T3G
Senior Member
I think that's splitting hairs. At the end of a day, if a train burns down and people are injured or worse, whether it came at the hands of an e-bike or e-wheelchair doesn't really matter. "At least the thing that killed your family member was an electric wheelchair" is cold comfort to someone who's grieving.We made legislative allowances for accessibility for otherwise prohibited practices all the time - think service animals.
AoD
Banning is a feel good, knee jerk reaction, but it doesn't really make the problem go away. There are loads of reasons why someone who uses an e-bike might be compelled to carry it on transit - perhaps they biked into town in the morning but were hit by a torrential rainstorm in the afternoon; perhaps their bike ran out of charge; perhaps they sustained an injury, or their bike got damaged or vandalized; perhaps they had to run an errand after work that involved picking up an oversize package - do we want to exclude them from using the service because we don't want to do the hard thing and solve a problem?