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MINUTES OF THE PUBLIC SAFETY COMMITTEE <br /> September 23, 2019 <br /> East Conference Room <br /> Present: Councilmembers Bullock, O'Malley, & Litten <br /> Also Present: Assistant Law Director Swallow, Katelyn Milius and David Baas of the Planning <br /> Department <br /> Call to Order: 6:38 p.m. <br /> AGENDA <br /> Approve minutes from the September 9, 2019 Public Safety Committee meeting. <br /> Councilman Litten made a motion to approve the minutes from the September 91h meeting of the <br /> Public Safety Committee, which was seconded by Councilman O'Malley. All members voted in <br /> favor. Motion passed. <br /> Communication from Director Sylvester regarding Cuyahoga County Bicycle& Scooter <br /> Share Program (Referred to Public Safety Committee 9/3/19) <br /> Chairman Bullock shared a handout that mapped out his vision for the discussion regarding the <br /> bicycle and scooter share program over 2 committee meetings. In the first meeting, the chairman <br /> expressed a desire to review the traffic code for potential updates and big picture issues and in <br /> the second he sought to have a detailed discussion on what rules an e-scooter vendor can operate <br /> by and would like to invite vendors to the meeting. Members expressed their concerns regarding <br /> the safety of e-scooters and how they would interact with Lakewood's built environment and <br /> traffic. Members raised the need for a moratorium on e-scooters in Lakewood and discussed the <br /> logistics of establishing one with Assistant Law Director Swallow. Some members recalled <br /> Council President O'Leary requesting a motion for one at the last regular meeting of Council. <br /> Chairman Bullock focused discussion on the use cases and 3 failure items listed on the handout <br /> he provided, some including scooter-pedestrian conflicts on sidewalks, motor vehicle conflicts, <br /> and parking clutter. Councilman O'Malley expressed interest in examining Columbus data on <br /> scooters as they have been put into use there for the past year or two. There were questions over <br /> the frequency of accidents, any strategies to mitigate accidents, and whether insurance covers an <br /> accident. Councilman Litten urged all parties to get in touch with Ohio City Inc., who could <br /> provide local input on how scooters have been implemented in Cleveland. <br /> David Baas gave a presentation on e-bikes and scooters. The presentation included information <br /> on shared micro-mobility, gave national trends along with data from Portland, Austin, and a <br /> UCLA study. Scooters are in over 100 cities in the nation. There is a two-pronged approach in <br /> managing scooters: 1) devices need to be regulated whether there is a transportation system in <br /> place or not and the traffic code can be used to do that 2) system controls can be utilized through <br /> a vendor and its use of technology. Members questioned if people are acquiring these vehicles <br /> for private use and what their cost is. It was indicated that they are being acquired and the cost is <br /> only a couple hundred dollars. The scooter sharing industry started taking off in 2010 and they <br />