banner
Home / News / Teens Are Dying on E
News

Teens Are Dying on E

Aug 04, 2023Aug 04, 2023

Advertisement

Supported by

California Today

Electric bicycles are convenient, affordable and popular, but on busy roads built for cars, their speed can be dangerous, especially for young riders.

By Soumya Karlamangla

In late June, Encinitas, a beach town in north San Diego County, declared a state of emergency for what initially seemed to be a surprising reason: e-bike safety.

In the span of a few days, two teenage boys riding electric bicycles had collided with cars. One of them, a 15-year-old heading to shot-putting practice, died. “We’re all grieving,” the town’s mayor, Tony Kranz, told NBC 7 at the time.

Encinitas joined a small but growing number of cities grappling with the impact of the booming e-bike industry, which could sell a million e-bikes in the U.S. this year. The bikes have been lauded for beginning to shift the transportation system away from cars and toward a relatively low-cost option for getting around, but they’ve also raised concerns about rider safety on roads congested with traffic. Carlsbad, about 10 miles north of Encinitas, declared its own state of emergency last summer after collisions involving bicycles or e-bikes had more than doubled since 2019.

My colleague Matt Richtel recently tackled the question of how safe e-bikes really are, especially for young riders. Several teenagers, in California, Oregon and other places, have died recently in e-bike accidents, he reported.

There’s solid data that teenagers tend to have more road accidents than adults. Drivers between the ages of 16 and 19 are three times as likely to be killed in a crash as drivers who are at least 20, and bicyclists between 10 and 24 have the highest rate of emergency room visits for crashes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Handling e-bikes can also be challenging for inexperienced riders. Many e-bikes can travel faster than the speed limit of 20 miles per hour that is legal for teenagers in most states, and some can be made to approach 70 m.p.h.

“Driving is the most dangerous thing that most of us will do in our lives on a regular basis,” said Matt, who won a Pulitzer Prize in 2010 for his reporting in The New York Times on distracted driving. “Now we’re adding in a product that adds speed and weight to bikes, with no training, no license, no registration, in a very, very risky traffic environment.”

These problems have come to a head in Southern California, where the weather invites year-round bicycling and traffic congestion abounds. Matt, who is based in Boulder, Colo., initially noticed teenagers in his city racing by on e-bikes, often without wearing helmets. When he arrived in Orange County to report on the issue for his article, he told me, he realized that what he’d seen in Colorado had been only the tip of the iceberg.

The minimal regulation of e-bikes has alarmed some policymakers and law enforcement officials. The California Legislature is considering a bill that would prohibit people younger than 12 from using e-bikes and would “state the intent of the Legislature to create an e-bike license program with an online written test and a state-issued photo identification for those persons without a valid driver’s license.”

“It’s not like a bicycle,” Sgt. Jeremy Collis of the San Diego County Sheriff’s Office told Matt. “But the laws are treating it like any bicycle.”

For more:

Is it an e-bike or a motorcycle for children?

Batteries in e-bikes and other devices are sparking fires in San Francisco.

The California Republican Party approved a plan to award all of its presidential delegates to a candidate who wins a majority of the vote in the state’s primary on March 5, a hurdle that Donald Trump could clear, The Associated Press reports.

The average winter wave off the coast of California is a foot taller than it was in 1970, an oceanographer at the University of California, San Diego, has found, according to The San Diego Union-Tribune.

A Los Angeles County Superior Court ruled that the kombucha company GT’s Living Foods had subjected its workers to “abusive and disturbing working conditions,” The Los Angeles Times reports.

Data from Zillow suggests that the median listing price for a house in Los Angeles will soon be more than $1 million, The Los Angeles Times reports.

California’s largest wildfire this year has consumed more than 77,000 acres of the Mojave National Preserve and has crossed into Nevada.

The largest dam removal project in the nation’s history is underway along the California-Oregon border, where workers are teaming up with Native American tribes to plant nearly 17 billion seeds to restore the Klamath River and the surrounding land, The Associated Press reports.

A toxic red tide has returned to San Francisco Bay a year after an algae bloom killed thousands of fish in the area, The Mercury News reports.

Today’s tip comes from Peg Stephan:

“Anyone visiting California should consider driving up Highway 395 from Death Valley to Yosemite. It’s a desolate yet beautiful landscape that includes Mount Whitney and Mono Lake. Just north of Lone Pine is the preserved Japanese internment camp of Manzanar, a site every American should visit.”

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to [email protected]. We’ll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

For decades, Bart’s Books in Ojai has beckoned to literature lovers, The Los Angeles Times reports.

The shop feels almost magical. It’s an outdoor bookstore that has operated since 1964. You can buy books at any hour of the day, whether the store is technically open or not — just select one of the books that line the shop’s exterior walls and, working off the honor system, put your money in the box.

“I am always amazed as to how far some people travel just to experience this unique outdoor bookstore,” Jamie Fleming, the chief executive of the Ojai Valley Chamber of Commerce, told The Los Angeles Times. “Bart’s Books is the most circled destination on our Ojai visitor’s map when we are suggesting places for people to see in the Ojai Valley.”

And people come from all over to browse the shop’s shelves. “A hitchhiker once came in and said he found us from a Bart’s bookmark someone gave him in the Midwest,” Jack Randolph, a longtime employee at the bookstore, told The Los Angeles Times in 2004.

Thanks for reading. I’ll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

P.S. Here’s today’s Mini Crossword.

Briana Scalia contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at [email protected].

Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox.

Soumya Karlamangla is the lead writer for the California Today newsletter, where she provides daily insights and updates from her home state. More about Soumya Karlamangla

Advertisement

For more:Southern CaliforniaCentral CaliforniaNorthern CaliforniaTell us about your favorite places to visit in California.Thanks for reading. I’ll be back tomorrow. — Soumya