It is unclear if the newly enacted
prohibition of ebikes on the Hudson River Greenway will be enforced or lifted. Classed among motor vehicles in the
park regulations, the wording in the Governors budget ebike regulations says "A state agency, by regulation or order, and a city, town or village, by local law or ordinance, may designate any appropriate public lands and properties under its jurisdiction, other than highways
exclusive of any greenway running adjacent to or connected with a highway, as a place open for travel by bicycles with electric assist upon written request for such designation by any person" and "For the purposes of this subdivision, the term "greenway" shall have the same meaning as such term is defined by subdivision seven of section 44-0103 of the environmental conservation law" which refer to :
§ 44-0109. Designation.
The Hudson river valley greenway is hereby designated to include the counties, including all cities, towns and villages therein, of
Westchester, Rockland, Orange, Putnam, Dutchess, Ulster, Columbia, Greene, Albany, Rensselaer, Saratoga and Washington...
in the city of New York the greenway shall include the areas of Bronx and New York counties that are adjacent to the Hudson River"
This was questioned
last summer when the ebike bill was being debated in the State Assembly and it was reported that on the request of the Hudson River Park Friends, the park’s private non-profit conservancy, "officials from the Hudson River Park Trust had testified...against allowing the new mobility devices on the greenway," the arbitrariness of this action being underlined due to the Trust operating
electric golf carts on the greenway. Streetsblog
reported that again due to lobbying by the Hudson River Park Friends, State Senators representing Manhattan Brad Hoylman and Liz Krueger are both "said to have insisted on limits on e-bikes and scooters in Manhattan as a precondition of supporting the wider legalization bill." A spokesman for Lyft/CitiBike New York City bikeshare, Harry Hatfield, said "Banning pedal-assist bikes on the largest bike lane in the country would be a loss for thousands of riders." Marco Conner, deputy director of Transportation Alternatives, said "This is a policy that is based on no data at all and on the unfounded belief that e-bikes are somehow inherently dangerous”. New York City Council member Fernando Cabrera said "a decision on the fate of e-bikes on the greenway would come after a hearing this summer, when the City Council gets back to some semblance of normalcy. "