Jeremy McCreary
Well-Known Member
- Region
- USA
- City
- Carlsbad, CA
Sorry, not equivalent. A kid with a driver's licence has passed written and driving tests at an impartial DMV. This demonstrates some knowledge of traffic laws and at least a little common sense and training beforehand.Kids are licensed to drive 5000 pound cars, so how can a 16 Y/O be denied an e-bike.
Then the kid's legally and financially responsible for any mayhem caused. The consequences to the kid himself/herself are largely out of the parents' hands.
But in many if not most jurisdictions, no such prep or accountability required for ebike use on public roads and bikeways. And you can see it quite clearly in the way some of the school kids around here ride.
But that's begun to change here in coastal north San Diego County. Several cities now require ebike training certificates for anyone who doesn't hold a drivers license — which of course is everyone under 16 in California. Holding a certificate means "Sorry officer, no one told me" no longer flies.
Since most of the ebike miles ridden by kids here are to and from school and activities, the school districts have also stepped up. No certificate or drivers license = no campus parking permit = impounded ebike if found on campus.
These measures went into effect in Carlsbad and Encinitas in the last 2 years. Have no data, but I think they've already had a positive effect. Some state lawmakers are trying to take this approach statewide. No go so far, but I really hope they succeed for the safety and benefit of all concerned.
Relying on parents to train their kids was an abject failure here. But the prize is worth some government intervention: Nearly all of these school kids on ebikes represent cars not on the road and that many fewer kids indoors on screens.
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