The San Francisco Bicycle Coalition weighed in with a pointed response, arguing that the state should be making it easier, not harder, to own and use e-bikes. Their senior organizer echoed the sentiment shared by many riders: the real confusion and danger comes from people not being able to tell the difference between a legal e-bike and an electric moped, not from the bikes themselves.

Brett Thurber, co-owner of a San Francisco e-bike shop, raised a practical industry concern about AB 1557. Restricting California’s speed limits below what manufacturers currently build for the U.S. market could push companies to skip California customers entirely, shrinking the supply available to local shops and consumers.

  • buffaloseven
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    42 days ago

    Except e-bikes operate in many places that cars do not. Cars being an issue isn’t an excuse for anarchy everywhere else. I’ve seen plenty of people on e-bikes driving 30+ km/h down a public pathway in a park; you won’t see a car anywhere within 300 feet of this but it’s a clear danger to those in the area.

    And I’d hardly call a speed limit for a bike a “burden,” and e-bikes have operated in a nebulous zone as mentioned above, they are motor vehicles.

    Even if you had to get a plate and follow a speed limit, there are still a million reasons why people should get out of cars and onto bikes (e- or otherwise) to move themselves around.

    • @chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      Cars being an issue isn’t an excuse for anarchy everywhere else.

      This doesn’t really address the logic of what you’re responding to though, and it clearly is a justification. If people are deterred from using ebikes for transportation and therefore use cars instead, then the resulting harm is whatever difference there is between injuries/deaths caused by an ebike and injury/death caused by a car over the same time period, it hardly matters for that where they are using them.

      And I’d hardly call a speed limit for a bike a “burden,”

      Whatever you call it, if there is an effect where a registration requirement results in more driving than otherwise, that has to be taken into account.

    • Annoyed_🦀
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      42 days ago

      I thought you’re gonna say 50kmph easily with a twist of a throttle but alas, it’s only 30kmph, which can be achieved easily for a period of time by an average cyclist on a roadbike.

      But i do agree ebike that can do more than 30kmph with a throttle are a danger to the pedestrians, it’s already a moped, which is something people doesn’t seems to realise.

    • @Town@lemmy.zip
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      52 days ago

      I’d be more for California physically limiting the speed of every vehicle sold in the state to 70 mph.