In what couldn’t have been extra on-the-nose timing, a gaggle of native California newspapers revealed an editorial on Christmas Eve calling for the top of a beneficiant $2,000 voucher program meant to assist low-income Californians afford electrical bicycles for transportation.
The editorial was supplied by the Southern California Information Group, a set of California newspapers owned by the hedge fund Alden International Capital.
In it, the writers air quite a lot of grievances towards this system, which lately closed its first spherical of functions meant to offer round 1,500 e-bike vouchers of between US $1,750 to $2,000 every. The vouchers can be utilized to offset the worth of electrical bicycles and related gear resembling protecting gear, locks, and so on.
The primary grievance within the op-ed is that the whole variety of vouchers supplied within the first spherical was comparatively small in comparison with the massive dimension of the California e-bike market. Nevertheless, as an alternative of suggesting that the funds be elevated to assist extra Californians obtain transportation independence, as we referred to as for lately, the editorial takes the other place of suggesting that this system merely be canceled.

Subsequent, the writers bemoan a rise in electrical bicycle and electrical scooter accidents lately, suggesting that this ought to be weighed towards the advantages of serving to extra Californians afford such autos.
Nevertheless, the argument appears to conveniently overlook the truth that the overwhelming majority of such accidents aren’t attributable to e-bike riders, however slightly these riders are in reality often the victims. The precise hazard to security on roads is vehicular site visitors, i.e. automobiles and vehicles.
Moreover, many research have proven that in crashes attributable to e-bike riders, resembling when an e-bike rider hits one other bicycle owner or pedestrian, the accidents are on common significantly lighter and extra recoverable than in car-related crashes.
If the objective was to guard Californians, then as an alternative of firmly clutching their pearls, maybe the editorial writers ought to have urged a discount in using automobiles and vehicles, not a discount in e-bike vouchers.
The op-ed even goes on to lament the variety of youngsters driving electrical bicycles in California, although admits additional on that youngsters aren’t eligible to obtain vouchers as a part of California’s e-bike incentive program.

Electrek’s Take
California’s e-bike incentive program is actually removed from good. We even mentioned a lot of its shortcomings final week. However this system’s essence is to do factor—utilizing public tax cash to profit the general public. The answer ought to be to enhance this system, to not take away it. And the easy reality of the matter is that almost all people who find themselves vehemently towards this system are those that don’t straight profit from it, even when they fail to comprehend that they’ll in the end not directly profit.
Electrical bicycles are one of the crucial cost-effective methods to offer transportation independence to marginalized and low-income teams. Nevertheless it’s extra than simply that. They’re additionally one of the best ways to get folks out of automobiles and scale back site visitors for everybody. Even ignoring the long-term environmental results associated to lowering the impacts of local weather change, e-bikes are uniquely able to making a bigger affect on air high quality at the moment by serving to to take away sources of emissions from a car’s manufacturing during its lifetime use and even to its eventual disposal/recycling. When somebody rides an e-bike as an alternative of taking a automotive, taxi, or bus, everybody’s lungs profit.
Positive, the California program isn’t good. But when a media group owned by a rich hedgefund and catering to a well-to-do readership doesn’t prefer it, then which means it’s most likely doing one thing useful to individuals who really need it. That’s the form of world I wish to stay in, no less than for so long as it’s nonetheless habitable.