Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Cities can’t keep up with electric scooters

- By Ivan Moreno

MILWAUKEE — Overnight in dozens of cities across the U.S., the electric scooters arrive, often without warning to public officials, parked along sidewalks and ready to be taken for a spin with a few taps on a smartphone.

It’s not long before they attract attention — and it’s notalways positive: Lawsuits and cease-and-desist orders havesometi­mesfollowe­dthe arrival of California-based companies Bird Rides Inc., LimeBike and Spin, with city officials saying the scooters aren’t legal to operate on streets or the sidewalks where they get dangerousl­y close to pedestrian­s.

And because the scooters are dockless, they’re parked anywhere when a ride is over, causing cities heartburno­ver blockedsid­ewalks.

Milwaukee was scheduled to ask a judge last week to order Bird to remove its scooters from the city, but the hearing is being reschedule­d.

It could be the first time a complaint against Bird will be argued in court, potentiall­y providing the first judicial opinion for the cities scrambling to figure out how to deal with the startups.

Milwaukee sued after sending Bird a cease-anddesist letter June 28, a day after 100 scooters arrived “in a similar, overnight, surprise fashion” other places have experience­d, according to the lawsuit.

Bird, which operates in about two dozen cities and is also refusing to comply with a cease-and-desist order from Indianapol­is, contends their scooters are legal for street use, just like bicycles and other “mobility devices.”

It says thecompany­wants to work with Milwaukee “to create and enforce common sense rules encouragin­g the safe use” of the scooters that residents “have begun to adopt enthusiast­ically.”

Bird was founded by Travis VanderZand­en, a former top and Lyft.

The clashes over the scooters are reminiscen­t of the early days of those ridesharin­g companies, which launched in places with no regulatory framework before building public support and triggering a flurry of legislativ­e activity that ultimately legitimize­d their businesses.

“It’s a very defiant position they’re taking as if laws don’t matter, they don’t apply to us, we’re going to do what we please, when we please,” said Milwaukee AldermanRo­bert Bauman.

Nashville, Tenn., sued last month before impounding all of Bird’s scooters. Thecity has since dropped its lawsuit and is working on regulation­s for the scooters.

In San Francisco, the city banned the scooters June 4, requiring Bird and other companies, to apply for permits before returning.

The scooters can go up to 15 mph.

Picking one up is a simple executive at Uber process. The Bird app shows where they’re available. Riders, who must scan in their driver’s license, unlock one by scanning a bar code for an initial charge of $1. It then costs 15 cents a minute to ride one.

When done, riders take a picture ofwhere they left the scooter to make sure it’s properly parked. Bird picks up the scooters each night and inspects them before putting them back the next day.

“It’s really fun, super fast,” said Kirby Bridges, a 28year-oldMilwauk­ee resident taking one of her first rides downtownWe­dnesday. “But I can also see how it can potentiall­y be really pretty dangerous, soItotally­understand why there would be a lawsuit.”

Although the app advises customers not to ride on sidewalks, that hasn’t stopped them, and cities have complained the scooters are sometimes left in places where they obstruct sidewalks.

In Denver, public works officials removed Bird scooters because theywere taking up space on public rights of way, said Nancy Kuhn, a spokeswoma­n for the agency. Denver also ordered LimeBike, which is in 30 cities, to cease operations until regulation­s are in place.

In Milwaukee, Bauman said he’s willing to consider regulation­s for the scooters if Wisconsin lawis changed, so they can be deemed legal vehicles that can then be registered.

But he said they should be used only on streets, not sidewalks.

Riders “can take their chances with dump trucks and cement trucks and buses and street cars and motor vehicles of all sorts. Have at it,” he said.

Other places have been more welcoming to the scooter companies. In Minneapoli­s, officials moved to regulate the scooters after they appeared, with the City Council giving initial approval last week to an ordinance to license them and establish parking rules. Memphis, Tenn., last month set up an agreement with Bird that includes parking regulation­s.

A recent column in The Commercial Appeal in Memphis in support of the scooters said they “can help riders zip to those final blocks where the bus stopped short.”

 ?? JIM LO SCALZO/EPA ??
JIM LO SCALZO/EPA

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