mjr
Comfy armchair to one person & a plank to the next
- Location
- mostly Norfolk, sometimes Somerset
There are no trials covering Thetford. Knowing where local trials are was part of the reason why I chose a reasonably local news report.Link is from July last year, 2021.
For their action in going the wrong way down a one way street(See previous post mentioning going against the traffic flow, and being over the limit. No mention of if it was involved in one of the trials or private.
That seems like a big presumption without evidence. (Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence...)No mention of the vehicle being seized either, so presumably it was, on the road legally being used in an illegal manner.
Where did you get that from? The MIB's written evidence to Parliament says "An e-scooter is a motor vehicle under the RTA definition". Various lawyers have also published more recent statements saying things like E-scooters fall within the legal definition of a ‘motor vehicle’Outside of the trials, they have no legal status on UK roads.* You can't MOT, insure or get a seperate last licence to cover it's legal use on the road. Don't believe me, try and come back with the results.
*That's the answer as given by the MIB, who have access to better legal teams than you or me.
Later MIB statements say they are "bearing the costs for compensating victims who are hit by e-scooters" and "this EU law requirement remains in UK law until the government legislates to remove it." I don't care if they're not covering it under schemes named Uninsured Driver or Untraceable Driver: unless something has changed, they are covering it and the insuring drivers among us are paying for it.
That's just another law users are breaking. If they're willing to commit more serious offences such as riding without registration, insurance, MOT and so on, does it really surprise anyone they also break the motorcycle helmet law?Edited to ask you
If, as you claim, they are electric motorbikes, why aren't helmets being worn by the users? Motorbike riders are legally required to wear one.
If you mean why users of the trial schemes aren't wearing helmets, that's because they're not required to since The Electric Scooter Trials and Traffic Signs (Coronavirus) Regulations and General Directions 2020 amended the Motor Cycles (Protective Helmets) Regulations 1998 to exclude sub-500w/55kg/15.5mph non-pedalled two-wheel-in-line one-person handlebar-controlled fail-safe-power vehicles used in trials.
Please, if you contradict this, offer links or at least decent citations, instead of waving.
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