He gets it.
In a Washington Post op-ed, a Virginia bicyclist and writer builds an effective case that new laws cracking down on ebikes are going too far, “making a basic form of transportation and a familiar element of childhood less accessible.”
In fact, he calls said laws “tyranny on wheels.”
Kevin R. Parker explains that ebikes make the bicycles that gave him a sense of freedom as a child more accessible for people who might not want, or be able, to ride.
But laws like New Jersey’s draconian new restrictions that treat every form of ebike the same destroys that newfound accessibility.
The justification for New Jersey’s legislation is safety. A 13-year-old boy was killed on an e-bike when he collided with a landscaping truck in September, and there are real safety concerns for riders and pedestrians when it comes to faster and more powerful e-bikes. E-bikes that hit high speeds can be a problem. But the law doesn’t distinguish between different kinds of e-bikes when it comes to licenses, registration and age limits. A 70-year-old on a pedal-assist bike riding to the grocery store is treated identically to a teenager on a powerful e-bike doing 40 mph. The proposed regulations are a blunt instrument that restricts transportation options and increases cost for people,
New Jersey isn’t alone. Cities across the country are debating new regulations, and not just for e-bikes. After Murphy signed the bill into law, New Hampshire introduced a bill requiring a $50 annual registration fee on all bicycles that operate on paths, roads or trails funded by state or local government, including children’s bikes. In California, progressive Bay Area communities have moved to ban or restrict e-bikes on paths and in public parks — the same communities that spent years and millions promoting alternatives to cars, now cracking down on the most effective alternative.
We’ve seen similar moves up and down the Southern California coast, as cities crack down on ebikes of every kind, repeatedly conflating electric motorcycles and non-street legal dirt bikes with far slower and less powerful ped-assist bikes.
The answer, Parker says, isn’t found in the usual progressive arguments. Instead, he offers a case that should appeal just as well to conservatives, if not better.
Freedom.
Activists fighting e-bike restrictions frame it as climate policy or transportation equity. The political language focuses on progressive political priorities. There’s a stronger argument to be made based on personal liberty: State governments are restricting personal mobility and imposing licensing and registration on bike riders across the board. There are reckless e-bike riders who break the rules of the road and put themselves and other citizens at risk. If they violate the speed limit, ignore traffic lights or blow through stop signs, local law enforcement should hold them responsible. But by pursuing aggressive blanket regulation, policymakers are making a basic form of transportation and a familiar element of childhood less accessible.
Works for me.
Hopefully, it will work for members of the California state legislature when they consider SB 1167, which would redefine electric bicycles, mopeds and motorbikes to create a clear distinction between them.
This is how I explained it last month.
The bill would require that an electric bicycle must have fully operational pedals and an electric motor capable of no more than 750 watts; anything else could not be legally called, marketed or sold as a bicycle or ebike.
What is currently termed a motorized bicycle would be redefined as a moped, with clearer definitions of vehicle design, power output, and a top speed of 30 mph on level ground.
The term motor-driven cycles would include electric motorcycles offering less than 3,750 watts and 5 brake horsepower.
Both categories would require that manufacturers and marketers clearly specify that they are not electric bicycles.
The bill represents a rare case of successfully splitting the baby, allowing restrictions on high-power electric motos while maintaining the freedom offered by lower-speed ped-assist ebikes.
Let’s hope it passes intact.
And not the other one.
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Apropos of the above discussion, an Orange County candidate for Father of the Year faces charges after his son was seriously injured running a red light and crashing into a car on a modified ebike.
it seems dear old dad helped his son convert the bike to an electric motorcycle by replacing the pedals with motorbike pegs, removing the 20 mph speed governor, and rewiring the engine to do up to 60 mph.
Let’s hope he at least bought the kid a helmet.
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Bad news from Palm Springs, where a bicyclist was critically injured in a collision yesterday morning, after allegedly riding into the path of an oncoming vehicle, and being struck by the driver.
That driver’s car was then rear-ended by another driver, because of course it was.
However, only person on the bike was injured.
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The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.
You’ve got to be kidding. A Pennsylvania driver is accused of intentionally hitting a boy on a bicycle in a road-rage incident that lasted multiple blocks; the man claimed he didn’t hit the kid on purpose, even though security video shows him blaring on his horn before attempting to cut the boy’s bike off, then ramming him from behind at a red light even though he had plenty of room to stop. He also claimed “he would have never struck the kid if the kid had stayed in his lane,” and bizarrely blamed the boy for purposely trying to upset him. Somehow, I’m guess that the only thing the kid did to purposely upset him was riding his bike in front of the guy’s car.
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Local
No news is good news, right?
State
Streetsblog’s StreetSmart podcast offers a comprehensive compendium of what transportation bills are moving forward in the California legislature, and what isn’t.
A 61-year old heart transplant recipient set out from Ocean Beach on a 3,000-mile bike ride to St. Augustine, Florida to raise awareness about the need for organ donors. Meanwhile, Southern California drivers do their part to create more every day.
A Hesperia family is hoping to win an adaptive bicycle for their 13-year old special needs son who suffered more than a dozen strokes after getting a virus two years ago, leaving him with permanent brain damage.
An Oakland man received a $400,000 settlement after he suffered a fractured skull, concussion, multiple spinal fractures, broken nose, ligament tears, and lacerations to his face, neck and shoulders when his bike hit a pothole that was obscured by shadows and a bend in the road.
The Bay Area’s Caltrain commuter line does exactly the wrong thing to address overcrowded bike cars by banning oversized bikes, such as cargo bikes, as well as bikes with panniers, both commonly used by bike commuters, instead of merely adding more space. Because that would just be crazy, right?
No bias here. An editorial from The Marin Independent Journal argues that a $52.6 million plan to re-open the 142-year old abandoned railroad Alto Tunnel for use by bicyclists and pedestrians is just too costly to consider. Never mind that it’s a fraction of the estimated $270 million cost to build a new highway bridge, which they didn’t seem to have a problem with.
A Davis petition calls on the city to recognize and improve the nation’s first bike lane, built nearly 60 years ago.
National
Swedish pop star Zara Larsson is one of us, joining Portland’s weekly elementary student bike bus before her concert in the city.
A Florida couple finds sea lions and romance on a stormy bike-and-surf odyssey along the Oregon coast.
A handful of Chicago drivers staged a protest at the site of a half-finished protected bike lane, saying it didn’t help bike and e-scooter riders who were struck by drivers there. Um, maybe because it’s not finished yet, and there’s nothing to keep cars out of it yet.
Sometimes, I don’t even know what to say. An Ohio ebike rider was killed, and a driver injured, when the ebiker tried to turn left into a church parking lot and struck the side of the other man’s SUV — then they were both stuck by the driver of a second car when the first driver got out to check on the original victim.
New York Mayor Mamdani is requesting $25 million build 500 long-promised bike lockers across the city.
International
A website for “the world’s urban leaders” examines how cities are making the European Declaration on Cycling a reality, which recognized bicycling as a fully-fledged mode of transport for the first time.
That’s more like it. After bicyclists packed a Winnipeg, Manitoba city council committee meeting to demand temporary protected bike lanes, the committee voted to make them permanent, instead. Although they’d have to be pretty damn strong barriers to keep out the speeding driver who killed a bike rider in 2024, doing up to 100 mph.
London’s bikeshare system marks International Women’s Day by naming a whole ten bikes after notable women bicyclists. Although something tells me most women would just prefer a safer place to ride them.
Speaking of ebikes, a writer for the London Telegraph calls them the future of bicycling holidays for mid-lifers. Which is evidently a kinder, gentler term for middle-aged. Or maybe it’s just shorter.
An Aussie writer explores the dark side of the bicycle marketplace by deciding to buy and return a hot bike to its rightful owner, and ends up going for a ride with a self-described “licensed gun outlaw.”
Competitive Cycling
A new documentary tries to answer what separates world-class cyclists from elite ones.
Former Tour de France Femmes champ Demi Vollering says “it’s very important to keep speaking up” about periods, nutrition and health affecting women’s cyclists.
Cyclist explains “everything you need to know” about this Saturday’s Strade Bianche Classic, which marks its 20th year.
Finally…
That feeling when a mountain of “gross stuff” threatens to melt into a bike lane graveyard. Don’t they say, dirty bicycle drive train, dirty mind?
And okay, even I think that’s funny.
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Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.
Oh, and fuck Putin.
















