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After Governor Ron DeSantis vetoed SB 382, Florida counties and municipalities were left without a new statewide framework for addressing many of the safety issues involving e-bikes, electric scooters, and other micromobility devices.
The meeting focused on the e-bike accident and fatality findings by Santini Research, which naturally leads into a practical question now facing many Florida communities:
How should local governments respond when transportation technology changes faster than the rules, infrastructure, enforcement standards, and rider education systems around it?
SB 382 would have created new statewide rules for electric bicycles and certain micromobility devices. The bill included speed-related restrictions for e-bikes and other small transportation devices operating near pedestrians, but Governor DeSantis vetoed the bill on June 25, 2026.
That veto does not make e-bike safety issues disappear. Instead, it shifts more attention to local governments, including counties and municipalities, that are already seeing the effects of faster electric devices being used on:
Florida law already defines electric bicycles and separates them into Class 1, Class 2, and Class 3 categories. Class 1 and Class 2 e-bikes are generally limited to motor assistance up to 20 miles per hour, while Class 3 e-bikes may provide assistance up to 28 miles per hour.
That classification system is important, but it does not answer every local safety question. Communities are still left to address where these devices may be operated, how rules should be enforced, how young riders should be educated, and how to distinguish lawful e-bikes from faster or modified devices that may function more like motor vehicles.
Santini Research presented county-level crash trends using data from the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, commonly known as FLHSMV. FLHSMV collects and publishes crash data to help lawmakers, public safety partners, researchers, the media, and the public understand traffic safety trends in Florida.
The data shows a major post-COVID increase in Florida bicycle fatalities and serious injuries across parts of the Orlando metro area. That trend is especially concerning because it coincides with the rapid growth of e-bikes, electric scooters, and other micromobility devices.
But the data must be interpreted carefully.
Current Florida crash reporting does not always perfectly separate traditional bicycles from e-bikes and other micromobility devices. That means the available crash data should not be used to claim that e-bikes are the sole cause of the increase in bicycle-related deaths or serious injuries.
The more accurate conclusion is this:
Florida is seeing a broader vulnerable-road-user safety problem, and the timing, volume, speed, and usage patterns of e-bikes and micromobility devices appear to be an important part of the conversation.
That distinction matters. The goal is not to blame every crash on one device. The goal is to identify a systems gap before more preventable injuries occur.
The central issue is not simply that e-bikes exist. E-bikes can be useful, efficient, and enjoyable. They can reduce car trips, expand mobility, and help people travel longer distances without relying on a motor vehicle.
The safety problem arises when faster electric devices are introduced into environments that were designed around older assumptions about bicycles, pedestrians, and low-speed recreational use.
Many Florida communities are now dealing with overlapping issues:
The technology changed quickly. The safety framework did not.
Orange County and other Florida local governments are now in a difficult position. They must balance safety, mobility, personal freedom, enforcement practicality, and the needs of families, schools, neighborhoods, and vulnerable road users.
A thoughtful local framework may need to address several issues at once, including:
The purpose of this research and discussion is not to ban e-bikes.
It is about catching up with reality.
Florida roads, sidewalks, and trails are now being used by a wider range of transportation devices than many communities were designed to handle. A modern safety framework should recognize that e-bikes and micromobility devices are not going away.
The better question is how to make their use safer, clearer, and more predictable for everyone.
That includes riders, pedestrians, drivers, parents, schools, law enforcement, and local governments.
As a personal injury attorney and leader of Santini Personal Injury & Car Accident Law, Frank Santini has seen how e-bike crashes affect families after the damage is already done. But Santini Research also focuses on identifying safety trends before they become routine tragedies.
E-bike and micromobility crashes raise complicated injury and liability questions, including:
Those legal questions are important after a crash. But the larger public safety goal is to reduce the number of crashes in the first place.
With SB 382 vetoed, Florida’s e-bike safety debate is likely to continue at the local level. Counties and municipalities may now become the primary places where rules are tested, refined, and enforced.
Orange County is currently reviewing a draft e-bike and micromobility ordinance prepared by the Orange County Sheriff’s Office, with the proposal expected to come before the County for consideration at its August 4 meeting.
Orange County’s discussion is part of a larger statewide issue: how Florida communities should respond to faster electric transportation devices being used in spaces originally designed for pedestrians, bicycles, and cars.
Santini Research will continue reviewing FLHSMV crash data, local ordinance developments, and micromobility safety trends across Florida.
The goal is simple:
Florida should not wait for more serious injuries and deaths before modernizing its approach to e-bike and micromobility safety.
Orange County Commissioner Kelly Martinez Semrad shared the meeting with Attorney Frank Santini publicly on social media to help bring more attention to the local e-bike and micromobility safety discussion.
Public engagement matters because these issues affect more than legal claims after crashes. They involve families, schools, neighborhoods, pedestrians, drivers, law enforcement, local governments, and riders trying to understand how faster electric devices should safely fit into existing roads, sidewalks, and trails.
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SB 382 was a Florida bill that would have created new statewide rules for e-bikes and certain micromobility devices. Governor Ron DeSantis vetoed the bill in June 2026, leaving many e-bike safety issues to be addressed through existing law and possible local action.
Yes. Florida law recognizes electric bicycles and divides them into Class 1, Class 2, and Class 3 categories. These classifications generally depend on whether the motor assists only while pedaling, whether the motor can propel the bike without pedaling, and the speed at which motor assistance stops.
Not perfectly. Current crash data often captures bicycle-related crashes but may not always clearly distinguish traditional bicycles from e-bikes and other micromobility devices. That is why e-bike safety trends should be discussed carefully and with appropriate limits. SB 382 would have required policed departments and Sheriff’s offices across Florida to start tracking e-bike crashes as a separate category. It remains to be seen if Florida law enforcement agencies will start tracking e-bike accidents as a separate category despite not being required by law to do so.
Without a new statewide framework from SB 382, counties and municipalities may play a larger role in addressing where e-bikes and micromobility devices can operate, how rules are enforced, how young riders are educated, and how local infrastructure should adapt.
No. The issue is not whether e-bikes should exist. The issue is how Florida can create safer, clearer rules for faster electric devices being used by riders of different ages and experience levels on roads, sidewalks, and trails.
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