
3 minute read
tAhoE
from Aug. 2, 2018
Limes or lemons?
Lime scooters in Tahoe
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Since electric scooters were introduced by the Lime company to South Lake Tahoe, the debate over whether they are an asset or a headache to the community has escalated.
In May, Lime deposited a fleet of 250 e-scooters at locations around the city, and the zippy two-wheelers have been popular ever since. However, due to the ease with which users can rent one—just a couple of clicks on a cellphone and a low rental price of one dollar to ride—and the lack of supervision, Lime scooter-users are breaking laws, and many Tahoe locals are fed up.
While it’s true that locals are averse to change—when the neon-green Lime Bikes were introduced the previous year, the community uproar was equally intense— their concerns are not unfounded. California law stipulates that motorized scooters cannot be operated without a driver’s license, the user must be at least 18, and a helmet is required to ride. But few people are obeying those laws.
On any given day, it’s easy to spot numerous Lime scooter-users breaking laws. Groups of children careen down sidewalks, weaving past pedestrians. People double-up on the e-scooters, riding with one or more people dangling off the back, and helmet-wearing is virtually nonexistent.
Vinze said he even saw one scooter-user who didn’t know how to brake shoot across an intersection.
Keeping drunk drivers from riding the scooters is also a challenge. On June 12, an 18-year-old woman was arrested after crashing an e-scooter on Emerald Bay Road. She was arrested for driving under the influence and sustained “moderate injuries,” according to a Facebook post by the California Highway Patrol.
Lime scooters are also being abandoned all over town. They’re left on sidewalks, in front of businesses, and on walking trails.
Still, tourists and locals alike have taken to the motorized scooters.
“The kids love the scooters, and everyone gets to see a little bit more with them,” said Hollister, California, resident Mike Miller, who recently visited with his family. “But it’s difficult with all of the people and traffic around. Putting these scooters in traffic isn’t safe, and riding them on the sidewalk isn’t safe for pedestrians, so it’s kind of a toss-up of where to go.”
Miller and his family took eight scooters out for the day, calling themselves a “scooter gang.” The scooters were easy for all of the family members to acquire, although one scooter they rented had to first be retrieved from a public fountain. Ω
Mike Miller and his family all rented Lime scooters for the day in South Lake Tahoe.
PHOTO/TERRA BREEDEN





