|
|
|
|
|
by anorwell
1287 days ago
|
|
The article says: > When the Australian cities of Melbourne and Brisbane mandated helmet use, it actually made streets less safe for cyclists. The number of people riding bikes dropped precipitously, which reduced the “Safety in Numbers” effect. This links to [1], but this paper doesn't seem to support the assertion at all. > These results help explain why two of the four companies operating in Sydney decided to leave the city in July 2018: the low rate of trips-per-day per bike, a high level of vandalism, and the threat of heavy fines from councils made the system one without potential for financial profit. While dockless bikesharing appears to be successful in many cities globally, the factors leading to its success have not been replicated in Sydney to date. There's no mention of helmets, and the paper is specifically about bike sharing programs, not biking in general. [1] https://findingspress.org/article/7615-stationless-in-sydney... |
|
It also claims that "MHLs are the main reason for the failure of Australia’s two public bike hire schemes. Brisbane and Melbourne are the only two cities in the world with helmet laws to have attempted public bike hire. While schemes in places like Paris, London, Montreal, Dublin and Washington DC have flourished, Brisbane and Melbourne have amongst the lowest usage rates in the world."
Presumably in editing, the article's two mentions of cycle hire schemes got confused.
[1] https://www.aph.gov.au/DocumentStore.ashx?id=173283f8-7b1c-4...