Parisians vote overwhelmingly to ban e-scooters from French capital

Paris: A big majority of Parisians have voted to ban electric scooters from the streets of the French capital, in a non-binding referendum that city authorities have said they would follow.

The ban won between 85.77 per cent and 91.77 per cent of the votes in the 20 Paris districts that published results, according to the City of Paris website on what was billed as a rare “public consultation” and prompted long queues at ballot boxes around the city.

The e-scooters were introduced in Paris in 2018.Credit:Getty

“I preferred to vote against, because in Paris it’s a mess,” railway worker Ibrahim Beutchoutak, 47, said. “The way it’s organised, the danger that it creates in Paris, the visual pollution, it’s not good.”

Many cities worldwide are tightening regulations on e-scooters, limiting the number of operators as well as speed and where they can park, although the Victorian government announced an expansion of Melbourne’s e-scooter trial last week.

In 2021, 24 people died in scooter-related accidents in France, including one in Paris. Last year, Paris registered 459 accidents with e-scooters and similar vehicles, including three fatal ones.

“In my work, we see a lot of road accidents caused by scooters, so we really see the negative effects,” general physician Audrey Cordier, 38, said after voting against the scooters.

Electric scooters accessed through smartphone apps have operated in Paris since 2018, but following complaints about their anarchic deployment, Paris in 2020 cut the number of operators to three.

“I preferred to vote against, because in Paris it’s a mess.”

It gave them a three-year contract, required that scooters’ speed be capped at 20 km/h and imposed designated scooter parking areas. The current contracts will run until September.

Operators had offered further regulations, including checking users were over 18, fixing licence plates so police could identify traffic offenders and limiting to one passenger.

On Sunday, operators such as Tier and Lime sent free voucher codes to users to encourage them to vote against the ban.

Some voters said they would have rather had tighter regulations than an outright ban.

“I voted for [the scooters] because I’m against the rather binary choice we’re given in this referendum. I don’t want scooters to do whatever they want on pavements, but banning them is not the priority,” Pierre Waeckerle, 35, said.

Reuters

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