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Newslink January 2022

Motor Schools Association of Great Britain, driving instructors, ADIs, driver training and testing, road safety

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Opponents against the use of e-scooters<br />

have been given more ammunition after<br />

a leading charity launched a campaign<br />

against their introduction, while figures<br />

for a major city hospital highlighted the<br />

extent of their involvement in injuries.<br />

As revealed in December’s <strong>Newslink</strong>,<br />

for the first time in September 2021, the<br />

DfT published statistics showing the<br />

number of casualties in collisions<br />

involving e-scooters. The figures, which<br />

cover rental and privately-owned<br />

e-scooters, show that during 2020 there<br />

were 460 collisions involving e-scooters,<br />

resulting in 484 casualties.<br />

But figures are also now available for<br />

the 12-months to June 2021, and these<br />

show 931 casualties – a near doubling.<br />

The DfT acknowledges that it is “not<br />

yet able to fully assess the quality of the<br />

e-scooter data captured, in terms of<br />

consistency of recording practice for<br />

e-scooters across different police forces,<br />

so data should be treated with caution.”<br />

The figures are ‘drastically’ underreported,<br />

the National Federation of the<br />

Blind UK (NFBUK) has said. The<br />

advocacy group has launched a<br />

vociferous campaign against e-scooters.<br />

In a new campaign podcast, titled<br />

‘E-scooters: the dangers they pose for<br />

visually impaired people’, the NFBUK<br />

points to statistics published by the<br />

Parliamentary Advisory Council for<br />

Transport Safety (PACTS) as part of an<br />

ongoing research project to assess their<br />

safety. The project is gathering data of<br />

casualties involving private e-scooters<br />

(riders and other road users) collected<br />

from the media, police forces and at<br />

least one major trauma centre.<br />

The figures show that at three A&E<br />

departments in Bristol there were<br />

90 e-scooter-related injuries<br />

in four weeks in May-June<br />

2021 – equating to 3.2<br />

patients a day. However,<br />

DfT data shows that Avon<br />

and Somerset Police only<br />

reported 21 e-scooter<br />

casualties for the sixmonth<br />

period <strong>January</strong>-June<br />

2021.<br />

Moreover, nearly 20 per cent<br />

For all the latest news, see www.msagb.com<br />

‘Terrifying’ rise in e-scooter crashes<br />

of those who attended one the Bristol<br />

A&E departments suffered head injuries<br />

– with three patients sustaining severe<br />

traumatic brain injury, intracranial<br />

haemorrhage or a skull fracture.<br />

Sarah Gayton, street access campaign<br />

coordinator at the NFBUK, said: “These<br />

figures are terrifying.<br />

“It appears the price for the e-scooter<br />

trial in Bristol – and allowing the ongoing<br />

use of illegal e-scooters on the streets<br />

– is being paid by those who are now<br />

living with life changing injuries.<br />

“This has to stop; the accident rate is<br />

horrific and Bristol Council should take<br />

immediate action to halt the trial.<br />

The DfT says in future,<br />

e-scooter casualties will be<br />

better captured as part of a<br />

new ‘powered personal<br />

transporter’ category –<br />

being introduced as part<br />

of a recent STATS19<br />

review.<br />

The DfT is also liaising<br />

with PACTS as part of their<br />

project.<br />

NEWSLINK n JANUARY <strong>2022</strong><br />

11

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