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Transportation

Paris Becomes the First European Capital To Ban Rented Electric Scooters 90

An anonymous reader shares a report: Paris became the first European capital to outlaw the vehicles on Friday, following a vote in April in which Parisiens overwhelmingly supported a ban, although turnout was low. Privately owned e-scooters, which the city cannot regulate, are exempt. Since their eruption onto the streets and sidewalks of cities across the world in 2019, e-scooters have posed unique regulatory problems for city officials. The vehicles often stayed in legal limbo as officials mapped out charters for e-scooter operators, capped fleets and regulated parking.

Cities like San Francisco and Miami temporarily banned e-scooters before reintroducing them. Santa Monica, Calif., successfully sued an e-scooter operator over its lack of licensing. And New York delayed the vehicles' arrival, citing security concerns. But no city has been as strict as Paris, where e-scooter users are mourning a cheap and flexible way of getting around without having to ride the crammed metro or use Velib', the popular but frequently overwhelmed bike-sharing system.
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Paris Becomes the First European Capital To Ban Rented Electric Scooters

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  • Good (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Friday September 01, 2023 @11:03AM (#63815009)

    These things are a plague.

    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      No. People who don't take the shopping cart back to its correct place/dump electric scooters around randomly instead of properly parking them are a plague.

      Be excellent. Don't be an asshole.

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      So are cars, and bicycles, and mopeds, and pretty much every personal transportation method.

      To be fair, Paris has rather good public transportation, and most people there don't use anything else on a day-to-day basis. Still there are some cases where it doesn't work. In particular during strikes, and strikes will never be banned.

  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Friday September 01, 2023 @11:10AM (#63815039)

    Wait! What?

    Just classify them as motor vehicles. They have a motor. They are vehicles. Job done.

    • by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Friday September 01, 2023 @11:36AM (#63815127) Journal

      You just classified wheelchairs as motor Vehicles.

      Of course you might want to add exceptions for mobility needs, but you made a blanket statement. Classifications are already part of existing laws in many jurisdictions. Which is why escooters and ebikes are allowed.

      The real fix is to punish the assholes and leave the polite people alone. But assholes ruin everything, because they can.

      • You just classified wheelchairs as motor Vehicles.

        Only motorised wheelchairs.

        But otherwise ... the problem is?

        They have motors. They're on the public highway (which includes both pavements and roadways). You need appropriate training, licensing, insurance, registration and regular safety checks. 38kg "mobility device" or 38,000 kg articulated lorry - training, licensing, insurance, registration and regular safety checks. It's not complex.

        Which is why escooters and ebikes are allowed.

        Speak for yourself. I

    • People voted against.
      Banned.

    • Just classify them as motor vehicles. They have a motor. They are vehicles. Job done.

      Congrats, you just banned e-bikes, mobility scooters, and electric wheelchairs.

      Laws and regulation require far more thought than you think in order to be sensible and effective. Your job isn't done, you just made things far worse. What will your electorate think?

  • by greytree ( 7124971 ) on Friday September 01, 2023 @11:19AM (#63815061)
    Problem solved.

    Paris is *still* a horrible car-filled city, where pedestrians have to wait at every corner for the chance to risk crossing the road.

    Kick the cars out.
    • by ddtmm ( 549094 )
      Ya that’s brilliant. Got any other great ideas?
      • What's so wrong with banning cars? Have you compared the air before cars became a thing with the air today? How many millions die every year breathing that crap? How many get killed on roads?

        And please don't bleat about "but our civilization needs cars" -- there are so many better ways to get people and items around.

        • by theCoder ( 23772 )

          Ha, that's funny! Before cars, there was a terrible pollution problem in large cities: mountains and mountains of horse dung. I cannot imagine how bad that smelled. Plus it attracting various bugs and diseases. Cars were hailed as a much cleaner way for people to get around. And don't think that people didn't get run down by horse drawn carriages.

          Just because (ICE) cars are the current problem does not mean that things were perfect before they existed.

          • I'm not saying things can't be, or wasn't, bad. What I'm saying is that transportation can be a lot more convenient, at the same time stopping the full speed plunge down the cliff it does the the planet, if innovation wasn't on purpose held back by a group of monied bastards.

            In '50s last century, city trams were scrapped all around the world. In '90s, rail networks got the same treatments. Suburbs get _purposefully_ built in a way that makes walking not possible. All attempts to introduce novel ways of

      • Yep, it is brilliant. Thank you.

        It's so brilliantly obvious that only Top-Gear-watching retarded neanderthal children who express their manhood through the capacity of their truck's engine could think it wrong.

        And there can't be any of those on Slashdot can ... ah.
    • Paris is *still* a horrible car-filled city, where pedestrians have to wait at every corner for the chance to risk crossing the road.

      Kick the cars out.

      Paris is working on that too: https://www.bloomberg.com/news... [bloomberg.com]

  • But the system required entire populations of people to be somewhat orderly and responsible. And humans are fundamentally an unruly, chaotic species of great ape. Any human system that fails to account for this hard biological fact will fail.
  • privately owned ones mean the person is used to riding it. The problem with the rentals is that you get people using them that have never ridden one of the things and just jump on and go. No experience, practice or even a helmet most times. I mean, I've seen people split their skulls open doing track stands on mountain bike....
  • I wasn't previously aware that anything made sense in France.

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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