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Transportation United States

Scooter Use is Rising in Major Cities. So Are Trips To the Emergency Room. (washingtonpost.com) 136

They have been pouring into emergency rooms around the nation all summer, their bodies bearing a blend of injuries that doctors normally associate with victims of car wrecks -- broken noses, wrists and shoulders, facial lacerations and fractures, as well as the kind of blunt head trauma that can leave brains permanently damaged. The Washington Post reports: When doctors began asking patients to explain their injuries, many were surprised to learn that the surge of broken body parts stemmed from the latest urban transportation trend: shared electric scooters. In Santa Monica, Calif. -- where one of the biggest electric-scooter companies is based -- the city's fire department has responded to 34 serious accidents involving the devices this summer. The director of an emergency department there said his team treated 18 patients who were seriously injured in electric-scooter accidents during the final two weeks of July. And in San Francisco, the doctor who runs the emergency room at a major hospital said he is seeing as many as 10 severe injuries a week.

[...] As the injuries pile up in cities across the country, the three largest scooter companies -- operating under the names Bird, Lime and Skip -- have seen their values soar as they attempt to transform urban transit, following the successes of ride-hailing and bike-sharing companies. The scooter start-ups have attracted massive investments from Uber, the prominent technology venture capital firm Sequoia Capital and Alphabet, Google's parent company, with some analysts estimating that some of the privately held companies might be worth more than $1 billion.
Responding to The Post, all these companies said safety is a priority to them, but at least Bird is also lobbying against legislation in California that would require users to wear helmets, the paper reported.
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Scooter Use is Rising in Major Cities. So Are Trips To the Emergency Room.

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  • No helmets? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Calydor ( 739835 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @01:27PM (#57270286)

    They must WANT their customers to be brain damaged if they're actively lobbying against requiring the most basic of safety gear for a scooter.

    • On the bright side, the Great Nanny State of California will soon mandate that helmets and other protective gear be provided for each scooter — after they make it legal for scooters to ride on the sidewalk [qz.com] first. I predict this will be a short lived fad.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Its already legal to ride e-bikes on sidewalks (where bikes are allowed). The thing that makes these run afoul of the law is that they dont have any pedals. Ebikes are required to have a functional pedal set. Without it, CA considers powered scooters to be a motorcycle.
        • California's helmet law is not about "safety". It is an underhanded way to ban scooter-sharing. A helmet requirement would make it much more difficult for the scooter companies. How can they possibly keep a helmet with each scooter? If riders are expected to bring their own helmets, it would make it much more of a hassle, and require people to plan ahead.

          One example is Santa Monica. They just spent $100M on their "Big Blue Bus" system, and are getting far below the expected ridership. There are not ev

          • Yeah, i got the 'its politics/power' vibe when the Santa Monica PD set up a stop and started pulling over people on the beach sidewalk for riding these without a helmet. Generally no one cares what you're doing on the beach as long you aren't hurting anyone so them setting up a dragnet was weird. I didnt know about the buses, but that all adds up.
          • by piojo ( 995934 )

            California's helmet law is not about "safety". It is an underhanded way to ban scooter-sharing. A helmet requirement would make it much more difficult for the scooter companies. How can they possibly keep a helmet with each scooter? If riders are expected to bring their own helmets, it would make it much more of a hassle, and require people to plan ahead.

            Not every business plan is viable. If this business model depends on people riding unsafely, it should probably fail. (Are the bikes really slow? I don't see the issue if they're no faster than bicycles. And you can probably see the obvious--that I'm not a libertarian on the topic of letting idiots kill themselves.)

            • (Are the bikes really slow? I don't see the issue if they're no faster than bicycles.

              I'm not sure that the issue is particularly about speed, but it's about likelihood of head coming into contact with the ground in the event of a malfunction, mis-balance, or collision. Humans aren't too bad at handling slips trips and falls in bare feet or up to a couple of cm of shoe thickness. Start to lengthen the leg (effectively) - by wearing one of high heels; platform-sole shoes (yes some of us can remember wearing t

      • by Anonymous Coward

        "the Great Nanny State of California" ... seriously, are you a dumb ass?

        First states to have mandatory seat belt laws (est. 1985): New York, New Jersey, Michigan, Texas, Missouri, D.C., Hawaii.

        That's right, Texas beat California As for the biggest complaints of our so-called "nanny state", California's cigarette tax is significantly lower than New York's. ($2.87/pack vs $4.35/pack), and there is an additional $1.50 tax when in NYC.

        People who like to winge about California often have never spent much time i

        • by Anonymous Coward

          The problem is every US state has become a nanny state. New Hampshire is one of the least damaged, but hardly comes out unscathed. The nanny state here has been held back a bit because of New Hampshire's history, but also is being saved thanks to an influx of libertarians migrating to the state as part of an effort to overhaul a state. We, freedom loving people of the world need there to be at least one last bastion of hope, freedom, and a place to call home and the only way you can achieve that is by like-

        • by The Original CDR ( 5453236 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @03:10PM (#57271136)

          People who like to winge about California often have never spent much time in the various parts of California.

          I lived in California for all my life. I'm somewhat familiar with the Great Nanny State of California. For example, Los Angeles tried to ban IDE cables [snopes.com] because the terms Master and Slave were used. Or San Francisco wanting to ban the Blue Angels [sfgate.com] from flying during Fleet Week for terrorizing families in neighborhoods. And don't get me started on "ban paper bags, use plastic bags instead" in the 1990's to "ban plastic bags, use paper bags and pay per bag instead" in the 2010's.

          • > And don't get me started on "ban paper bags, use plastic
            > bags instead" in the 1990's to "ban plastic bags, use paper
            > bags and pay per bag instead" in the 2010's.

            Paper bags are OK, but not brown bags in Seatlle, Washington. http://newsfeed.time.com/2013/... [time.com]

            > It's not a brown bag lunch, it's a "sack lunch." The Office for Civil Rights
            > in Seattle, Washington has suggested that government workers refrain
            > from using the common term because it could be offensive to some people,

        • All I need to predict "nannystatism" is the state tax rates.

          2016 highest income tax rates (https://turbotax.intuit.com/tax-tips/fun-facts/states-with-the-highest-and-lowest-taxes/L6HPAVqSF):

          California 13.3%
          Oregon 9.9%
          Minnesota 9.85%
          Iowa 8.98%
          New Jersey 8.97%
          Vermont 8.95%
          District of Columbia 8.95%

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I have a coworker whose husband used to think just like you. Now she has to feed him manually 3 times a day. He had a motorcycle accident while not wearing a helmet. Sorry, but the burden you put on society is not worth it to us. Wear a damned helmet.

        • Where did I write that I was against helmets? I gave up riding a bicycle (yes, with a helmet) 20 years ago because soccer moms thought it was okay to drive me off the road (or go through the landscaping on a street corner) with an SUV to get their little devil spawn to school in the morning.
    • One's not wearing a helmet only endangers the non-wearer. There is simply no standing for the government to mandate it.

      Of course, these companies are doing it for a different reason — they want (more) people to use their services, helmet or not.

      • It also places others at risk of severe psychiatric trauma, bloodborne disease, and funerary costs.

        • by mi ( 197448 )

          It also places others at risk of severe psychiatric trauma

          You realize, of course, how I can ban just about anything based on that argument? No? Let's begin with "traumatizing speech" and "verbal assaults"... Voila — down with the First Amendment! And so on...

          • It's not black and red, you know. A pinprick and a little blood aren't going to hurt anyone; killing another human being causes serious psychological trauma.

            We also do ban speech to incite violence.

            • by mi ( 197448 )

              It's not black and red, you know.

              In ACLU's own terms, it is a "slippery slope" without the "clear bright line" separating the reasonable and egregious applications.

              Once you accept an argument, that preventing somebody's "psychological trauma" is a sufficient reason to limit another's pursuit of happiness, the government can ban just about anything — may as well abolish the Constitution.

              Because one can always pull out a poster boy — err, scratch that — a poster person, who may be "traumatiz

              • In ACLU's own terms, it is a "slippery slope" without the "clear bright line" separating the reasonable and egregious applications.

                So are a lot of things. There are noise restrictions: you can't blare music at 120dB at night or the police show up. I can hear my neighbors talking and hear people outside driving cars sometimes; they're not loud but they're audible. At what point do we fine you for making "noise"?

                I can shine a flashlight at an airplane. Laser diodes require a lens to form collimated light, and they do scatter over distance: a spot at 2 kilometers is larger than a spot at 2 meters. At what point is shining a brig

    • At last, somebody is doing something about the shortage of donor-organs!

    • No, they don't actively want that. They just don't care. Requiring helmets means either they pay for them (obviously bad) or the customers pay for them (which means fewer customers). So of course they're actively lobbying against it.

    • You are assuming that helmets are safer on bicycles AND on scooters.

      You DO realize that helmets are NOT any more safe on bicycles, right?
      http://bicyclesafe.com/helmets... [bicyclesafe.com]

      TEDx Copenhagen - Mikael Colville-Andersen - Why We Shouldn't Bike with a Helmet
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      If you were actually concerned about safety you would lobby crash helmets for motorists instead of just cyclists or motorcyclists. About 38,000 motorists die on U.S. roads every year compared to fewer than 700 cyclists.

      But since

    • What percentage of scooter injuries are concussions? I suspect not that many. On top of that with helmets, we will see a new problem -- pedestrian injuries caused by impact of helmets on pedestrians. There's a reason that America's National Football League is trying to reduce helmet contacts with other player's heads.

      I'm not opposed to helmets, but maybe a design that is less menacing to innocent bystanders than the "standard" hard helmet ...

      It's my understanding that Segways are limited to fast walking

    • by Daetrin ( 576516 )
      You are attributing conditions to villainy that simply result from greed.

      They don't _want_ their customers to be brain damaged. In fact they'd be happier if no one was ever hurt riding their scooters. However they already know that people continue using their scooters even though people are getting hurt using them, some very seriously.

      On the other hand if this law passes either they would have to provide helmets to go with the scooters (and find some way of preventing people from just walking off with t
  • I keep seeing claims that most of these cities already have laws on the books mandating helmet use for these things, yet I've NEVER seen a helmet on any riders in my area, or on the riders in any of the news reports about their rollout. Perhaps if the companies were liable for the injuries suffered they would find a way to enforce helmet usage. Sadly that would only be possible if their app was running on a platform that had access to a camera, oh wait...
  • Well, yeah... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Kierthos ( 225954 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @01:34PM (#57270350) Homepage

    I started seeing rental scooters in the area a few years ago, but they've really taken off here in the last year or so.

    And most of the time I see people on these things, they're not wearing the provided helmets. Or they're riding double on them (occasionally triple). I've even seen some scooter riders flat out ignore stop signs and stop lights, and a couple who were driving on the sidewalk.

    I saw one guy who clearly didn't know how to operate the scooter cut a wide turn, and sideswipe a concrete barricade. The helmet popped out of the wire cage on the back of the scooter (of course he wasn't wearing it), and he kept going down the street. I called after him, but either he didn't hear me, or he ignored me. And then he turned onto a much busier street.

    Honestly, I'd feel bad for them, but instead I feel bad for the people who are going to be in accidents with these thundering idiots.

    • Once you eliminate the most vicious forms of disease, starvation, and exposure, nature needs to develop new ways thinning out the heard as it were. Life (or I suppose death) finds a way.

      For some people, their only notable achievement will be a Darwin award.
  • From the article:

    What's more, the firms acknowledge that they can't always know about serious mechanical problems in their vehicles unless riders flag problems. Indeed, the scooter companies are still learning how their vehicles perform in various weather conditions and from regular use, according to a senior executive at one of the three companies who spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk freely about industry challenges.

  • by taustin ( 171655 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @01:53PM (#57270472) Homepage Journal

    is the cause of accidents. They talk about people injured by mechanical failures, and undoubtedly those occur.

    But no mention of what percentage is caused by that, what percentage caused by rider error (which is likely rather higher) and what percentage is caused by other drivers (since it's illegal to ride these things on the sidewalk, which means you're in a bicycle lane or on the street). Most motorcycle accidents are cause by drivers of cars who never saw the bike. I suspect the same is true on these toys.

    But let's not let facts get in the way of any propaganda! There's money to be made, selling advertising to outrage monkeys.

    • ...what percentage is caused by other drivers (since it's illegal to ride these things on the sidewalk...)

      In Denver it's illegal to ride the scooters in Bicycle lanes, you are expressly told to ride them on the sidewalk.

      Of course you are also told to ride with a helmet and I've not ever seen that...

      The best option would be to speed limit scooters to about 2x walking speed, so that people could not get up enough speed to really hurt themselves or others.

      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        The article, however, is about California (Santa Monica), where, as far as I know, it's illegal to ride them on the sidewalk.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Except I always see them ride in sidewalks, facts, what are those again?

      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        That the cops don't enforce the law doesn't change what the law is.

        • No but it does change people's perception of the law. If I know something is illegal but I wouldn't get in trouble for doing so I have no incentive not to do it. Kind of like here cycling drunk is illegal and subject to the same fine as driving a car. Yet I cycle home sometimes so drunk that I fall off my bike because of the unwritten rule that you don't punish cyclists for things that would prevent them from cycling.

          A law that isn't enforced is not a law, it's a kind request.

    • is the cause of accidents. They talk about people injured by mechanical failures, and undoubtedly those occur.

      But no mention of what percentage is caused by that, what percentage caused by rider error (which is likely rather higher) and what percentage is caused by other drivers (since it's illegal to ride these things on the sidewalk, which means you're in a bicycle lane or on the street). Most motorcycle accidents are cause by drivers of cars who never saw the bike. I suspect the same is true on these toys.

      Scooters are worse.
      * Very short wheelbase;
      * Very small wheels;
      * Extremely tight turning radius.

      That's a formula for falling off. Now, it wasn't so bad with those "Razer" scooters, where you'd only break your wrist. But these things go much faster, and in most cities are forbidden from riding on the sidewalk. For example, CA vehicle code says so for anything motorized.

      And 15 to 40 mph on the sidewalk is not a good idea in a neighborhood with old people walki

    • "it's illegal to ride these things on the sidewalk"

      Surely not everywhere and always. Someone ran a survey of the local laws in Vermont's 250 odd towns and cities. They found that in some it's illegal to ride bicycles on sidewalks (if you can find a sidewalk), in some it's optional, in some it's mandatory. I expect the same would be true of scooters.

  • Where I live, scooter riders almost always ride on the sidewalks, which are already very narrow. They almost never wear helmets. I have seen several instances of two people squeezing onto a single scooter. I have seen falls and accidents. I've seen pedestrians get hit. Almost every day I walk around in my neighborhood, some scooter rider whizzes by me, unannounced--I can't hear them coming, and they get within inches of me.

    Whether or not a law is passed to regulate the use of these motor vehicles--and

  • by Anonymous Coward

    and it's not a scooter problem, it's a cultural problem. There are countries that have literally a hundred times more cyclists and scooterists than you, and still fewer accidents.

    Riding or driving like a massive asshole and refusing to wear a helmet because it's not cool is the problem, and it's wholly a problem of American culture, not a problem of scooters.

  • It's one thing if it's the people riding the scooters are the ones getting injured.

    It's another thing if it's people they run into, or someone trips on a scooter that some idiot just dumped on the ground (because none of these things have stations to park them, like rental bikes)

  • by dstyle5 ( 702493 ) on Friday September 07, 2018 @02:02PM (#57270574)
    I wasn't wearing protective equipment a few years back when I got tripped up inline skating, ended up landing on my right patella (kneecap) and broke it into 3 pieces. Prior to this incident I hadn't fallen in over 20 years of skating and was over-confident and stupidly not wearing protective padding. Painful lesson learned...

    Needless to say I wear full protective gear after two surgeries, months of physio for my extremely tight and shrunken quads, etc. Mandating a helmet for these type of activities where you are moving on concrete should be a no-brainer. I see dumb people with very small children in my area with no helmets, wobbling on bikes and scooters, makes me cringe.
    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      a helmet for these type of activities where you are moving on concrete should be a no-brainer

      It's lack of a helmet that's a no-brainer. Eventually.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Byrd,,

    its a shame that your choosing to collect profits versus considering the safety of your riders, customers, and the public @ large...

    Layme,,
    perhaps everyone should give you the "Bird"

     

  • ... in fact, I'd rather they didn't. I want them as soft as possible if they crash into me.

  • No helments and FASTER scooters.

    We need all the fresh young organs we can get from volunteers.

  • Seeing people on scooters in my city, I'm not surprised they're in the hospital. Nearly all of them just zoom around, don't adhere to road rules. Then if you do hit one, media blames car driver with titles that read "car hits scooter". I actually almost hit one today, driving south, put my blinker on to turn right onto a street. I get to where I'm about to turn the wheel, Scooter driving on my lane towards me and tries to left turn onto the road I'm on. I see them also driving down very busy streets middl
  • So, the problem is just that we aren't using the streets and roads for their original purpose of bikes, horses, and the odd delivery truck.

    In the 50s everyone warned of lawless youth on scooters, the kind you pushed by hand.

    You see the problem only from the perspective of the group you're not part of, not the group you are part of.

  • Jesus Christ, FINALLY something in my favor.

    -Charles Darwin

  • Scooters need to be limited to 12-15mph, tops. This is a trivial fix. Anyone arguing against helmets and other safety gear at speeds exceeding 12mph is ignorant of what can happen to a human body crashing at speed. Anyone who cries out "nanny state" - just because that state wants to protect people from hurting themselves - should not be permitted to have children. /s
  • The wheels on a scooter are too small to make the ride stable. And some scooters go too fast. Being able to go 25mph on little wheels is a recipe for disaster. Even small obstacles can cause your path to alter. Compare the rate of accidents of bicycles to the rate for scooters. Are the ER's reporting large numbers of biking accidents also? Maybe the gyroscopic characteristics of larger wheels is what makes bicycles more stable? Maybe bikers tend to follow the rules of the road more than scooter riders

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