As I'm sure you know, RACV-ALTA has just signed a contract to bring Bixi-style street rental bikes to Melbourne.
Bixis come from Montreal (The word is a combination of bike and taxi) where 5000 of the bikes have just finished a very successful summer, with millions of rides taken. These sturdy bikes are now spreading around the world. There will soon be Bixis in Boston, 6000 Bixis in London and, yes, 600 in Melbourne, well, maybe.
I found out there's a stumbling block. At the Melbourne Bike Futures Conference, where ALTA made a presentation, it was revealed that Bike Share has never been set up successfully in a city with compulsory helmets.
Why is that? The near impossibility of automatically dispensing a legal, sterilized, helmet on the street along with the bike.
In the movie I've made at the conference, viewable on my blog, And So To Bike,
Http://datillo.wordpress.com/ Alison Cohen, presnting for ALTA, candidly admits the difficulties they face because of helmets .
There is no doubt for me that Bike Share would be a huge plus for any city, and it's no surprise that its speading around the world like a bushfire, despite the much publicised vandalism problems of the 30,000 Velibs in Paris.
. Bike share decongests cities, bike share brings in a whole new class of riders, people who've never thought of using a bike for transport before, now try doing so for free, and love it. (The first half hour is usually free)
Most importantly, bike share is making cycling safer, both by upping the number of bikes on the roads, and by bringing in the sit-up-and -beg style of bike (All bike share schemes use this type of bike)
Whilst they are solid, slow, and heavy, Bixis are safer because you see better, and are seen better. This is, after all, the way 89% of Eurpeans who are using bikes as transport, ride. And they, even without helmets, since it's always a choice in Europe, have less serious accidents than we do.
How ironic it would be if the only thing our Federal Govenrment has ever done for bike safety, namely bring in the compulsory helmet law, proves to be the one thing which prevents this far greater, in my opinion, contribution to safety, from hitting our roads.
In any case, true safety under the wheels, not on the head as they Dutch with their 29,000 kms, of bike ways and tiny accident rate, prove
Anyway, this is a drama which is just beginning ,and one we'll all be watching with great interest, I'm sure. Mike Rubbo