Nehmo
10 kW
From what I've read, mine is a minor fight compared to the e-bike wars in NYC and Shenzhen. I'm the (almost) only combination e-bike & bus-rider in the Kansas City metro. Nonetheless, I'm in it, and the fight is on.
(I should inform the readers that I have the experience of having lived in and rode public transportation in a few North American and European cities. But KC is the first place I've had an e-bike.)
Bus drivers here in KC are crabby in general. They are even more crabby toward someone with a bike, any bike. And e-bikes, they hate, even though they may have never seen one before. My explanation is that e-bikes are different, and anything different, or anti conformist, is subject to attack by weak people. These people are inferior socially-emotionally-intellectually and are always looking for someone to bully as a means to compensate. If they have authority, and they can exercise it, they'll do it in an negative-enforcement way because they will look upon their action as a ego victory that makes them feel a little less inferior. Such is the psychology.
And drivers always get the backing of their supervisors when dealing with riders. It's a we-them attitude, and a rider is more like an inmate than a customer. They basically threaten to throw you off the bus or not allow you to board. This may be a serious setback for a rider with no recourse.
In any case, here in KC, there doesn't appear to be a published rule against e-bikes on the rack of a bus.(There is a video on Kcata.org saying non-motorized bikes can go on the rack, but that's the closest I can find to a rule.) There also doesn't seem to be a rule, at least not a published one, regarding the transportation of batteries. Drivers have used both these "rules" to harass me.
I intend to deal with this issue somehow. It's going to have to be above the driver-supervisor level, and for ammunition, I'm looking for a list of city transportation services that allow bikes and maybe, specifically, e-bikes.
In Kansas City (Missouri and Kansas) the company is http://www.kcata.org/ Bikes are begrudgingly allowed on 2-place racks. Whether an e-bike is allowed depends on the driver. Younger white drivers (that's the way it is) may allow a bike on the bus when the racks are full. I've never seen a non-white driver or an old driver make this exception. Many smaller buses don't have racks.
What about the rest of the world? Please add your city and it's public transportation policy regarding bikes and e-bikes.
`~- Nehmo
(I should inform the readers that I have the experience of having lived in and rode public transportation in a few North American and European cities. But KC is the first place I've had an e-bike.)
Bus drivers here in KC are crabby in general. They are even more crabby toward someone with a bike, any bike. And e-bikes, they hate, even though they may have never seen one before. My explanation is that e-bikes are different, and anything different, or anti conformist, is subject to attack by weak people. These people are inferior socially-emotionally-intellectually and are always looking for someone to bully as a means to compensate. If they have authority, and they can exercise it, they'll do it in an negative-enforcement way because they will look upon their action as a ego victory that makes them feel a little less inferior. Such is the psychology.
And drivers always get the backing of their supervisors when dealing with riders. It's a we-them attitude, and a rider is more like an inmate than a customer. They basically threaten to throw you off the bus or not allow you to board. This may be a serious setback for a rider with no recourse.
In any case, here in KC, there doesn't appear to be a published rule against e-bikes on the rack of a bus.(There is a video on Kcata.org saying non-motorized bikes can go on the rack, but that's the closest I can find to a rule.) There also doesn't seem to be a rule, at least not a published one, regarding the transportation of batteries. Drivers have used both these "rules" to harass me.
I intend to deal with this issue somehow. It's going to have to be above the driver-supervisor level, and for ammunition, I'm looking for a list of city transportation services that allow bikes and maybe, specifically, e-bikes.
In Kansas City (Missouri and Kansas) the company is http://www.kcata.org/ Bikes are begrudgingly allowed on 2-place racks. Whether an e-bike is allowed depends on the driver. Younger white drivers (that's the way it is) may allow a bike on the bus when the racks are full. I've never seen a non-white driver or an old driver make this exception. Many smaller buses don't have racks.
What about the rest of the world? Please add your city and it's public transportation policy regarding bikes and e-bikes.
`~- Nehmo