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BackConcerns Over Dockless E-Bike Safety and Regulation in London
Concerns Over Dockless E-Bike Safety and Regulation in London
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Guardian Business2 g önceLaw3 dk okumaUnited Kingdom

Concerns Over Dockless E-Bike Safety and Regulation in London

Readers highlight risks to pedestrians and disabled people, calling for stricter rules and accountability for hire e-scooters and bikes.

L'essentiel

  • London residents express serious concerns about dockless e-bikes and scooters, citing risks to pedestrians and disabled people due to careless riding and improper parking.
  • Letters call for stricter regulation, user registration, insurance requirements, and increased penalties for misuse to ensure public safety and accessibility.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

The article comprises letters to the editor responding to a previous report about Jane Ouartsi, a disabled woman, being hit by a child on a Lime bike and denied compensation.

Taille de police

I am a powered wheelchair user in Westminster. I support cleaner streets and fewer car journeys, so I am not opposed to ebikes in principle. But the present dockless system too often transfers risk on to pedestrians, disabled people and older people.

In Westminster, I regularly find hire ebikes and scooters abandoned across pavements, dropped kerbs and crossings. A walking person may step around them. I may be blocked entirely, forced to reverse, or pushed into the road.

I have been hit by an e-scooter while crossing the road near my home. Outside Tate Britain, at a zebra crossing, I was almost run over by a rider looking at his mobile phone. There was a millimetre between my wheelchair and the bike. Had he hit me at speed, the consequences could have been catastrophic.

The level of penalties still feels pitiful. In Westminster, a higher‑rate car parking penalty is £160, reduced to £80 if paid promptly. If a badly parked car can attract that sanction, why should dumped hire ebikes and scooters be treated more lightly when they block disabled people’s safe passage?

Jane’s case exposes a serious loophole. The issue is not only age verification, but whether these bikes can be ridden at all by someone who has not been identified, verified and charged for the journey. A heavy electric hire bike should not be usable anonymously. Allowing that risk to persist is a commercial choice, not a technological inevitability.

When I was a child, cycling came with visible expectations. We did cycling proficiency at school. I still remember a village bobby stopping a friend for riding dangerously. Perhaps that sounds quaint, but the principle was right.

A livable city must be accessible as well as convenient for everyone. For many Londoners, especially wheelchair users, blind people and older people, that balance is badly wrong today.

Colin Hughes

London

Having read your article about ebikes, I should like to propose that a system be devised whereby the person hiring the ebike is firstly registered and approved, during which process the person undertakes to abide by strict terms and conditions that, in the event of any mishap, ensures that the said person becomes potentially liable if a claim is made against them.

As such, the person hiring any bike would either need to prove that they are covered by insurance or, better still, be covered by the hire company’s group policy.

A person’s “licence” to hire an ebike, as identified by their unique registration number, could be revoked or suspended by the hire company in accordance with contractual terms and conditions. Without a licence, it would not be possible to hire an ebike.

The suggestions I have made would obviously need to be considered by the relevant parties involved, but it is of the utmost importance that no victim should remain without due compensation.

Richard C Harris

Wallington, London

Until recently I had commuted in London by bicycle for more than a decade. Going through two parks, it was the highlight of my day. Then came Lime bikes. Mostly ridden and parked with little consideration for others, they have exposed how selfish people can be.

At least the clacking din of hacked Lime bikes gives an “arsehole incoming” warning, but it’s become the soundtrack to the capital.

Charging purely by time and allowing parking on pavements, London is made worse by dockless electric rental bikes. It’s time to change at least those elements.

Richard Beeching

Hove, East Sussex

Questions ouvertes

  • What specific actions will local authorities take to address e-bike safety concerns?
  • Will hire companies implement stricter user verification and insurance policies?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by Guardian Business.

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