No. How do you enable payment for such normal sockets? Even if you figure out a way to do that, the amount of payment for electric bikes is so tiny that just to cover credit card processing fees would require electric bike users to pay for exorbitantly expensive electricity.
So bike batteries are typically not more than 750 Wh. If you are trying to go on some long cross-country trip for fun, then maybe you pack three of them (2kWh of electricity). That gives you ~100 km of pedal assist.
That's still a dollar/day including CC fees. Seems reasonable.
0.75kWh per charge even at Electrify America prices ($0.64/kWh) is not enough for a single transaction. Maybe they will force you to preload the account and then deduct from your balance. But the fact is a normal outlet consumes so little electricity that it's not economically worthwhile to meter any reasonable duration of using that single outlet.