Flightless Bird: E-Scooter Company Bird Declares Bankruptcy
Bird Scooters still has a few partner cities in North America and is participating in pilot programs in places like New York City, but it has had to scale back operations in recent years.
Electric scooter company Bird is flying south for the winter, and it might be a very different kind of fowl by the time it returns. The Miami, Florida-based micro-mobility company known for allowing rambunctious, helmetless e-scooterists to fly down city streets declared bankruptcy Wednesday, saying it was entering into a process of “financial restructuring” while still keeping its bikes and other scooters operational for now.
The company declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy, often called “reorganization” bankruptcy, where it also plans to sell some of its existing assets to its existing lenders. The company was quick to mention it would be “maintaining the same service for its riders and upholding its commitments to partner cities,” meaning you’ll still likely see scooterists zipping around Miami and a few New York City boroughs, as well as Springfield, Missouri and the greater Toronto, Canada area.
Read more
Read About Everything Wrong With The Chevy Blazer EV That Edmunds Bought With Its Own Money
This New Development Could Make Cardi B and Offset’s Split Uglier
Automakers Are Trying To Prevent The Second-Largest Recall In History
The company was once heralded by Time magazine as one of the top 50 “Genius Companies” back in 2018 and was a top startup valued at $2 billion thanks to big-name investment. Just a year later, Bird was announcing layoffs. Now Amazon has a $4.8 million claim on the company for use of its Amazon Web Services client, according to bankruptcy documents.
The company also owes millions on its lease for its Denver, Colorado office space and more to other vendors. Bird claimed on its Chapter 11 forms it has between $100 million and $500 million in assets and within the same range of liabilities.
The problem with these dockless e-scooter rental companies is that while they promised to revolutionize the “last mile” commute with a sustainable, electric option, they also proved to be a nuisance in many cities, with bikes and scooters left around wantonly on streets and sidewalks. They have also led to injuries and some deaths, leading to Paris, France, banning rental electric scooters entirely earlier this year.
More from Gizmodo
Self-Checkout Is Coming To Airport Security, Testing Begins In Las Vegas
Steam Keys For This Gaming Disaster Are Being Sold For Hundreds Of Dollars
Why is Wonka considered a box office success compared to The Marvels?
Sign up for Gizmodo's Newsletter. For the latest news, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.