My apologies for yesterday’s unexcused absence.
Wednesday was a very long day, and by the time I finally had a chance to write about the bicycling death in Santa Ana, it was too damn late to start on anything else.
On the other hand, this is the first time I haven’t had a migraine all week.
So there’s that, anyway.
Apropos of nothing, today’s photo is my coffee cup and a little light reading.
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In late-breaking news — as in a 1 am press release — Streets For All and Streets Are For Everyone announced that SB 1167, which addresses the problem of illegal electric motorbikes being sold as ebikes by unscrupulous dealers, passed the state Senate and will move on to the Assembly.
Given the late hour, I’m just going to let you read the whole thing, rather than trying to rewrite it and edit it down.
This bill partially addresses the problem I’ve complained about for some time, that legal ped-assist ebikes too often get conflated and confused with illegal e-motos.
And this may be the first time I have so scrupulously used unscrupulous in any context on here.
California Senate Passes SB 1167 to Crack Down on Illegal E-Motos Fraudulently Sold as E-Bikes
SACRAMENTO — Recent news has seen a spike in reports of injuries or fatalities caused by “e-bikes,” such as 13-year-old Benson Nguyen or gangs of teenagers and young adults riding “e-bikes”. What is often missed is that most, if not all, of the vehicles being ridden are not legal e-bikes but are more correctly called e-motos (sometimes incorrectly called e-motorcycles). E-motos are high-powered two-wheeled electric devices that look similar to e-bikes or more like a cross between an e-bike and a motorcycle.
Under California law, legal e-bikes are limited to 750 watts and must fall within the state’s three-class e-bike framework.
But consumers, parents, schools, retailers, and law enforcement are increasingly encountering devices being fraudulently sold as e-bikes that can travel at much higher speeds – 30, 40, 50+ mph, and may legally require registration, licensing, insurance, or safety equipment.
SB 1167, legislation authored by Senator Catherine Blakespear of Encinitas, directly addresses the problem of e-motos and other high-powered electric devices being marketed and sold as street-legal “e-bikes” even when they do not meet California’s legal definition of an electric bicycle and are not street-legal. SB 1167 would make it clear that these devices cannot be falsely advertised or sold as e-bikes and can’t be ridden on the roads without proper registration, rider training, and safety features such as rear taillights, turn signals, and helmets.
Streets For All and Streets Are For Everyone (SAFE) today applauded the California State Senate’s unanimous 37-0 passage of SB 1167.
SB 1167 strengthens consumer protections by requiring clearer labeling and disclosure when a device does not meet the legal definition of an e-bike. The bill also requires every e-bike sold in California to include a visible frame label identifying its class and maximum assisted speed, making it easier for riders, parents, retailers, schools, and law enforcement to understand what kind of device is being used.
“The e-bike panic in California has too often missed the real problem. Legal e-bikes are helping people replace car trips, save money, and get around more easily — but high-powered electric motorcycles being sold as e-bikes create confusion, real safety risks, and reasonable public backlash. SB 1167 is exactly the kind of smart, targeted legislation we need: protect consumers, crack down on misclassified devices, and keep legal e-bikes moving,” said Marc Vukcevic, Director of State Policy at Streets For All.
Under SB 1167, e-motos up to 3000 watts of power would be categorized the same as a moped, requiring the same registration, driver training, and safety features (taillights, turn signals, front lights, etc.) in order to be legally ridden on the road. E-motos above 3000 watts would be classified as either a motor-driven cycle or a motorcycle.
“We know we aren’t going to be getting rid of e-motos. That genie is already out of the bottle. The point of SB 1167 is not to outlaw e-motos but to bring them back under the law and ensure they are being used in a way that is safe for the rider and those around them,” said Damian Kevitt, Executive Director at Streets Are For Everyone.
The legislation also improves incident reporting by requiring law enforcement to include e-bike label information when documenting crashes and other incidents. That improved data collection will help California better distinguish between legal e-bikes and other electric two-wheeled vehicles, ensuring future policy is based on the actual source of safety concerns.
E-bikes are an increasingly important transportation option for Californians. They help families replace car trips, give young people and older adults more independence, support workers who rely on affordable transportation, reduce emissions, and make biking a more practical option for longer trips and hilly communities. Streets For All and SAFE support policies that protect legal e-bike riders and responsible retailers while ensuring that e-motos sold are used safely, with proper registration, training, and safety features one would expect of any high-powered vehicle used on our roads.
SB 1167 is co-sponsored by Streets Are For Everyone, Streets For All, Calbike, and PeopleForBikes. The bill now heads to the Assembly for consideration.
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Horrible news from New York, where two men were killed in head-on collision on the city’s Queensboro Bridge Wednesday morning.
No drivers or motor vehicles involved.
Instead, a 35-year old bike rider was hit by a 39-year old man riding the wrong way in the bike lane, on an illegal e-scooter capable of up to 53 mph. Both men died after being taken to a hospital.
A photo shows the carbon-frame Factor bike snapped in half, with the scooter embedded in between.
The scooter should have never been on the streets, where New York has a 20 mph speed limit for stand-up e-scooters, which is common in many cities and states; California has a 15 mph limit for throttle-controlled scooters.
Never mind that the rider wasn’t legally allowed in the bike lane, let alone riding salmon.
Now two people have paid the price for one man’s bad choices.
Thanks to Edward for the heads-up.
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While we’re on the subject of horrible news, a Fairfax, Virginia man is fighting for his life after he was shot multiple times by a road-raging driver.
According to witnesses, the driver was chasing the ebike rider when he caught up to the victim at a stop sign, then got out of his car and fired several shots as the bike rider tried to back away.
Despite taking two to three bullets to the chest, the victim got back on his ebike and rode to the next town over, where a friend called 911. He was hospitalized in critical condition.
Police arrested the driver hours later. Possible charges will likely depend on whether the victim survives his injuries.
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Calbike says the untenable ten-year delay in building active mobility projects in LA’s Boyle Heights, Skid Row and Wilmington, which could result in the loss of $100 million in state grants, shows why California has to fix its Active Transportation Program.
AB 2168, authored by Assemblymember Buffy Wicks, would strengthen California’s ATP by making it more focused, more coordinated, and more accountable. The bill requires updates to the ATP guidelines to give greater emphasis to safe routes to transit, including projects that improve biking and walking access to transit facilities, school bus stops, transit station areas, planned stops, transit corridors, transit-oriented development areas, and underserved or rural areas.
The most important change in AB 2168 is also one of the most practical: it pushes California to stop treating active transportation as a small, separate category of transportation spending. The bill calls for commitments of State Transportation Improvement Program (STIP) funds to ATP-funded projects so California can scale up larger and network-level active transportation improvements. Committing STIP funds, which typically funded larger general roadway projects, to active transportation projects increases available funding for biking and walking infrastructure, increasing the reach far beyond the oversubscribed, underfunded ATP. In plain terms, that means ATP dollars should be used as a corollary, complementary piece for bigger investments, not as the only money available to build safer streets.
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Personal injury attorney Steven M. Sweat emailed with a good reminder that California’s three-foot passing law was changed three years ago to require drivers to change lanes to pass a vulnerable road user when there’s a lane available.
Sweat has a guide to California bike laws on his website, in case you’re in need of a quick refresher.
But drivers still can’t legally put two wheels across the magic yellow line in the center of the road to pass a bike rider safely on a two-lane road, thanks to our outgoing governor’s overactive veto pen.
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Bike Angeles rides the D.
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If, like me, you’re still making last-minute decisions on local offices before Tuesday’s Election Day deadline, LAist offers a detailed Voter’s guide.
Meanwhile, Streets For All endorses Nithya Raman, my fellow corgi dad Kenneth Mejia, and Marissa Roy in the upcoming election.
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The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.
The head of a Florida homeowner’s association faces charges for chasing down a 12-year old boy who had just moved to the area, knocking him off his bicycle and throwing the bike in his car, in an extreme case of “you don’t belong here.”
Clean Technica says Berlin is ground zero in the war between bicycles and cars, following the progress Paris has made. To which LA drivers said “hold my beer.”
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Local
Los Angeles officially opened Phase 3 of the Griffith Park Safety and Active Transportation Improvement Project, adding protected bike lanes, speed humps, new signage and traffic-calming measures along Crystal Springs Drive. Someone sent me a photo of k-rail barriers being removed in Griffith Park, but I seem to have lost the email, so please resend it if you can.
Metro approved a number of motions at Thursday’s board meeting, including a new budget that will continue to flush nearly a billion dollars down the induced demand toilet, along with a motion to move the plans for the LA river bike path forward with a lower-cost design that could possibly, maybe, kinda hopefully be finished in time for the ’28 Olympics. LA Mayor Karen Bass was also voted in as board chair for the upcoming fiscal year, though voters may have a say in that come November, if not on Tuesday.
State
Another Orange County mom could face charges for the sins of her son, after the teenager fled from cops attempting a traffic stop by riding against traffic at a high rate of speed and blowing through a red light, following several previous warning about his alleged illegal behavior.
The driver charged with killing six-year old Hudson O’Loughlin in a January Pacific Beach hit-and-run was formally charged on Wednesday, as 32-year old Tiffany Sanchez pled not guilty to felony counts vehicular manslaughter and hit and run causing death; in gut wrenching testimony, Hudson’s father said the boy was still alive and trying to move his bike following the initial impact, when Sanchez stepped on the gas and ran the boy over. And yes, this one still makes me cry.
Better news from San Diego’s Carmel Valley, where a 12-year old boy was moved from the ICU nearly a month after he was struck by a driver while riding his ebike; Mark Maldonado has shown significant improvement since he was removed from a ventilator and a medically induced coma. A crowdfunding page has raised nearly $21,000, while classmates at his elementary school raised over $1,800 with a bake sale and lemonade stand.
San Diego County health officials warn about the dangers of ebikes. Even though it’s only the illegal ones that cause the problems.
National
Even tiny and cold Nome, Alaska now has a bike bus with nearly two dozen students.
A former Chicago Peace Corps volunteer has helped send over 7,000 bicycles to Africa’s Kingdom of Lesotho since founding Bikes for Lesotho 13 years ago.
Sad news from Cleveland, where the landmark former home of a 143-year old bike shop was partially demolished when the building was declared unsafe, two years after the business had closed.
Damn. A Tampa, Florida man was struck and killed by a driver while riding his bike, just six months after surviving a cardiac arrest.
International
What could possibly go wrong? A pedestrian walkway in Oxfordshire, England will be widened slightly so bike riders can share the route, but for just a little more 400 feet — one and a third the distance of a football field — likely leaving both walkers and rider confused and conflicted.
Life is cheap in the UK, where Road.cc catches up on sentencing for several drivers who killed or injured bike riders, including just four years for a woman who killed a 70-year old man while driving drunk and stoned, with an open wine bottle next to her and her kids in the car.
A British advocacy group says the government should invest in electric bicycles, because ebike incentives are twice as effective as grants for electric cars. Maybe someone should tell the California Air Resources Board, since they stole the funding for the state ebike incentive program to give it to electric car buyers, instead.
Competitive Cycling
Velo digs into the numbers to show that Jonas Vingegaard really might be better and stronger than ever.
Thirty-four-year old Danish cyclist Michael Valgren fought his way to his biggest victory since a devastating crash at the 2022 Route d’Occitanie nearly ended his career, by winning Wednesday’s stage 17 of the Giro.
Twenty-two-year old French pro Paul Magnier won stage 18 of the Giro on Thursday to reclaim the ciclamino points leader’s jersey, while Jonas Vingegaard remained far ahead in the GC. And yes, I had to look up ciclamino, too.
Velo looks back fondly at the “storied history” of Pennsylvania’s 50-year old Trexlertown Velodrome, saying it set a new standard for US bike racing.
Finally…
That feeling when your new bike lane becomes a giant ad and a carnival ride. Or when your new cargo bike could double as a racing bike, unless maybe you prefer your next bike to be hydrogen powered.
And who needs a piano when you have a bicycle?
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Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.
Oh, and fuck Putin.














