Los Angeles Times

Renting a car vs. renting a scooter

-

Re “Scooter safety,” letter, Aug. 9

In his letter to the editor, the executive director of the Micromobil­ity Coalition tries to ward off regulation­s on electric scooter operators by comparing the renting of these scooters to car rentals.

This comparison is false. To rent an electric scooter, all that is needed is an app and credit card. To rent a car a valid driver’s license is required, along with the completion of a lengthy form of one’s personal informatio­n, and a credit card. This informatio­n-heavy process of renting a car allows authoritie­s to track down the driver if one breaks the law.

The minimal requiremen­ts to rent an electric scooter, touted as one of its benefits, makes it difficult to track down a rider who breaks the law. Matthew Hetz

Los Angeles

The writer wonders if people who want electric scooter companies to be fined for the misuse of their products believe rental car companies should be held responsibl­e for their illegally parked vehicles.

If Hertz or Avis rolled out their services by encroachin­g on public space and disrespect­ing the community and ignoring safety concerns; if they left cars randomly and illegally parked anywhere near the frequency that scooter riders do; if the number and placement of illegally parked rental cars were such that they could burden or harm an elderly, a disabled or a blind person; and if Hertz or Avis did not supply authoritie­s with the identity of a violating operator, then yes, Hertz or Avis should be fined.

These foreseeabl­e problems are of the scooter companies’ own making and are theirs to solve. If penalties do not motivate them, then a complete ban should be considered. Chris Fay

Venice

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States