Dear Seasoned Chicago Cyclists,
Please try to impart the patience and compassion you would have for a first time bike commuter. Having experienced the roll out in DC and already had one scooter fatality, there's definitely a concern about safety. Basically, scooter users will likely be pedestrians (not cyclists) turned scooter riders so they won't know the ins and outs like a seasoned cyclist. Think first time Divvy user. So yes, you'll see them on the sidewalks (even though they aren't supposed to), bike lanes, and streets. Lots of patience will be necessary. While scooters can be a good addition to the non-car commuter, they do pose risks to themselves (mostly) and other vulnerable users of the roads.
Here's an article with the details of the scooter roll-out:
https://chi.streetsblog.org/2019/06/11/ready-or-not-10-different-sc...
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I live in the scooter test area and have not yet fallen foul of one on the roads whilst riding, yet. But walking the sidewalks does have a new challenge, primarily scooters left standing in the middle of the sidewalk, blocking the pavements for strollers and the elderly and basically just being in the way. Visually it's also very strange to walk around and suddenly see these little groupings of scooters just standing there. Imagine just parking a car where ever you are done with it and walking away, regardless of the environment etc. At least Divvy has stations and there are scooter 'pens' in car parks on some of the trails. Not sure how it's going to pan out in the long term.
BERLIN — Barely a few months after they were introduced in several of Europe’s storied capital cities, the great electric scooter backlash has already begun.
From Paris to Berlin and to Copenhagen, drunken users and poorly parked scooters have provoked the kind of visceral hatred that became synonymous with the dockless scooters’ arrival in American cities last year.
The mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, already vowed to put an end to what she called a trend “not far from anarchy” on the roads of the French capital last month. That was before their introduction in neighboring Germany, where newspapers have since captured a nation in crisis: a man trying to steer his e-scooter onto a high-speed motorway, reports of scores of drunk e-scooter drivers and polls showing a deeply divided country.
The early verdict for the scooters in Europe has been harsh. Commentators have decided they are a “dangerous” trend, “madness” and a “pest.”
Some earlier take-aways from the Portland experience, underscoring how micro-mobility helps solve the last mile problem of transit, and, reduces automobile use. A few excerpts, but I'll put in the whole link below.
https://www.portlandoregon.gov/transportation/article/700917
The newest development in the world of scooters that locals are quite happy about but have SCOOTER company's furious.
Karma, schadenfreude, there's something for everyone here. Hit by a car pulling over to allow a cop by who was responding to your hit-and-run actions? Priceless. Mastercard may need to use this in a future commercial.
I saw a Bird scooter locked up with a U-lock to a bike rack in the loop yesterday.
Luckily it doesn't seem like many are taking advantage of it, but the geofencing seems pretty easy to defeat. I've seen a lot of branded/rentable scooters east of Halsted up to the river, though not as many east of the river in the actual loop
There are more and more private scooters out there such as this one seems to have been. Elsewhere such as in the Kafka thread, fleeing police is not the right thing. Meanwhile, if people don't get back to the wisdom of separating pedestrians from wheeled traffic as this incident reminds us, the Riverwalk might get re-named to ScooterCity.
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