All transport modes impose some kind of externality. Trains need marshalling yards and a permanent way, and have a really serious ongoing maintenance budget. For public modes that’s planned in: bus routes get more roadwork, stops get isolated from parking, it’s accounted for.
For *private* modes like these there’s every incentive for companies to offload the externality (parking) onto the public, and specifically the spaces of the people least likely to be able to step over a tangle of bicycles.
@liamvhogan Governments – at the local level – need to take this seriously. It can be done.
#Canberra, Australia, had two e-scooter companies. They'd set limits on the number of scooters each could deploy. One company (Beam, 'the purple ones') ignored those limits and the city was strewn with their scooters.
So the city council didn't renew their contract. On a Tuesday. And it expired on Sunday, and they told them all the scooters had to be gone, removed, disappeared. By the end of the week. And they were. And that was that.
We can 'fight back'. It's not even a fight! It's just a well-written contract and a local authority that has the guts to stand by it.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-09-04/act-govenment-bans-beam-mobility-escooters/104310798