This guy is one of my favorite YouTubers.
micromobility - Bikes, scooters, boards: Whatever floats your goat, this is micromobility
Ebikes, bicycles, scooters, skateboards, longboards, eboards, motorcycles, skates, unicycles, heelies, or an office chair: Whatever floats your goat, this is all things micromobility!
"Transportation using lightweight vehicles such as bicycles or scooters, especially electric ones that may be borrowed as part of a self-service rental program in which people rent vehicles for short-term use within a town or city.
micromobility is seen as a potential solution to moving people more efficiently around cities"
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It's a little sad that we need to actually say this, but:
Don't be an asshole or you will be permanently banned.
Respectful debate is totally OK, criticizing a product is fine, but being verbally abusive will not be tolerated.
Focus on discussing the idea, not attacking the person.
The class 1,2,3 system is only confusing if you're a moron. Santa Barbara has the right idea, identifying a problem with "high powered ebikes" which are sold with >750 watt motors, which makes them too high powered to legally be ebikes. These are in moped or electric motorcycle territory.
It's not the class system that is confusing it's the enforcement. The video kinda made it clear, it's impossible to enforce because you have to stop everyone to check everything because the one with a law-breaking spec often looks the same as the one that is not, and most of the time parent also doesn't know what they get into. As we all know, law mean shit if it's impossible to enforce.
I'm in full agreement, and want to note that the confusion regarding enforcement started well before ebikes became a thing, at least in California.
To see why, we have to turn back to the 1970s, when mopeds -- legally, a "motorized bicycle" -- were introduced. At the time, the definition described a "device" (so not a vehicle in California) with a max 30 MPH (48 kph) limit on level ground, a 4 HP (3 kW) max engine output, an automatic transmission , and operative pedals. This hewed almost identically to the original Swedish mopeds, which existed in the context of a max 50 kph speed limit in urban areas.
Fast forward to sometime in the 2000s or early 2010s, the California definition of moped gained a proviso for electric-powered mopeds, with a max motor output of 3 kW but removed the requirements for an automatic transmission (bc irrelevancy) and the pedals.
So since that time, enforcement of mopeds would have been confusing, since an electric motorcycle (always has been legal) and an electric moped can share the same appearance but differ only in limited power output and speed. Though the market for electric mopeds didn't explode anywhere near what happened in the 2010s and 2020s with ebikes.
But the problem was always there, just now exacerbated. But I do think even the three-class system as implemented in California has other problems with enforcement as well.
For example, a class 2 and class 3 ebike have different operating requirements. To ride a class 3, the rider must be 16+ years old and a helmet is mandatory, even if over 18 years old. Under the law, to stop an underage rider on suspicion of operating a class 3 ebike would require separate information that the rider is not at least 16. In practice, this is an invitation for police profiling, stopping riders because "you look too young" and that's patently objectionable.
If a rider is stopped for something else (eg the helmet requirement for class 3) and their age is noticed from their ID during the stop, then that's a fair cop. But anytime that enforcement results in unjustified profiling and stops that are not premised by reasonable suspicion, that's where civil rights erode. Not just for those riders that are pulled over, but everyone who travels the roads. No one would be safe.
P.S. Anyone looking through the history of the California Vehicle Code should be aware that there were once two definitions of "motorized bicycle", one which meant moped and another which was the early prototype that preceded the ebike class system. The latter was removed circa 2018, after the class system was already in use for two years. That's... totally not confusing at all, legislators...
This isn't hard to solve, just have the manufacturers sell them with mandatory class tags, so that everyone knows immediately what they are, what speed limit they have to obey and where they're allowed to go.
You can even create dedicated lanes for each class, for safety.
There are dedicated lanes for motorcycles already. Other than that, I agree.
Dedicated lanes for motorcycles, as in, the same as the car lanes?
Around my neck of the woods there are no dedicated motorcycle lanes - they can make use of bus lanes, same as taxis, and can't use bicycle lanes.
But yeah, just sort them into classes at the factory, and make the rules around that - like for medium power vehicles it could demand insurance, for high power ask for registration and a driver's license too, for low power/bycicles just a very basic course taught at schools but where kids they issued their very own initial "drivers license".
By dedicated lanes for motorcycles I mean roads. What I'm trying to say is that motorcycles should not be in bicycle lanes and that includes motorcycles posing as bicycles.
I gotta get one of these 4 wheel e-cargo bikes for work. It would be super awesome to skip the traffic and ride the bike lanes.
Sorry, you're not a multi-billion dollar mega Corp, so you're limited to 3 wheels.
The truth hurts