USA TODAY US Edition

A new scourge in cities: Scooters gone wild

- Chris Woodyard

LOS ANGELES – Jonathan Freeman, angry about electric scooters that have inundated his hometown of San Diego, came to an urban mobility conference here demanding solutions.

Pedestrian­s’ “lives are being destroyed by unregulate­d scooters,” he said from the audience during a session on whether “micro-mobility” devices like scooters are here to stay. “We are losing the right to go for a walk.”

Freeman’s comments sparked a debate about the safety of scooters last week at L.A. CoMotion, a transporta­tion conference drawing innovators and transit companies from across the U.S. to discuss what organizers call “the urban mobility revolution.”

“Dockless” scooters – meaning you ride them and leave them anywhere – began appearing on city sidewalks across the nation just over a year ago, quickly becoming a scourge to municipal leaders worried about safety of both riders and pedestrian­s, not to mention the street clutter.

Cities have only recently started to take action by limiting the number of scooters and cracking down on where they can be ridden or parked. Scooter companies themselves say they aren’t opposed to reasonable regulation as more riders treat scooters as a serious means of transporta­tion – a handy way to go short distances – not just as a novelty.

“It’s really critical we figure this out,” said YJ Fischer, scooter operator Bird’s senior director of global partnershi­ps. Regulation­s could cost operators, but “we are willing to make those investment­s in the community.”

Transit experts see scooters as another way for commuters to bridge the link from their homes to bus stops or rail stations. Besides Bird, other upstarts have included those with similarly catchy names like Lime, Scoot, Skip and Jump. Scooters are serious business: Jump is part of ride-hailing service Uber. And automaker Ford just paid more than $40 million to buy scooter startup Spin.

Only now, after a summer of scooter mayhem, are many cities starting to cope.

In California’s urban centers, where the scooters have become as common as taco trucks, the city of Beverly Hills opted to impose a six-month scooter ban. San Francisco issued a temporary ban, then limited the number of operators to two, while Santa Monica is experiment­ing with designatin­g some street parking spaces for scooter parking. Other cities have tried similar approaches, including Nashville, Denver and Washington.

San Jose, California, Mayor Sam Liccardo said in an interview that he’s trying to use technology to rein in scooters. He said he’s asking scooter companies to come up with plans to ensure their products are used safely and not in a way that interferes with walkers. One idea: Use “geofencing” – technology that keeps devices from working outside a designated area – to keep scooters off sidewalks.

Another idea to prevent scooters from piling up on sidewalks would be to keep charging users until they are properly parked. He said he’s acting on complaints about sidewalk riding or scooters left everywhere.

“We get a lot of complaints,” Liccardo said in an interview after speaking at the conference. “There is no question it is a problem anywhere in dense neighborho­ods where we expect a lot of foot traffic.”

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Bird and Lime scooters sit parked in front of a building in San Francisco.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES Bird and Lime scooters sit parked in front of a building in San Francisco.

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