmeant to cover up to 80 percent of the costs and electrical work needed to install chargers at homeāat 3cenergy.org.Ā
āItās kind of the last hurdle for people to adopt electric vehicles. Theyāre wondering where [theyāre] going to charge if they donāt have a charger at home,ā Whitworth said.Ā
Highlight
⢠The First 5 Santa Barbara County Children and Families Commission is accepting applications for an alternate community member, the organization announced. The commission is made up of nine regular members and four alternate members, all appointed by the county Board of Supervisors, according to the commission. County residents interested in being considered must complete an application at sbcounty.granicus.com/boards.
Editor Camillia Lanham wrote this weekās Spotlight. Send business and nonprofit tips to spotlight@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Jul 29 – Aug 5, 2021.

