LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Keep e-scooters out of our parks

Posted

To the editor:

To the city’s transportation department: Stay out of our parks!

Two months after New York state legalized e-bicycles and e-scooters, the city council created a pilot program in June 2020 for the operation of shared electric scooters to exist for a duration of no less than one year, and no more than two years.

Earlier this year, DOT announced the East Bronx as a pilot zone and selected three companies — Bird, Lime and Veo — to participate in the pilot starting with 3,000 e-scooters. Why DOT chose an area that lacks bike infrastructure is so confusing.

DOT proposed 24 e-scooter corrals — not fully installed as of yet, according to the agency — along a stretch of Pelham Parkway. E-scooters are allowed on streets with speed limits no greater than 30 mph and usable bike lanes provided. They can’t be ridden on sidewalks.

Pelham Parkway has no bike lanes, and the speed limit was recently reduced from 30 mph to 25 mph on Pelham Parkway from White Plains Road to Stillwell Avenue since it was identified as one of the roadways for having some of the highest rates of crashes in the city. This should come as no surprise to many of the residents along Pelham Parkway who have not only heard these crashes, but witnessed many of them as well.

So where can these e-scooters be ridden legally and safely, I and others asked DOT. Their response was that Pelham Parkway has a greenway that is accessible to bicyclists, and hence e-scooters.

Our greenway path is accessible to bicyclists alongside the pedestrians, runners, walkers, jogging, children playing, mothers with strollers, senior citizens, pet parents with their dogs, and the disabled community as well. Our path is not dedicated nor reserved for bicyclists, and is unmarked for solely such use.

Our unmarked path measures between 9 and 10 feet wide, and is too narrow for an e-scooter to travel safely side-by-side within the path. As well, there is no signage or lights directing to yield or stop for pedestrians crossing through the parkway from north to south, or vice versa, on several of the crossing paths. Instead, there are yellow signs in our greenway prohibiting the use of motorized or electric bikes, scooters and ATVs.

Friends of Pelham Parkway, founded in 2017, is made up of residents and volunteers who care for our greenway through advocacy, cleanups, tree care and planting. Our concerns are the insufficient number of park enforcement patrol officers and their inability to enforce since they can’t chase after these motorized or electric bikes or scooters without endangering others on the greenway.

Also, we can’t support a pilot that has not been carefully planned, had no community outreach, no announced launch date, and where several questions remain unanswered. DOT should know these answers before the pilot zone and corrals were chosen.

The parks department prohibits the use of e-scooters on the Pelham Parkway greenway, and I don’t expect them to change the rules to permit the pilot to operate in their area. Parks may not listen to our concerns, but they are risk averse due to potential liability. It is parks — not the three companies participating in this pilot program — that will be held responsible and liable when — and not if — an accident occurs resulting in severe injuries, or even death.

As an environmental group that advocates for equity in park maintenance and environmental justice in the park’s tree planting, we support alternative transportation.

E-scooters have a short lifespan, are disposable and not recyclable, which makes them not that eco-friendly.

Instead of DOT following venture capitalist-fueled toys, they should expand Citi Bike that prioritized the wealthiest parts of our city. Also, as a county that is the unhealthiest in the entire state, we should encourage physical activity instead of displacing people off the parkway with e-scooters.

In short, we ask DOT to focus on making our streets safe for pedestrians, cyclists and drivers, and keep the problems on the streets out of our greenway.

Roxanne Delgado

The author is founder of Friends of Pelham Parkway.

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Roxanne Delgado,

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