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E scooters will soon rule the roads!

Truthfully, I would love to see e-scooters on the roads and not on walkways. I don't know why the government doesn't allow them on roads. Let the e-scooters go up against heavier vehicles. Make helmets and brakes optional. And in due time, their usage and numbers would be greatly reduced. A most happy outcome for everyone.
 
Truthfully, I would love to see e-scooters on the roads and not on walkways. I don't know why the government doesn't allow them on roads. Let the e-scooters go up against heavier vehicles. Make helmets and brakes optional. And in due time, their usage and numbers would be greatly reduced. A most happy outcome for everyone.
Well said. I have added to your points. Lol :D
 
Initially our cities were compact as most walk on foot. Then roads got wider to accommodate horses, and carriages. But cities found after the mass manufacture of automobiles are spread vast and wide.
Notice how compact the older part of our cities are, and how spread out the newer suburbs are.we need to build cities like changi airport. Shops and homes are interconnected and linked to other parts of the island by mrt.
 
Truthfully, I would love to see e-scooters on the roads and not on walkways. I don't know why the government doesn't allow them on roads. Let the e-scooters go up against heavier vehicles. Make helmets and brakes optional. And in due time, their usage and numbers would be greatly reduced. A most happy outcome for everyone.

In countries where the government does not control every aspect of the daily lives of citizens e scooters are allowed everywhere and helmets are optional.

 
The
In countries where the government does not control every aspect of the daily lives of citizens e scooters are allowed everywhere and helmets are optional.


that is a much better implementation of road design.
 
How about traditional scooters?

e5dcc9be39b55d3dd968c22b1f35bd6c--saigon-vietnam.jpg
The honda sh series is the most popular scooter in europe. And together with vespa, its assembled in vietnam, but are not sold locally here.
 
Population density is the main reason why cars should banished from the roads unless absolutely necessary.

Car centric urban design can easily be reversed. All it takes is a few relatively minor changes.


Won't work in asia. Shopkeepers will protest as bosses cannot drive all the way and park in front of their shops.
 
In countries where the government does not control every aspect of the daily lives of citizens e scooters are allowed everywhere and helmets are optional.



Proper regulations are there to protect the public and consumers,,,for the escooters case, road users included, with BS or half baked regulations,,more economic and social harm is done,,,

Australia's obsession with cheap solar is derailing the market, insiders say
7.30
By Liz Hobday and Sybilla Gross
Updated earlier today at 6:33am

PHOTO: Faulty solar panels may product less energy than expected, or even be dangerous. (ABC News: Jerry Rickard)
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Rooftop solar industry veterans say Australia has become a dumping ground for poor-quality solar products and some are questioning the regulatory oversight of household rooftop solar installers and products.

Key points:
  • An audit found 1.2 per cent of rooftop solar installations have been inspected by the Clean Energy Regulator
  • The regulator's inspections found one in six solar installations were "substandard", and about one in 30 were "unsafe"
  • Based on the sample, the audit found there would be tens of thousands of "unsafe" installations


An audit of the Clean Energy Regulator (CER) by the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) late last year found it is likely there are potentially tens of thousands of badly installed and even unsafe systems on rooftops.

Not only are these systems risky, it is likely they are not producing the clean energy that Australia's renewable energy target relies on.

About one in five Australian homes has installed rooftop solar.

The ANAO found 1.2 per cent of rooftop solar installations have been inspected by the regulator.

The regulator's inspections found that about one in six solar installations was "substandard", and about one in 30 was "unsafe".

Based on the sample, the audit found there would be hundreds of thousands of substandard installations and tens of thousands of unsafe solar systems across the country.

'Incredibly disappointing, to say the least'
PHOTO: Rex Leighton expected his solar panels to last 25 years. They lasted less than five. (ABC News: Jerry Rickard)


Wollongong resident Rex Leighton spent $8,000 installing a rooftop solar system in 2015, which he expected would last for at least 25 years.

It only lasted four and a half years.

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2 million homes in Australia have solar panels — so what is going on in all those shiny rooftop structures?


He said a manufacturing fault meant the 20-panel system had been gradually damaged by water.

Mr Leighton said it was "incredibly disappointing, to say the least".

"It made me feel a bit sick really, because the warranty was for 10 years on the product.​
"And we were expecting a substantially longer time than that."

PHOTO: Johann Fleury says poor-quality solar panels are all too common. (ABC News: Jerry Rickard)


On the day 7.30 visited Mr Leighton's property, Johann Fleury's company Thirroul Solar was removing the panels and replacing them.

"These can't be fixed. There's no way of reversing the issue that they have with them," Mr Fleury said.

"So they are basically just dead panels."​
It is not a job he likes doing.

The panels he was taking down will most likely end up at the tip, as there was nowhere nearby to recycle them.

Mr Fleury was just one of dozens of solar installers 7.30 spoke to who said poor-quality rooftop solar was all too common.

"A large amount of those earlier panels, since I'd say 2008 all the way till 2014, a lot of those panels have come back down off roofs," he said.

He is worried about the reputation of the rooftop solar industry, with poor-quality systems that may only last a couple of years leaving customers disappointed and out of pocket.

"There's a lot of things that are wrong or negative within the solar industry," he said.

'Some are fine, some are really poor'
PHOTO: Dr Michelle McCann says Australia does not have a rigorous culture of testing imported solar products. (ABC News)


In Canberra, Dr Michelle McCann runs one of the few laboratories in Australia that conducts commercial testing for solar panels.

"We're in a pretty good position to assess how panels are performing across the whole of Australia, simply because we are one of the few options in Australia," she said.

"We have found that the performance is really variable across Australia. Some are fine, great, and some are really poor."

Dr McCann said even new panels from high-end brands may not perform as well as expected, and often manufacturing faults are not visible to the naked eye.

"You can't tell from the outside of a panel whether it's going to be good or bad, and you can't tell by looking at the brand name of a panel whether it's going to be good or bad," she said.​
One of the worst-performing panels she had tested from the Australian market was a panel that produced 12 per cent less electricity than its advertised rating.

"[That] raises questions then about what that panel's going to do after one year, or three or five years, let alone 25 years in the field," she said.

Dr McCann said some overseas manufacturers were sending poor-quality solar products to Australia, knowing they would not be checked.

"What we can conclude is that in some cases, unfortunately they know that we are not really checking the quality of what is coming into Australia always, and there are a lot of companies out there … some of them are cutting corners where they can to make extra money."

She said Australia does not have a rigorous culture of testing imported solar products.

"When there's no expectation that your product will be checked, then there's a little bit more flexibility … to ship out the poorer-performing product that inevitably results from any production line.​
"Australian consumers are notorious, and known overseas, for caring a lot about price and not caring about quality, and when that happens you get the cheaper product. And the cheaper product is not the better-performing product."

Homes destroyed by rooftop solar fires
PHOTO: Steve Attard knows of 25 fires that were started by problems with rooftop solar in the Melbourne metropolitan area in the past five years. (ABC News)


The acting commander of Fire Investigation and Analysis at Melbourne's Metropolitan Fire Brigade (MFB), Steve Attard, says homes can be destroyed in fires that have been caused by rooftop solar systems.

"People are losing their homes, and a lot of the homes, by the time we get to the scene of the fire, the fire travel has destroyed at least the roof compartment," he told 7.30.​
"We always see the worst-case scenario."

He knows of 25 fires in the Melbourne metropolitan area in the past five years that were started by problems with rooftop solar.

He said there is a particular issue with one safety measure that was introduced in Victoria in 2005, and then nationally in 2012.

It is a switch called a DC isolator that can be installed on roofs to shut off the flow of power from solar panels.

"Most people aren't aware these isolators do exist up on the roof until there is an issue, and these are the ones we're being cautious about because they're exposed to the elements," Mr Attard said.​
"Moisture does get inside, even if they're installed correctly. We have condensation building up inside these units and getting into the electrics and then giving us grief."

He said fires in these units can spread across roofs before anyone notices.

"Certain brands have been recalled, but there's still a number of the old isolators still out in service, which at some point in time will pose a risk."

Low-quality solar no problem, Clean Energy Council says
PHOTO: Kane Thornton, CEO of the Clean Energy Council, says the majority of rooftop solar systems are safe. (ABC News: )


One of the renewable energy industry's peak bodies, the Clean Energy Council (CEC), has the power to accredit rooftop solar products and installers.

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Last year the CEC cancelled its accreditation of 12 installers and temporarily suspended the accreditation of 160 more.

It also struck more than 5,500 models of solar panel from its list of approved products, along with 88 models of solar inverter.

CEC chief executive Kane Thornton insists low-quality solar is not a problem in Australia.

"I think what we've got here is a minimum standard that ensures a minimum level of quality for these systems," he told 7.30.

"I don't think it's up to government to dictate exactly which product an Australian consumer might prefer."​
Mr Thornton said the overwhelming majority of rooftop solar systems are safe, and an "unsafe" rating from the CER may not be as bad as it sounds.

"This categorisation is about potentially unsafe systems," he said.

The ANAO found that the number of rooftop solar systems classified as "unsafe" has declined from an average of 4.2 per cent from 2011 to 2015, to 2.7 per cent last year.

Mr Thornton told 7.30 the regulatory framework for rooftop solar products and installations is working, because the number of systems categorised as unsafe is continuing to fall.

"We're obviously very focussed on continuing to reduce that number," he said.

He said the solar industry is one of the most heavily scrutinised in the country.

"We've got 2 million households with rooftop solar and very, very few actual incidents relating to safety within the industry.

"There's more work to be done. I don't think anyone disputes that."

No safety standards for batteries
PHOTO: The massive growth in rooftop solar is being followed by a boom in household batteries. (Reuters: Mike Blake)


Some of the problems emerging in rooftop solar are the result of a massive growth in demand, fuelled by government subsidies.

But there is a chance Australia could repeat some of the same mistakes with the next boom in home energy — household batteries.

The National Audit Office found some of the risks of batteries include electric shock, gas explosion, fire, and chemical exposure.

About 60,000 home batteries have already been installed, but there is still no agreed Australian Standard setting out the minimum safety requirements for their installation.

An updated Australian Standard is expected to be released in August this year.

The CEC has accredited about 950 installers to work with home batteries and Mr Thornton said home batteries are fundamentally very safe.

"We need to remember that these types of batteries have been used in cars for many years. They're also not dissimilar to the batteries that are in many people's homes in the form of cordless power tools," he said.

Renewable energy certificates not cancelled if system fails
One of the big selling points of rooftop solar is the government incentives that reduce the cost of the systems for consumers, and form the basis for the national trade in carbon abatement.

When a householder installs solar panels, a renewable energy certificate known as an STC can be created, which assumes the panel will produce clean energy for 12 years.

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The certificate can be bought by a polluting company to offset its carbon emissions, and contribute towards Australia's renewable energy target.

But if the solar panels fail after just a few years, the certificate can still be used to offset emissions.

And that still counts towards Australia's renewable energy target.

This market for renewable energy, from rooftop solar, as well as wind and solar farms, is worth $1.5 billion a year and rising.

The CER, which looks after this market, says there is no provision under the current laws for STCs to be cancelled if a system fails early, and its expectation is that the system would be repaired or parts replaced.

The CER also says the STC credits for rooftop solar are calculated conservatively, so that "if a small number fail and are not repaired, it is immaterial across all the systems that have received certificates".

Different rules in each state and territory
PHOTO: Some parts of Australia have far more comprehensive safety checks than others. (ABC News: Jerry Rickard)


The ANAO audit found the CER had administered Australia's renewable energy target effectively — except for the enforcement activities of its investigations unit.

As part of its four main recommendations, the audit said the CER should examine the electrical safety risks posed by rooftop solar more closely.

The CER accepted those recommendations, but it told 7.30 it was an economic regulator and not primarily responsible for rooftop solar safety.

That job falls to the state and territory electrical safety authorities, who receive notifications from the CER when systems are not up to scratch.

But 7.30 found some parts of Australia have far more comprehensive checks than others.

  • Authorities in Tasmania, the ACT and Victoria inspect every system that is installed.
  • The Northern Territory also runs its own inspection regime. Inspectors in the NT have checked 295 rooftop solar systems in the past 12 months.
  • Queensland authorities told 7.30 solar installers with a history of substandard work are targeted for audits.
  • New South Wales authorities said they rely on notifications from the Clean Energy Regulator, and that a targeted compliance program for solar installations is under development.
  • Authorities in South Australia, where almost a third of homes now have rooftop solar, could not provide any information to 7.30 by deadline.
  • In south-west WA, where the state-owned company Western Power is responsible for rooftop solar inspections, almost 10,000 checks have been carried out in the past 18 months.
  • Horizon Power, which services rural and remote WA, was unable to confirm whether it runs an inspections regime independently of the CER, and was unable to provide 7.30 with any figures by deadline.
7.30 understands that several state authorities have become increasingly dissatisfied with the CER's regime of testing, and are planning to expand their own checks of rooftop solar systems.

The CER provided a statement to 7.30, saying it is required by law to inspect a statistically significant number of rooftop solar systems (about 5,500) over a two-year period.

"There has been an overall downward trend in the level of unsafe systems installed since the inspection program commenced."
 
The Dualtron Thunder! 5400 watts of mind boggling power. If you can stay upright you can easily outrun those lame fun police. They'll be eating your dust!

With this model you can forget about the MRT and its unending delays. You'll arrive at your destination in half the time.



MRT is cheap and comfortable. Why would I give up that for this small boy toy?
 
so far it's orderly among 69% of e-scooter users in sillycon valley. there's always that minority segment of abusers who will spoil it for everyone. very popular among white young chicks who go shopping and walking around town at a faster pace. moreover, e-scooter-share startups are required to collect and maintain equipment regularly, recharge batteries, and stack them neatly along walkways. contractors are paid handsomely by these startups to collect, maintain, clean, recharge, and put them back on the streets for reuse. some contractors do all that work in their homes. can also be a part time job. bird and lime are the main competitors in sillycon valley. sf has more stringent requirements for scooter-share use and is coming out with strict regulations for these startups. so far, bird, lime, and spin have not received permission from sf to deploy their scooters, but they continue to flout city laws by playing cat and mouse with transport authorities and leaving them around in the streets. sf is not equal to sillycon valley.
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SINGAPOREThe Big Read: Calls to ban PMDs mount as accidents persist — but is it the best option?
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The Big Read: Calls to ban PMDs mount as accidents persist — but is it the best option?




SingaporeThe Big Read: Calls to ban PMDs mount as accidents persist — but is it the best option?
Despite moves in recent years to regulate motorised devices on public paths, calls to beef up action against errant riders are mounting.
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
Man riding a personal mobility device (PMD) on a pedestrian footpath in Singapore. (File photo: Gaya Chandramohan)
By Kenneth Cheng
28 May 2019 06:00AM(Updated: 28 May 2019 06:30AM)
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SINGAPORE: Some have abandoned their daily walks for fear that they would be hit by a motorised vehicle hurtling down footpaths. Others have had close shaves with impetuous riders.
In recent months, many Singaporeans — including Members of Parliament (MPs) — have joined a growing chorus of condemnation against these motorised vehicles, which have left riders and pedestrians with all manner of injuries from deep cuts to fractures and concussions. There have also been deaths.

Popular with riders for daily commutes and deliverymen whose livelihoods depend on them, these vehicles — known as personal mobility devices (PMDs) in Singapore — include electric scooters, hoverboards and electric unicycles.

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READ: Why being hit by an e-scooter can be deadly - and a call to ban them from footpaths


image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
An e-scooter rider on a shared path. (File photo: TODAY)

Despite efforts to regulate their use, safety concerns persist and calls are mounting to keep them off footpaths and the void decks of public housing estates.

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AN ISSUE AROUND THE WORLD
These exhortations come as countries around the world grapple with the dangers posed by these vehicles.
Some have laid down speed limits, barred them from footpaths, or confined them to private land.
Germany this month banned e-scooters from pavements and France will follow suit in September.
In the United Kingdom, roads and pavements are off-limits to e-scooters. They are allowed on private property, such as parks and universities, with the landowner’s permission.
Earlier this month, Dr Lee Bee Wah, an MP for the Nee Soon Group Representation Constituency (GRC), asked in Parliament if Singapore could emulate France’s impending ban.
Allowing PMDs on footpaths shifts “more risks to the pedestrians”, said Dr Lee. She added that some of her residents feel so unsafe on footpaths that they have “even given up their daily walks”.
There are no signs, however, that a ban in Singapore is on the cards.
Dr Lam Pin Min, Senior Minister of State for Transport, said in reply to Dr Lee that, while the Government was mindful of the safety concerns, the solution was “not to ban them, but to cultivate the right culture where users ride safely and responsibly, and only at the allowed places”.
READ: Don’t complain about rules for bikes and PMDs until we’ve proven we can be responsible, a commentary


image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
Man riding a personal mobility device (PMD) across the road in Singapore. (File photo: Jeremy Long)

CALL FOR BANS
At the same sitting, there were also calls to ban PMDs from void decks of Housing and Development Board (HDB) estates.
Bukit Batok MP Murali Pillai wondered if the ground-level lift lobbies and areas around letter boxes could be designated pedestrian-only paths under the Active Mobility Act to prevent collisions involving PMDs.
The Act spells out the rules governing the use of PMDs and other equipment on public paths.
Dr Lam replied that void decks are exempted from the Act as they are “not critical for connectivity”.
Therefore, town councils — which take care of public housing estates — can impose their own rules, including barring PMDs from void decks, he said.
More than a week after Dr Lam’s comments, the 15 town councils under the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP) said that they would not rule out banning PMDs from void decks as they relook their by-laws.
On Saturday (May 25), Dr Lam provided more details, saying that the Government is working with the town councils to ban PMDs from accident-prone areas within housing estates.
When Aljunied-Hougang Town Council, run by the opposition Workers’ Party, was asked if it would consider a ban in void decks, it said that more needed to be done to educate users on riding responsibly in common areas not limited to void decks, lift lobbies and footpaths.
“We will continue to increase our educational efforts,” it said.
Meanwhile, for many pedestrians, the worries are real.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
File photo of an e-scooter.

Some had written to forums to express their concerns.
One took aim at reckless food delivery riders after a close call with one in Tampines this month. Another lamented the recklessness of PMD users who speed down footpaths, mostly at night.
On social media, stories abound of encounters with errant riders.
A GROWING MENACE
Statistics from the Land Transport Authority (LTA) show that nearly a fifth of the 3,700 active-mobility offences between May 2018 and April 2019 involved users who sped, rode recklessly or used PMDs on roads.
Under Singapore’s law, PMDs cannot be used on roads. They are allowed only on footpaths and shared pathways, such as cycling paths and park-connector networks.
In 2017 and 2018, there were 228 reported accidents involving PMDs on public paths, 196 of them resulting in injury, Transport Minister Khaw Boon Wan told Parliament last month.
One mishap left a rider dead and 32 other accidents resulted in major injuries, such as concussions and fractures, he said.
The LTA said that it has increased enforcement efforts in recent months. From February to April, it carried out about 2,260 enforcement operations and seized more than 400 devices.
The government agency said that regulations and enforcement are key to deterring irresponsible behaviour, and the public can help by providing details of where they have encountered errant users and irresponsible retailers.
For Singapore’s lawmakers, devising a solution to the problem took some years.
An Active Mobility Advisory Panel was set up in 2015 to look into rules governing the use of PMDs, bicycles and other equipment.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
LTA's Active Mobility Enforcement teams at work. (Photo: Kenneth Lim)

It submitted its recommendations in 2016, spelling out rules for users, the types of devices permitted on various pathways, and the speed, width and weight criteria for devices allowed in public spaces.
The Government accepted the proposals in full and incorporated these into the Active Mobility Act, which took effect in May last year. The panel made further recommendations in August last year after a second review.
The present measures include having owners of e-scooters register their vehicles, which must meet weight, width and speed requirements. From July, it will be an offence to ride an unregistered e-scooter on public paths. PMD users must also keep within 10kmh on footpaths and 25kmh on shared paths.
Still, Singaporeans, MPs and transport analysts have said that the measures could go further.
Here are some suggestions:
SUGGESTION #1: COMPULSORY SAFE-RIDING COURSE
Some PMD groups stressed that Singapore has already gone some way to roll out a regulatory regime and riders know the rules, but they acknowledged that educational efforts can be more widespread.
Mr Wilson Seng, president of the PMD Retailers Association of Singapore, suggested that the LTA’s Safe Riding Programme be made compulsory for all riders.
The 90-minute course on safe-riding practices takes users through a training circuit and the rules governing PMDs.
Free until the end of this year, it is conducted in community clubs and schools, for instance.
Users found riding recklessly must attend the programme and pay for it.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
Safe riding demonstrations for personal mobility devices at the Car-Free Sunday event on Feb 26, 2017 (Photo: Olivia Siong)

Mr Seng, 30, whose association represents about 25 retailers, said that users could be made to show retailers a certificate of attendance before they buy a PMD.
He noted that some retailers have already been nudging riders to attend the programme when they buy a device.
Agreeing, Mr Joseph Lum, a member of The Wheelies, a unicycle enthusiast group, said that training could be mandatory for users, leading to a licence akin to a driver’s licence.
This will make users accountable, said Mr Lum, 43, a bank vice-president.
Transport economist Walter Theseira of the Singapore University of Social Sciences (SUSS) said a primary concern with PMD users is the lack of licensing or testing.
“There are practically no minimum standards a user has to meet to be able to operate a PMD,” said Associate Professor Theseira, head of the SUSS’ Master of Management (Urban Transportation) programme.
He added that it would make sense to resolve the problem by regulating issues such as licensing.
Dr Lee, the Nee Soon GRC MP, also supported licensing e-scooter riders, who should be of a minimum age and receive training. “If they get into an accident with pedestrians, their licence will be revoked,” she added.
Right now, users must be at least 16 years old to register their e-scooters with the LTA.
Even so, Mr Pillai, the Bukit Batok MP, said that issues of concern must be identified clearly before making any programme compulsory.
For instance, he asked if the problem lies with a lack of understanding of the rules or with non-compliant equipment.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
An impounded overweight PAB weighing 36.32kg. (Photo: Land Transport Authority)

Mr Denis Koh, chairman of Big Wheel Scooters Singapore — the largest online community of e-scooter enthusiasts here with more than 26,000 members — also felt that more thought was needed before making the Safe Riding Programme compulsory.
Mr Koh, who sits on the Active Mobility Advisory Panel, said that the panel had not ruled out this possibility, but felt that it may be too early to consider the move.
“Policies should be introduced one step at a time and we’ve to see ground conditions and sentiments, and look at statistics and the data,” said Mr Koh.
Nevertheless, he proposed that recalcitrant riders be banned from owning PMDs if they re-offend and attend the Safe Riding Programme more than thrice.
READ: What happened to caution and graciousness on the roads? A commentary
In response to queries, an LTA spokesperson said that more than 46,000 people have taken part in the Safe Riding Programme, which was rolled out in February last year.
Asked if there are plans to make it compulsory, the spokesperson added: “We will look at how we can make the Safe Riding Programme even more effective.”
SUGGESTION #2: CURB PMD NUMBERS
Besides posing dangers to persons in the street, the presence of PMDs has also clogged pathways, as pedestrians, cyclists and PMD users jockey for space.
More than 70,000 e-scooters had been registered in Singapore by April 30, the LTA said previously.
SUSS urban transport analyst Park Byung Joon said that PMDs have added to the congestion in densely populated Singapore.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
An e-bike rider on a road in Singapore. (File photo: TODAY)

To control their numbers, he suggested a system similar to the Certificate of Entitlement (COE) scheme for vehicles, such as cars.
Under the system, buyers wishing to own a vehicle must bid and pay for a limited supply of COEs.
Associate Professor Park said that imposing the system on PMDs would consequently make ownership more expensive.
Still, he questioned if the legislative and administrative effort to roll out such a system for PMDs would be worthwhile. “Government resources are not unlimited,” he said.
Assoc Prof Park noted that limiting such motorised devices to persons with disabilities could also work, since they are not in large numbers.
Right now, personal mobility aids such as motorised wheelchairs and mobility scooters are allowed on footpaths and shared paths. They are bound by a 10kmh limit on public paths.
As for delivery riders, who have come under fire lately for speeding to fulfil orders, Assoc Prof Park felt that they should not be given an exception.
“If their plan is to clutter Singapore’s streets with e-scooters, that is not acceptable,” he said.
Earlier this month, retired general manager Francis Cheng Choon Fei, 64, urged the LTA to step up enforcement against reckless food delivery riders.
The Tampines resident had a close shave with a speeding GrabFood delivery rider on an electric scooter.
Mr Cheng wrote that he was nearly knocked down on May 12 along a walkway beside the Telepark building in Tampines Central.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
File photo of e-scooters used by food delivery riders. (Photo: ElectroWolf, Electric Scooters Singapore‎/ Facebook)

Associate Professor Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim, who chairs the Active Mobility Advisory Panel, said that engagements are continuing with food delivery firms to ensure that their riders have third-party liability insurance when they are at work.
Such insurance schemes allow victims to lodge claims for damages.
Food delivery business Deliveroo, for instance, rolled out free accident and injury insurance for all its riders in May last year.
“Accident insurance is applicable to riders on all vehicle types and their substitutes, while all cyclists and e-scooter riders also have access to third-party liability insurance,” Deliveroo’s spokesperson said.
Food delivery companies said that they would act against riders who break the rules.
Technology firm Grab said its food delivery arm, GrabFood, takes customer feedback seriously and will act against errant delivery-partners, including warning, suspending or banning them from the platform.
At Deliveroo, customers may report objectionable rider behaviour and the company will ensure that action is taken.
This may include terminating a rider’s supplier agreement.
“If a rider has been found to have endangered a pedestrian, we will stop working with (him). We will co-operate with the relevant authorities however possible,” said Deliveroo’s spokesperson, adding that the firm requires all riders to abide by local rules and regulations.
Both companies have training programmes for riders.
New GrabFood delivery-partners are trained in road safety rules and regulations, for instance, and are reminded regularly to abide by speed limits and wear proper safety gear. They are also given road safety tips, said Grab’s spokesperson.
Riders who join Deliveroo are required to complete an introductory road safety guidance programme.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
(Photo: Facebook/Deliveroo Riders Singapore)

The company also works with the LTA to hold Safe Riding Programmes for its riders every month, and reminds riders regularly of road safety programmes and regulations, added the Deliveroo spokesperson.
Foodpanda could not respond to this reporter queries, as its spokesperson was away from the office this week.
SUGGESTION #3: LIMITED BAN IN CERTAIN AREAS
Beyond training and curbing supply, some MPs repeated their calls for a ban on PMDs in areas with high human traffic, such as void decks of HDB blocks and town centres — a move supported by some analysts and PMD interest groups.
Dr Lee said that this would protect the young and old, and allow people to “feel safe when gathering in these areas”.
In her Nee Soon South constituency, riding is already disallowed in void decks.
Under the Nee Soon Town Council by-laws of 2013, all vehicles, except wheelchairs and toy vehicles, cannot be used in void decks, Dr Lee said.
Some PMD users have been fined, although she did not provide figures. Enforcement is done with the police.
Barriers have also been installed in areas such as lift lobbies, coffeeshops and pre-schools, so that PMD users have to dismount, noted Dr Lee.
As a result, some residents have reported feeling much safer, she said.
Mr Koh from Big Wheel Scooters said that disallowing PMDs in void decks, where there are many pillars and blind spots, was “reasonable”.
He suggested that town councils consult agencies such as the LTA to align their policies not only in void decks but their surrounds.
Enforcement can be done jointly between agencies such as the LTA and the police, he said.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
A man riding an electric scooter. (File photo: TODAY)

“We do not want some towns to enforce like this and another to enforce like that,” Mr Koh said.
Bedok, Pasir Ris and Tampines are all very near one another; do you want different rules or enforcement in every town?​
Assistant Professor Terence Fan, a transport specialist at the Singapore Management University (SMU), said that residents could take photos of errant users and report them to the authorities.
Signs or lines demarcating no-go zones should be rolled out to make the rules clear, he added.
Mr Loh Chow Kuang, a former secretary of the Public Transport Council, said that a combination of education, warning signs, significant penalties, an enforcement team, and closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras was needed to enforce such rules.
Most, if not all, lift lobbies, corridors and void decks of HDB estates already have CCTV cameras, noted Mr Loh, who is president and chief executive officer of Singapore Urban Transport International, which promotes Singapore's know-how in urban transport development and management globally.
Asked if installing more CCTV cameras would work, Mr Pillai said that the police had already fitted a number of ground-floor lift lobbies with these tools, which could be tapped for enforcement.
Mr Lum from The Wheelies said that PMDs could be restricted at certain hours from areas where many young children or elders gather, such as void decks.
Opening alternative paths will reduce PMD users’ need to use those areas, he added.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
A CCTV camera installed at a void deck of a HDB block in Singapore.

Assoc Prof Faishal said that the Government is working with town councils to explore measures that can improve residents’ safety.
Meanwhile, Dr Paul Barter, an adjunct associate professor specialising in urban transport policy at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, suggested that the authorities could identify a comprehensive network of streets where vehicle speed limits could be cut to 30kmh.
PMD and bicycle users without helmets could be allowed on these streets, creating additional safe routes for them.
These users, except children and their adult escorts, could then be banned from footpaths wherever there are streets with a 30kmh limit or cycling paths, said Dr Barter.
SUGGESTION #4: TOTAL BAN
While most people interviewed did not support an all-out ban on PMDs, one analyst and several pedestrians were in favour of such a move.
Assoc Prof Park said that, with the exception of persons with disabilities who need mobility aids to get around, the Government could give users up to a year’s notice before it rolls out a ban, to give them time to seek alternatives.
This, too, will help to calm demand for PMDs and give the authorities time to draw up a licensing scheme for persons with disabilities, he added.
Nevertheless, a ban on PMDs could mean that Singapore would be “back to square one” in its efforts to improve last-mile connections.
“We will only have walking (and) we should pay attention to walking as a more enjoyable and preferred mode,” said Assoc Prof Park.
For those wishing to ride e-scooters just for leisure, he said that a confined space meant only for such devices, for instance, could be explored.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
(Photo: To Kien)

Project manager Tan Chi Wei, 41, who urge for greater action against reckless riders, also supported a ban.
A year ago, an e-scooter rider emerging from a blind spot bumped into him at the void deck of an Yishun Avenue 4 block. He was walking his daughter, who was then three years old, to her pre-school. They were not hurt.
Still, Mr Tan acknowledged that a complete ban is hard to achieve immediately as “enforcement officers cannot be everywhere”. The devices first need to be stopped at the ports of entry before they reach the market, he said.
Mr Cheng, the Tampines resident, also prefers a ban, as many riders exercise poor judgement and “speed along walkways without a care for pedestrians”.
It is not quite possible to build more PMD lanes given Singapore’s land constraints, he said.
‘HOLISTIC APPROACH’ NEEDED
Notwithstanding calls for a ban, many interviewed for this article said that such an extreme move would be a step backwards for Singapore’s vision of a “car-lite” city.
Assoc Prof Faishal, who is also Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Social and Family Development, said that when used responsibly PMDs have an important role in Singapore’s transport landscape.
While some may argue that PMDs have no place here since the country is so well-connected, he said that those who use these vehicles as an alternative to driving, walking or taking public transport have found them “convenient, useful and environmentally friendly”.
He said that most e-scooter riders, for instance, are safe and responsible.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
A senior citizen riding a personal mobility device (PMD) in Singapore. (File photo: Gaya Chandramohan).

“We should, therefore, not go down the path of imposing a complete ban on PMDs because of a small number of people who misuse them,” said Assoc Prof Faishal.
“Instead, we should take a balanced and holistic approach to improve active-mobility safety and build this as part of the evolving transport landscape.”
Dr Barter reiterated that PMDs have greatly expanded users’ freedom to make trips that are inconvenient by public transport.
“Banning them would harm the mobility of many thousands of people who already find them useful,” he said.
Agreeing, SMU’s Asst Prof Fan said that PMDs are important in linking homes that are farther from public transport.
For instance, some workers travel from the Central Business District to their homes in Tanjong Rhu on PMDs, completely replacing public transport, he added.
For some, such as Mr Lum of The Wheelies, PMDs are a more convenient alternative to cars.
In the mornings, he parks his car on the edge of town and rides his unicycle to his Shenton Way office to avoid the traffic snarl-ups.
He also occasionally takes his eight-year-old daughter to her primary school on an electric scooter to steer clear of the peak-hour traffic, saving up to 20 minutes during the journey.
Mr Sitoh Yih Pin, chairman of the Government Parliamentary Committee for Transport, said that an outright ban at this stage would be “a little excessive”.
Apart from stricter rules and enforcement, the Potong Pasir MP said greater effort is needed to communicate with PMD riders and other road and pavement users about taking precautions and observing proper etiquette.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
An e-bike rider in Singapore. (File photo: TODAY)

Agreeing, Mr Koh of Big Wheel Scooters said that pedestrians, too, have to play their part.
For instance, pedestrians would sometimes veer into the cycling paths at East Coast Park.
Ultimately, Mr Koh said a balance must be struck without restricting Singaporeans’ commuting options.
“We don’t want to make this a nanny state, where everything is governed by rules, rules, rules, and enforcement, enforcement, enforcement,” he added.
Source: TODAY/nr(sl)
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The Big Read: Calls to ban PMDs mount as accidents persist — but is it the best option?




SingaporeThe Big Read: Calls to ban PMDs mount as accidents persist — but is it the best option?
Despite moves in recent years to regulate motorised devices on public paths, calls to beef up action against errant riders are mounting.
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
Man riding a personal mobility device (PMD) on a pedestrian footpath in Singapore. (File photo: Gaya Chandramohan)
By Kenneth Cheng
28 May 2019 06:00AM(Updated: 28 May 2019 06:30AM)
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SINGAPORE: Some have abandoned their daily walks for fear that they would be hit by a motorised vehicle hurtling down footpaths. Others have had close shaves with impetuous riders.
In recent months, many Singaporeans — including Members of Parliament (MPs) — have joined a growing chorus of condemnation against these motorised vehicles, which have left riders and pedestrians with all manner of injuries from deep cuts to fractures and concussions. There have also been deaths.

Popular with riders for daily commutes and deliverymen whose livelihoods depend on them, these vehicles — known as personal mobility devices (PMDs) in Singapore — include electric scooters, hoverboards and electric unicycles.

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READ: Why being hit by an e-scooter can be deadly - and a call to ban them from footpaths


image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
An e-scooter rider on a shared path. (File photo: TODAY)

Despite efforts to regulate their use, safety concerns persist and calls are mounting to keep them off footpaths and the void decks of public housing estates.

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AN ISSUE AROUND THE WORLD
These exhortations come as countries around the world grapple with the dangers posed by these vehicles.
Some have laid down speed limits, barred them from footpaths, or confined them to private land.
Germany this month banned e-scooters from pavements and France will follow suit in September.
In the United Kingdom, roads and pavements are off-limits to e-scooters. They are allowed on private property, such as parks and universities, with the landowner’s permission.
Earlier this month, Dr Lee Bee Wah, an MP for the Nee Soon Group Representation Constituency (GRC), asked in Parliament if Singapore could emulate France’s impending ban.
Allowing PMDs on footpaths shifts “more risks to the pedestrians”, said Dr Lee. She added that some of her residents feel so unsafe on footpaths that they have “even given up their daily walks”.
There are no signs, however, that a ban in Singapore is on the cards.
Dr Lam Pin Min, Senior Minister of State for Transport, said in reply to Dr Lee that, while the Government was mindful of the safety concerns, the solution was “not to ban them, but to cultivate the right culture where users ride safely and responsibly, and only at the allowed places”.
READ: Don’t complain about rules for bikes and PMDs until we’ve proven we can be responsible, a commentary


image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
Man riding a personal mobility device (PMD) across the road in Singapore. (File photo: Jeremy Long)

CALL FOR BANS
At the same sitting, there were also calls to ban PMDs from void decks of Housing and Development Board (HDB) estates.
Bukit Batok MP Murali Pillai wondered if the ground-level lift lobbies and areas around letter boxes could be designated pedestrian-only paths under the Active Mobility Act to prevent collisions involving PMDs.
The Act spells out the rules governing the use of PMDs and other equipment on public paths.
Dr Lam replied that void decks are exempted from the Act as they are “not critical for connectivity”.
Therefore, town councils — which take care of public housing estates — can impose their own rules, including barring PMDs from void decks, he said.
More than a week after Dr Lam’s comments, the 15 town councils under the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP) said that they would not rule out banning PMDs from void decks as they relook their by-laws.
On Saturday (May 25), Dr Lam provided more details, saying that the Government is working with the town councils to ban PMDs from accident-prone areas within housing estates.
When Aljunied-Hougang Town Council, run by the opposition Workers’ Party, was asked if it would consider a ban in void decks, it said that more needed to be done to educate users on riding responsibly in common areas not limited to void decks, lift lobbies and footpaths.
“We will continue to increase our educational efforts,” it said.
Meanwhile, for many pedestrians, the worries are real.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
File photo of an e-scooter.

Some had written to forums to express their concerns.
One took aim at reckless food delivery riders after a close call with one in Tampines this month. Another lamented the recklessness of PMD users who speed down footpaths, mostly at night.
On social media, stories abound of encounters with errant riders.
A GROWING MENACE
Statistics from the Land Transport Authority (LTA) show that nearly a fifth of the 3,700 active-mobility offences between May 2018 and April 2019 involved users who sped, rode recklessly or used PMDs on roads.
Under Singapore’s law, PMDs cannot be used on roads. They are allowed only on footpaths and shared pathways, such as cycling paths and park-connector networks.
In 2017 and 2018, there were 228 reported accidents involving PMDs on public paths, 196 of them resulting in injury, Transport Minister Khaw Boon Wan told Parliament last month.
One mishap left a rider dead and 32 other accidents resulted in major injuries, such as concussions and fractures, he said.
The LTA said that it has increased enforcement efforts in recent months. From February to April, it carried out about 2,260 enforcement operations and seized more than 400 devices.
The government agency said that regulations and enforcement are key to deterring irresponsible behaviour, and the public can help by providing details of where they have encountered errant users and irresponsible retailers.
For Singapore’s lawmakers, devising a solution to the problem took some years.
An Active Mobility Advisory Panel was set up in 2015 to look into rules governing the use of PMDs, bicycles and other equipment.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
LTA's Active Mobility Enforcement teams at work. (Photo: Kenneth Lim)

It submitted its recommendations in 2016, spelling out rules for users, the types of devices permitted on various pathways, and the speed, width and weight criteria for devices allowed in public spaces.
The Government accepted the proposals in full and incorporated these into the Active Mobility Act, which took effect in May last year. The panel made further recommendations in August last year after a second review.
The present measures include having owners of e-scooters register their vehicles, which must meet weight, width and speed requirements. From July, it will be an offence to ride an unregistered e-scooter on public paths. PMD users must also keep within 10kmh on footpaths and 25kmh on shared paths.
Still, Singaporeans, MPs and transport analysts have said that the measures could go further.
Here are some suggestions:
SUGGESTION #1: COMPULSORY SAFE-RIDING COURSE
Some PMD groups stressed that Singapore has already gone some way to roll out a regulatory regime and riders know the rules, but they acknowledged that educational efforts can be more widespread.
Mr Wilson Seng, president of the PMD Retailers Association of Singapore, suggested that the LTA’s Safe Riding Programme be made compulsory for all riders.
The 90-minute course on safe-riding practices takes users through a training circuit and the rules governing PMDs.
Free until the end of this year, it is conducted in community clubs and schools, for instance.
Users found riding recklessly must attend the programme and pay for it.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
Safe riding demonstrations for personal mobility devices at the Car-Free Sunday event on Feb 26, 2017 (Photo: Olivia Siong)

Mr Seng, 30, whose association represents about 25 retailers, said that users could be made to show retailers a certificate of attendance before they buy a PMD.
He noted that some retailers have already been nudging riders to attend the programme when they buy a device.
Agreeing, Mr Joseph Lum, a member of The Wheelies, a unicycle enthusiast group, said that training could be mandatory for users, leading to a licence akin to a driver’s licence.
This will make users accountable, said Mr Lum, 43, a bank vice-president.
Transport economist Walter Theseira of the Singapore University of Social Sciences (SUSS) said a primary concern with PMD users is the lack of licensing or testing.
“There are practically no minimum standards a user has to meet to be able to operate a PMD,” said Associate Professor Theseira, head of the SUSS’ Master of Management (Urban Transportation) programme.
He added that it would make sense to resolve the problem by regulating issues such as licensing.
Dr Lee, the Nee Soon GRC MP, also supported licensing e-scooter riders, who should be of a minimum age and receive training. “If they get into an accident with pedestrians, their licence will be revoked,” she added.
Right now, users must be at least 16 years old to register their e-scooters with the LTA.
Even so, Mr Pillai, the Bukit Batok MP, said that issues of concern must be identified clearly before making any programme compulsory.
For instance, he asked if the problem lies with a lack of understanding of the rules or with non-compliant equipment.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
An impounded overweight PAB weighing 36.32kg. (Photo: Land Transport Authority)

Mr Denis Koh, chairman of Big Wheel Scooters Singapore — the largest online community of e-scooter enthusiasts here with more than 26,000 members — also felt that more thought was needed before making the Safe Riding Programme compulsory.
Mr Koh, who sits on the Active Mobility Advisory Panel, said that the panel had not ruled out this possibility, but felt that it may be too early to consider the move.
“Policies should be introduced one step at a time and we’ve to see ground conditions and sentiments, and look at statistics and the data,” said Mr Koh.
Nevertheless, he proposed that recalcitrant riders be banned from owning PMDs if they re-offend and attend the Safe Riding Programme more than thrice.
READ: What happened to caution and graciousness on the roads? A commentary
In response to queries, an LTA spokesperson said that more than 46,000 people have taken part in the Safe Riding Programme, which was rolled out in February last year.
Asked if there are plans to make it compulsory, the spokesperson added: “We will look at how we can make the Safe Riding Programme even more effective.”
SUGGESTION #2: CURB PMD NUMBERS
Besides posing dangers to persons in the street, the presence of PMDs has also clogged pathways, as pedestrians, cyclists and PMD users jockey for space.
More than 70,000 e-scooters had been registered in Singapore by April 30, the LTA said previously.
SUSS urban transport analyst Park Byung Joon said that PMDs have added to the congestion in densely populated Singapore.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
An e-bike rider on a road in Singapore. (File photo: TODAY)

To control their numbers, he suggested a system similar to the Certificate of Entitlement (COE) scheme for vehicles, such as cars.
Under the system, buyers wishing to own a vehicle must bid and pay for a limited supply of COEs.
Associate Professor Park said that imposing the system on PMDs would consequently make ownership more expensive.
Still, he questioned if the legislative and administrative effort to roll out such a system for PMDs would be worthwhile. “Government resources are not unlimited,” he said.
Assoc Prof Park noted that limiting such motorised devices to persons with disabilities could also work, since they are not in large numbers.
Right now, personal mobility aids such as motorised wheelchairs and mobility scooters are allowed on footpaths and shared paths. They are bound by a 10kmh limit on public paths.
As for delivery riders, who have come under fire lately for speeding to fulfil orders, Assoc Prof Park felt that they should not be given an exception.
“If their plan is to clutter Singapore’s streets with e-scooters, that is not acceptable,” he said.
Earlier this month, retired general manager Francis Cheng Choon Fei, 64, urged the LTA to step up enforcement against reckless food delivery riders.
The Tampines resident had a close shave with a speeding GrabFood delivery rider on an electric scooter.
Mr Cheng wrote that he was nearly knocked down on May 12 along a walkway beside the Telepark building in Tampines Central.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
File photo of e-scooters used by food delivery riders. (Photo: ElectroWolf, Electric Scooters Singapore‎/ Facebook)

Associate Professor Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim, who chairs the Active Mobility Advisory Panel, said that engagements are continuing with food delivery firms to ensure that their riders have third-party liability insurance when they are at work.
Such insurance schemes allow victims to lodge claims for damages.
Food delivery business Deliveroo, for instance, rolled out free accident and injury insurance for all its riders in May last year.
“Accident insurance is applicable to riders on all vehicle types and their substitutes, while all cyclists and e-scooter riders also have access to third-party liability insurance,” Deliveroo’s spokesperson said.
Food delivery companies said that they would act against riders who break the rules.
Technology firm Grab said its food delivery arm, GrabFood, takes customer feedback seriously and will act against errant delivery-partners, including warning, suspending or banning them from the platform.
At Deliveroo, customers may report objectionable rider behaviour and the company will ensure that action is taken.
This may include terminating a rider’s supplier agreement.
“If a rider has been found to have endangered a pedestrian, we will stop working with (him). We will co-operate with the relevant authorities however possible,” said Deliveroo’s spokesperson, adding that the firm requires all riders to abide by local rules and regulations.
Both companies have training programmes for riders.
New GrabFood delivery-partners are trained in road safety rules and regulations, for instance, and are reminded regularly to abide by speed limits and wear proper safety gear. They are also given road safety tips, said Grab’s spokesperson.
Riders who join Deliveroo are required to complete an introductory road safety guidance programme.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
(Photo: Facebook/Deliveroo Riders Singapore)

The company also works with the LTA to hold Safe Riding Programmes for its riders every month, and reminds riders regularly of road safety programmes and regulations, added the Deliveroo spokesperson.
Foodpanda could not respond to this reporter queries, as its spokesperson was away from the office this week.
SUGGESTION #3: LIMITED BAN IN CERTAIN AREAS
Beyond training and curbing supply, some MPs repeated their calls for a ban on PMDs in areas with high human traffic, such as void decks of HDB blocks and town centres — a move supported by some analysts and PMD interest groups.
Dr Lee said that this would protect the young and old, and allow people to “feel safe when gathering in these areas”.
In her Nee Soon South constituency, riding is already disallowed in void decks.
Under the Nee Soon Town Council by-laws of 2013, all vehicles, except wheelchairs and toy vehicles, cannot be used in void decks, Dr Lee said.
Some PMD users have been fined, although she did not provide figures. Enforcement is done with the police.
Barriers have also been installed in areas such as lift lobbies, coffeeshops and pre-schools, so that PMD users have to dismount, noted Dr Lee.
As a result, some residents have reported feeling much safer, she said.
Mr Koh from Big Wheel Scooters said that disallowing PMDs in void decks, where there are many pillars and blind spots, was “reasonable”.
He suggested that town councils consult agencies such as the LTA to align their policies not only in void decks but their surrounds.
Enforcement can be done jointly between agencies such as the LTA and the police, he said.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
A man riding an electric scooter. (File photo: TODAY)

“We do not want some towns to enforce like this and another to enforce like that,” Mr Koh said.
Bedok, Pasir Ris and Tampines are all very near one another; do you want different rules or enforcement in every town?​
Assistant Professor Terence Fan, a transport specialist at the Singapore Management University (SMU), said that residents could take photos of errant users and report them to the authorities.
Signs or lines demarcating no-go zones should be rolled out to make the rules clear, he added.
Mr Loh Chow Kuang, a former secretary of the Public Transport Council, said that a combination of education, warning signs, significant penalties, an enforcement team, and closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras was needed to enforce such rules.
Most, if not all, lift lobbies, corridors and void decks of HDB estates already have CCTV cameras, noted Mr Loh, who is president and chief executive officer of Singapore Urban Transport International, which promotes Singapore's know-how in urban transport development and management globally.
Asked if installing more CCTV cameras would work, Mr Pillai said that the police had already fitted a number of ground-floor lift lobbies with these tools, which could be tapped for enforcement.
Mr Lum from The Wheelies said that PMDs could be restricted at certain hours from areas where many young children or elders gather, such as void decks.
Opening alternative paths will reduce PMD users’ need to use those areas, he added.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
A CCTV camera installed at a void deck of a HDB block in Singapore.

Assoc Prof Faishal said that the Government is working with town councils to explore measures that can improve residents’ safety.
Meanwhile, Dr Paul Barter, an adjunct associate professor specialising in urban transport policy at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, suggested that the authorities could identify a comprehensive network of streets where vehicle speed limits could be cut to 30kmh.
PMD and bicycle users without helmets could be allowed on these streets, creating additional safe routes for them.
These users, except children and their adult escorts, could then be banned from footpaths wherever there are streets with a 30kmh limit or cycling paths, said Dr Barter.
SUGGESTION #4: TOTAL BAN
While most people interviewed did not support an all-out ban on PMDs, one analyst and several pedestrians were in favour of such a move.
Assoc Prof Park said that, with the exception of persons with disabilities who need mobility aids to get around, the Government could give users up to a year’s notice before it rolls out a ban, to give them time to seek alternatives.
This, too, will help to calm demand for PMDs and give the authorities time to draw up a licensing scheme for persons with disabilities, he added.
Nevertheless, a ban on PMDs could mean that Singapore would be “back to square one” in its efforts to improve last-mile connections.
“We will only have walking (and) we should pay attention to walking as a more enjoyable and preferred mode,” said Assoc Prof Park.
For those wishing to ride e-scooters just for leisure, he said that a confined space meant only for such devices, for instance, could be explored.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
(Photo: To Kien)

Project manager Tan Chi Wei, 41, who urge for greater action against reckless riders, also supported a ban.
A year ago, an e-scooter rider emerging from a blind spot bumped into him at the void deck of an Yishun Avenue 4 block. He was walking his daughter, who was then three years old, to her pre-school. They were not hurt.
Still, Mr Tan acknowledged that a complete ban is hard to achieve immediately as “enforcement officers cannot be everywhere”. The devices first need to be stopped at the ports of entry before they reach the market, he said.
Mr Cheng, the Tampines resident, also prefers a ban, as many riders exercise poor judgement and “speed along walkways without a care for pedestrians”.
It is not quite possible to build more PMD lanes given Singapore’s land constraints, he said.
‘HOLISTIC APPROACH’ NEEDED
Notwithstanding calls for a ban, many interviewed for this article said that such an extreme move would be a step backwards for Singapore’s vision of a “car-lite” city.
Assoc Prof Faishal, who is also Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Social and Family Development, said that when used responsibly PMDs have an important role in Singapore’s transport landscape.
While some may argue that PMDs have no place here since the country is so well-connected, he said that those who use these vehicles as an alternative to driving, walking or taking public transport have found them “convenient, useful and environmentally friendly”.
He said that most e-scooter riders, for instance, are safe and responsible.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
A senior citizen riding a personal mobility device (PMD) in Singapore. (File photo: Gaya Chandramohan).

“We should, therefore, not go down the path of imposing a complete ban on PMDs because of a small number of people who misuse them,” said Assoc Prof Faishal.
“Instead, we should take a balanced and holistic approach to improve active-mobility safety and build this as part of the evolving transport landscape.”
Dr Barter reiterated that PMDs have greatly expanded users’ freedom to make trips that are inconvenient by public transport.
“Banning them would harm the mobility of many thousands of people who already find them useful,” he said.
Agreeing, SMU’s Asst Prof Fan said that PMDs are important in linking homes that are farther from public transport.
For instance, some workers travel from the Central Business District to their homes in Tanjong Rhu on PMDs, completely replacing public transport, he added.
For some, such as Mr Lum of The Wheelies, PMDs are a more convenient alternative to cars.
In the mornings, he parks his car on the edge of town and rides his unicycle to his Shenton Way office to avoid the traffic snarl-ups.
He also occasionally takes his eight-year-old daughter to her primary school on an electric scooter to steer clear of the peak-hour traffic, saving up to 20 minutes during the journey.
Mr Sitoh Yih Pin, chairman of the Government Parliamentary Committee for Transport, said that an outright ban at this stage would be “a little excessive”.
Apart from stricter rules and enforcement, the Potong Pasir MP said greater effort is needed to communicate with PMD riders and other road and pavement users about taking precautions and observing proper etiquette.

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
An e-bike rider in Singapore. (File photo: TODAY)

Agreeing, Mr Koh of Big Wheel Scooters said that pedestrians, too, have to play their part.
For instance, pedestrians would sometimes veer into the cycling paths at East Coast Park.
Ultimately, Mr Koh said a balance must be struck without restricting Singaporeans’ commuting options.
“We don’t want to make this a nanny state, where everything is governed by rules, rules, rules, and enforcement, enforcement, enforcement,” he added.
Source: TODAY/nr(sl)
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https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...device-e-scooter-accidents-singapore-11568106

Almost every country is going in the opposite direction. The era of the automobile is over.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...s-that-block-billion-dollar-scooter-companies
Business
U.K. to Review 184-Year-Old Law That Bans E-Scooters
By
Nate Lanxon
and
Jess Shankleman
March 19, 2019, 1:00 PM GMT+13 Updated on March 19, 2019, 9:22 PM GMT+13
  • Legalization of popular e-scooters still a long way away
  • Government pledges 90 million pounds for future public trials
800x-1.jpg

The European scooter industry has attracted more than $150 million of investment from venture capital firms over the past year.
Photographer: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images
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The banning of e-scooters on British roads is being reconsidered after the U.K. government said it was opening “the biggest regulatory review in a generation” of current mobility laws, some of which date back to 1835.


The government said Tuesday that it wanted to start the process of modernizing existing legislation, which was proving to be a barrier to innovation, and will offer 90 million pounds ($119 million) of funding for mobility trials.


“We are at a potentially pivotal moment for the future of transport, with revolutionary technologies creating huge opportunities,” British transport minister Jesse Norman said in a statement. “Through this strategy the government aims to take advantage of these innovations.”


The European scooter industry has attracted more than $150 million of investment from venture capital firms over the past year according to data compiled by Bloomberg. U.S. rivals such as Lime and Bird Rides Inc. have also raised hundreds of millions of dollars and aggressively expanded across the continent.


But in the U.K. e-scooters are classed as motor vehicles, or “powered transporters” -- subject to tax, driver licenses and insurance -- and the U.K’s Highways Act of 1835 stipulates that footpaths must be for the sole use of pedestrians. It effectively means every so-called last mile mobility company is blocked from operating anything but highly limited trials.

The emergence of new business models, such as that of Uber Technologies Inc., has also led many governments to rethink urban transport. The U.K. government cited figures it had compiled that showed traffic congestion alone cost the taxpayer about 2 billion pounds a year.
However, a spokeswoman for the government said in a statement that there were “no current plans to bring forward legislation to legalize e-scooters.” Instead, the announcement marked the start of the process of reviewing current policy to help lawmakers approve subsequent public trials, which could result in overhauled rules.
The government said it also wanted to ensure mobility services helped move the country toward zero-emission travel; that “active travel” such as walking and cycling must remain the best option for short urban journeys; and data gathered by mobility services “must be shared where appropriate.”
The latter point mirrors policy in cities such as Paris, where e-scooter operators provide regulators and officials with anonymous journey statistics to help reveal where public transit systems may be failing to accommodate demand.
Scooter startups have backed the review. Richard Corbett, head of Bird in the U.K., said the company was "delighted" by the government’s announcement. Noa Khamallah, VP of global strategy at Voi Technology AB, one of the largest European e-scooter companies, said the U.K. was a highly attractive market to try and launch in, but warned the experience of dealing with other transport startups -- such as Uber -- has made regulators nervous.
(Updates with comment in final paragraph.)
 
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