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Does not belong in the bike lane. Nothing wrong with it, but it's a motor vehicle.
Anything with an electric motor or gas engine belongs in the street. Bike lanes are for completely human-powered bicycles. I would accept exceptions for the elderly and the disabled. No ebike on a bikeway should be capable of going more than 15 m.p.h., if even that.
Yeah, the speed is my biggest issue w/ e-bikes in the bike lanes. In general, by the time a cyclist has gotten to the point where they can sustain 20mph, they have quite a bit of bike-handling experience under their belt. Not so when all it takes to go that fast is the turn of a throttle.
Most modified bikes with gas motors are cobbled-up rattletraps that are far slower than any e-bike I see on the lake.
The Bafang BBS02 eBike conversion kit has a top speed of 32mph(!) in "throttle only" mode. I don't think that something like that belongs on the Lakefront Path or the bike lane. I have seen reviews of ebikes that have only a pedal assist mode that cut-off at 20mph. I'm thinking that if it has a throttle, keep it in the street.
Interesting opinion piece about the wisdom of mixing bicycle and ebike traffic:
http://www.copenhagenize.com/2014/02/the-e-bike-sceptic.html
"I wonder if this has to do with the fact that a higher proportion of E bike riders are elderly and or obese and or otherwise more susceptible to injury."
If that's true, Ebikes let them go quite a bit faster than such people would be able to ride without electric assist (this is even more of an issue in the US, where the allowable speed of 20 mph is higher than the EU limit of 25 kmph). Also, see David Altenburg's comment above. Going faster than your health or skill allows creates a danger, regardless of the type of bike you ride.
I think electric-assist can be a really good thing (for example, to help people with knee problems). But I'm concerned that too many ebikes go too fast to coexist well with bicycles.
I ride on busy city streets all the time, and I'm pretty sure I never hit 20 m.p.h. Nor do many cyclists I see out there. A knowledgeable ebiker would have plenty of speed available. There's no such thing as a free lunch. Having a motor is not a substitute for understanding what you're doing, wherever you are.
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