22nd June 2021 ❘ Legal News and Commentary
E-Scooters – What are the risks?
E-Scooters – What are the risks?
The use of e-scooters is on the rise due to the introduction of over 30 rental schemes across the UK including Newcastle, Nottingham and London. The Government has introduced a number of trials in urban areas which have been brought forward due to the COVID-19 pandemic to try and provide a safe alternative to other methods of public transport.
However, as the number of serious accidents involving e-scooters continues to grow there are calls by the Major Trauma Group for increased legislation around the use of e-scooters. Indeed, back in June 2020 an influential safety organisation raised serious doubts about the safety of electric scooters on public roads and pavements.
The Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety (PACTS), which advises members of Parliament on air, rail and road safety issues, described e-scooters as having features which are ‘inherently unsafe’.
Safety concerns
In a report submitted to the UK’s Department for Transport, PACTS raised the following concerns:
- The small wheels of e-scooters are incapable of safely negotiating the ruts, potholes and uneven surfaces of many urban streets.
- E-scooters have neither mirrors nor indicators, which make it very difficult for riders to see vehicles approaching from behind or to signal their intentions to other drivers or road users. Indeed, the majority of e-scooters within trials have the throttle on the handlebar, so any riders cannot lift off a hand to signal a turn in the way that a cyclist can.
- The standing position of an e-scooter is unstable, putting riders in danger of being thrown forward more quickly and with more force than a cyclist. This according to the Danish Transport Authority leads to much higher rates of head injury – estimated to be eight times higher than a cyclist.
- There is no mandatory helmet use being prescribed by law therefore users are often using the e-scooters without using helmets which are often provided with the e-scooters.
- The lights on e-scooters, if there are any, are normally at a very low level, which makes them much less visible than a bicycle. This therefore means during hours of darkness (which will be particularly an issue during winter months) they are not as visible as bicycles.
We are therefore calling on the Government to think again regarding the current e-scooters trial before further needless injuries to e-scooters riders, pedestrians and other road users are sustained.
How we can help following serious road traffic collisions…
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