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e-scooter article in the Grauniad

‘I know they’re exciting – but calm down!’ Britain’s love-hate affair with the e-scooter

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/apr/27/i-know-theyre-exciting-b...

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chrisonabike | 2 years ago
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Interesting - on scooter policing / regs - I didn't know the rules but wouldn't have guessed that this would be the outcome.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-gloucestershire-61243033

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OnYerBike replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
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My understanding of the current legal position is that e-scooters fall under the definition of "motor vehicles". There have been certain specific laws amended to allow e-scooters being used as part of a trial to be used legally on public roads (see https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2020/663/note/made) by relaxing some of the legal requirements, but for anything not specifically amended then an e-scooter is treated the same as a car. So drinking offences would be treated as in charge of a motor vehicle (rather than cycling).

There's some more useful reading here: https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-8958/CBP-895...

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chrisonabike | 2 years ago
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What people want: cars like they show them in the adverts.  Your own vehicle, your own private space, going where you want, when you want (no other drivers).  Fresh air and relaxation.  Lots of parking most places. Affordable to many on hire-purchase.

What people need: cycles like they have them in the Netherlands.  Your own vehicle, interacting with other people if you like but not stuck in their space, going where you want, when you want.  Fresh air, relaxation and gentle exercise.  Lots of parking most places.  Affordable to most (2nd hand) and usable by a far larger population (those who haven't or can't take a driving test).

What people get: cars and traffic jams. So we also get scooters.  Why? Cars are spendy plus not everyone can drive.  Walking is slow and requires effort.  Bicycles require effort, need somewhere to park, get stolen, are scary on the road / get shouted at on the pavement - oh and turn you into a "cyclist".  Scooters - you can pick up and take with you - on the train, into buildings.

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brooksby replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
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chrisonatrike wrote:

Scooters - you can pick up and take with you - on the train, into buildings.

Have you tried lifting one of those e-scooters?  I had to, where someone had parked their rental Voi scooter against the shutters on my office's front door. 

Bl00dy heavy things, I'll tell you!

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Simon E | 2 years ago
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"Britain’s love-hate affair with the e-scooter"

Just how many people in Britain have even tried one (or been hit by an e-scooter rider)?

Not many, I suspect. The Graun trying to make a story out of almost nothing.

Or is this a London-centric topic where Enfield is thought of as the northern edge of civilisation?

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OldRidgeback | 2 years ago
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I've rented e-scooters a few times and they are fun. But I can't help thinking that an e-bike does the same job much better. The costs of basic e-bikes and e-scooters are about the same. You can get the base Carrera e-bike for about £500 last time I looked, much the same as a lower performance e-scooter. The bike has better brakes, better stability and can cope with bumpy roads a lot better. It's safer.

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OnYerBike replied to OldRidgeback | 2 years ago
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One advantage of e-scooters (depending on make/model) is that they can be folded up and brought into offices, carried on trains/buses etc. so more akin to a folding bike in that regards. Which has benefits for multi-modal transport and because there is often a lack of secure bike storage (even when bike racks are provided, they are often not "secure" given the prevalence of portable electric angle grinders etc.).

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OnYerBike | 2 years ago
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Interesting article. I would certainly tend to agree that e-scooters seem like they could play a valuable role in (relatively) sustainable personal transport.

I know a lot of people complain about reckless riders and I'm sure that is a problem - although I suspect there is a strong bias in that the (vast?) majority of people riding e-scooters in public are doing so illegally - and people who are disinclined to obey the law are presumably also disinclined to ride responsibly. 

A lack of suitable infrastructure also likely plays a part - as with cyclists, I daresay most e-scooter riders who choose to use the pavement do so because they don't feel comfortable mixing with motor vehicles on the carriageway. 

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hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
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Read that just earlier.

I think e-scooters really demonstrate how backward we've been with getting people around. There's a clear need for people to travel shorter distances (5 miles or less?) that don't require a car as it's just getting a person from A to B. Obviously we all want people on bikes and getting some active transport, but e-scooters really appeal due to their fun factor and ease of use.

Here in Bristol we have loads of them around, both legal and illegal and I welcome them as it gets drivers to expect non-cars to be filtering and taking up space on the roads. Unfortunately, the riders are experiencing abuse from some drivers too, but at least that means cyclists aren't the only target (be better if the problem drivers just hopped on a bike/scooter themselves).

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chrisonabike | 2 years ago
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Good articles about these in the US:

BikeSnob: https://www.outsideonline.com/adventure-travel/destinations/dockless-scooters-cities-pros-cons-bikesnob/

John Allen: http://john-s-allen.com/blog/2018/09/some-comments-on-electric-scooters/

I'd tend to agree with his final comment (still true): "one more example of technology getting ahead of government management and regulation"

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brooksby | 2 years ago
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Quote:

Lime estimates that, globally, one in four trips taken by its users replaces a car journey. A Swiss research paper, published in December, found that privately owned e-scooters tended to replace car journeys, but rented e-scooters emitted more CO2 than the transport modes they replaced.

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