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Now let's see how much of this BS the California mass media decides to run without questioning.
I'm not optimistic.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bYDpYwbs1o4
Scott Mace
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You can see the bill here: AB 1942.
~ Alan
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---------- Forwarded message ---------
Thank you for sharing the talking points and for the continued work to address unsafe high-speed electric devices. We strongly agree that e-motos and out-of-class products misrepresented as e-bikes are the real issue and should be regulated as motor vehicles.
From the NBDA perspective, our primary concern is protecting legitimate bicycles, specifically Class 1 and Class 2 products, and ensuring they remain clearly and defensibly outside the scope of motor vehicle regulation. In our view, the so-called “Class” framework is also what initially put the bicycle industry in a difficult position. Attempting to defend access and usage by walking through class definitions has proven confusing to policymakers and the public, and increasingly ineffective.
What is defensible and logical is grounding policy in the federal definition of a bicycle as established by the CPSC under 16 CFR 1512.2. That definition provides a clear, nationally recognized foundation that distinguishes bicycles from motor vehicles in a way that is far easier to explain and justify than nuanced class distinctions.
We also believe the deferment of Class 3 regulation, and leaving its treatment to individual jurisdictions, was a mistake. That approach has directly contributed to the fragmented landscape we are now trying to navigate. Without a clear, understandable distinction between Class 1 and Class 2 bicycles and all out-of-class products (including e-motos), public sentiment will continue to move toward broad, uniform restrictions on all e-bikes. Anything less risks solving nothing while harming safe, compliant bicycle use.
While we understand the decision to set aside the bicycle definition and Class 3 in the current draft policy discussion, we are concerned this will make it increasingly difficult to keep bicycles, as defined in 16 CFR 1512.2, out of the proposed California legislation altogether. That outcome would have serious unintended consequences for specialty retailers, riders, and communities that rely on bicycles as accessible transportation.
Looking ahead, we would like to see some coordinated effort among stakeholders to have Class 3 formally acknowledged and incorporated into the federal definition of an e-bike. This is, in our view, the safest route to providing optimal protection for Class 3 products while ensuring clarity for policymakers and the public.
NBDA strongly supports efforts that:
Clearly protect Class 1 and Class 2 bicycles as bicycles
Draw a bright, enforceable line between bicycles and out-of-class electric devices
Regulate e-motos and high-powered electric vehicles as motor vehicles, not bicycles
Work toward federal recognition of Class 3 e-bikes as part of a unified, defensible framework
We appreciate the opportunity to stay engaged in this discussion and would welcome continued collaboration to ensure the result is both workable and sustainable for retailers, riders, and policymakers alike.
Best regards,
Heather Mason
Executive Director, National Bicycle Dealers Association
Phone:
949-540-8020 | Email:
hea...@NBDA.com
Web: www.NBDA.com
3972 Barranca Pkwy, Ste J-423, Irvine, CA 92606
Are you an NBDA Member?
Please provide your feedback on Membership via this short survey.
PeopleForBikes shares concerns about unsafe, high-speed electric devices operating on public roads and bike infrastructure, particularly those marketed to youth. However, this proposal regulates low-speed electric bicycles instead of addressing the real issue, high-powered electric motorcycles (“e-motos”) being misrepresented as e-bikes. This is a missed opportunity and over regulates safe, compliant e-bikes.
PeopleForBikes opposes registration and license plate requirements for e-bikes.
The three-class system was developed to clearly define low-speed electric bicycles as bicycles, not motor vehicles, and to ensure they are regulated similarly to traditional bikes. Legal e-bikes are already subject to strict limits on motor power, speed,
battery safety, and where they may be operated.
Imposing registration and license plate requirements will not meaningfully improve safety. E-bikes are lighter and slower than motor vehicles, and crashes are far less severe. This proposal distracts from the primary source of traffic fatalities, which are large, fast motor vehicles, while risking unintended consequences, including discouraging e-bike use and shifting trips back to cars.
Registration requirements would also increase costs and barriers for riders who rely on e-bikes as affordable transportation, disproportionately impacting lower-income communities and potentially increasing unnecessary enforcement interactions.
Additionally, further regulating Class 2 and 3 e-bikes will not address youth misuse. Many of the devices causing concern exceed legal e-bike limits and are not e-bikes at all.
If the Legislature’s goal is to address safety and youth access, the focus should be on e-motos rather than e-bikes.
A better approach is to regulate high-powered e-motos as motor vehicles
Clarify that any device exceeding 750 watts or 20 mph on motor power alone, or designed to be modified to do so, is not an electric bicycle and cannot be sold or labeled as one
Treat high-speed electric devices as motor vehicles subject to registration, license plates, operator licensing, and insurance requirements
If registration is warranted, it should apply to motor vehicles, not bicycles.
PeopleForBikes and a coalition of advocates is actively working on legislation to address high speed mobility devices while preserving legal low speed e-bikes. We invite Assembly Member Bauer Kahan to be a part of this effort and are happy to meet on this issue.
Hello Ash,
Thanks for the quick reply, information, and efforts!
Heather Mason from the National Bicycle Dealers Association would be the appropriate contact to share talking points with. I would also highly suggest collaborating with my organization (the other statewide bicycle advocacy organization) CABO | California Association of Bicycling Organizations. Jim Baross - CABO President, CyclingSavvy Instructor, League LCI and Coach (former League Board Member) was cc'd. Your lobbyist probably knows our highly respected lobbyist's, the Lombardos.
As far as the e-moto concern, listed below is what I recently shared with fellow bicycling colleagues in California and beyond:
2026 and parts of 2025 are going to be an interesting and challenging year for conventional but certainly electric bicycles (laws, usage, education)! New CA laws going into effect, like:
- Bill Text - AB-875 Vehicle removal. - a good tool for law enforcement.
- Bill Text - SB-586 Off-highway electric motorcycles. - finally! Defines for the first time OHEMs. Note: From what know, illegal electric motorcycles -- like Sur-Rons I believe -- do not have VINs (PINs or other identifiers) so they cannot be registered as OHEMs in at least California.
- Bill Text - SB-1271 Electric bicycles, powered mobility devices, and storage batteries. - various sections operative 2025, 2026, or 2028
- California Code, VEH 312.5. - effective January 1, 2025: A NEW Subsection (d) which states:
(d) The following vehicles are not electric bicycles under this code and shall not be advertised, sold, offered for sale, or labeled as electric bicycles:(1) A vehicle with two or three wheels powered by an electric motor that is intended by the manufacturer to be modifiable to attain a speed greater than 20 miles per hour on motor power alone or to attain more than 750 watts of power.(2) A vehicle that is modified to attain a speed greater than 20 miles per hour on motor power alone or to have motor power of more than 750 watts.(3) A vehicle that is modified to have its operable pedals removed.
Note: Unfortunately, this leaves a big gap between legal electric bicycles (CVC 312.5) and now off-highway electric motorcycles (CVC 436.1)! Therefore, WHAT type of electric "vehicle" are they?
Clint Sandusky
Riverside (CA) Community College District PD (cpl., ret.)
CA POST-certified Bicycle Patrol Instructor (30 yrs.)
Cycling in Traffic Expert & Educator
E-Bike Expert, Educator, Instructor, Author & Consultant
CABO, District 8 Rep.
(951) 906-1468
On Fri, Feb 13, 2026 at 9:16 AM Ash Lovell <a...@peopleforbikes.org> wrote:Hi Clint and all,
Thanks for flagging, we heard about this from our CA lobbyist this morning.
We are already working with our lobbyist, CalBike, SAFE and SFA in CA to push back against the bill. We're drafting talking points that explain why PFB and our partners oppose license/registration and our recommendations instead. I’m happy to share those talking points with this group when they’re ready.
We're also working with Sen. Blakespear's office (who is intro'ing the model e-moto legislation) to push for her (our) solution instead of this new bill.
I'll keep you posted as we learn more.
Best,Ash
Ash Lovell, Ph.D.
Vice President of Government Relations
PeopleForBikesP.O. Box 2359 / Boulder, CO 80306
On Fri, Feb 13, 2026 at 9:02 AM Clinton Sandusky <clint.s...@gmail.com> wrote:Good morning, everyone,
Here we go again (the New Jersey effect?!)!
Based on information received from a colleague with our CABO | California Association of Bicycling Organizations, CA Assemblymember Rebecca Bauer-Kahan, joined by Walnut Creek Mayor Kevin Wilk and Dr. Craig De Vinney, will announce the E-Bike Accountability Act legislation requiring registration and license plates for Class 2 and Class 3 e-bikes to strengthen safety and accountability across California.
Scheduled for Feb. 13, 2026, at 2:30 p.m. (PST) to be broadcast live on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bYDpYwbs1o4
As of the date/time of this email, the bill has not yet been introduced, as shown below:
Clint Sandusky
Ash Lovell, Ph.D.
Vice President of Government Relations