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Tighter E-bike Standards and Lane Rules

Titre complet:
2026.IE29.10

Summary#

This item asks Toronto City Council to support Ontario’s plan to modernize e‑bike rules and to tell the Province how Toronto thinks the rules should work. It does not change Toronto’s by‑laws now. It directs City staff to comment on the provincial proposal, to ask for stronger safety standards, and to come back later with by‑law changes for bike lanes and trails. The broad goal is to make bike lanes safer and make enforcement clearer.

Key points:

  • Support a two‑class system for e‑bikes (Class 1 pedal‑assist and Class 2 throttle), capped at 32 km/h and 500 watts, with working pedals, no footrests/platforms, and an adjustable saddle.
  • Keep a minimum rider age of 16, require helmets for all e‑bike riders, and allow passengers of any age if there is a seat.
  • Support requiring faster, heavier moped/scooter‑ or motorcycle‑style vehicles to be licensed and insured.
  • Ask the Province to set a maximum weight of 55 kg for Class 2 e‑bikes and to require strong brakes that can stop within 9 m at top speed, even when loaded and in wet, hilly conditions.
  • Ask Toronto’s Fire Chief to recommend lithium‑ion battery safety standards to the Province.
  • Direct staff to propose by‑law updates by January 2027 to allow only Class 1 and Class 2 e‑bikes in bike lanes, cycle tracks, and multi‑use trails, and to prohibit other motorized vehicles there.

What it means for you#

  • E‑bike riders

    • If the Province adopts its plan, e‑bikes would be clearly defined. Your bike would need to have working pedals, be limited to 32 km/h and 500 W, and meet design rules (no footrests/platforms; adjustable saddle). Helmets would be required for all operators and riders must be at least 16.
    • You could carry a passenger of any age if your bike has a seat for them.
    • If the Province also adopts Toronto’s request, some heavier e‑bikes (over 55 kg) and bikes with weak brakes would not qualify as e‑bikes.
    • If the City later updates by‑laws, only Class 1 and 2 e‑bikes would be allowed in bike lanes, cycle tracks, and multi‑use trails.
  • Riders of moped/scooter‑ or motorcycle‑style electric vehicles

    • Under the Province’s proposal, your vehicle would need licensing and insurance, like other motor vehicles.
    • If the City later changes by‑laws, these vehicles would be banned from bike lanes, cycle tracks, and multi‑use trails.
  • App‑based delivery workers

    • You may need to switch to a compliant Class 1 or 2 e‑bike to keep using bike lanes and trails. If you use a moped/scooter‑style vehicle, you would likely need a license and insurance and use the road, not bike lanes.
  • Retailers and importers

    • You may need to make sure products meet the Province’s e‑bike limits (speed, power, weight if adopted, design, brakes) and advise customers about compliance.
  • Cyclists and pedestrians

    • This could reduce fast, heavy motorized traffic in bike lanes and multi‑use trails, which may improve safety.
  • City staff and police

    • Clearer vehicle classes could make enforcement easier. Staff would prepare submissions to the Province now and draft by‑law changes for Council to consider by January 2027. The Fire Chief would provide advice on battery safety standards.
  • Timing

    • Immediate effect is advisory: the City will submit comments and start work. Real‑world changes depend on the Province adopting its proposal and on Council later passing by‑law updates.

Expenses#

No publicly available information.

Possible cost areas, if future changes proceed:

  • City staff time to prepare submissions and a by‑law report.
  • Public education, signage, and by‑law enforcement costs if Council later changes bike‑lane rules.
  • Toronto Fire Services staff time to develop battery safety recommendations.
  • Retailers and riders may face compliance costs (meeting speed/power/weight/brake specs), depending on what the Province adopts.

Proponents' View#

  • The motion appears intended to improve safety in bike lanes and on multi‑use trails by keeping faster, heavier motorized vehicles out.
  • Clear classes (e‑bikes vs. moped/scooter‑ or motorcycle‑style vehicles) could make enforcement easier for police and more understandable for riders and retailers.
  • Licensing and insurance for moped/scooter‑style vehicles could provide accountability and compensation after crashes.
  • Setting a clear speed (32 km/h), power (500 W), and design features (working pedals, no footrests/platforms, adjustable saddle) could reduce “scooter‑like” vehicles posing as e‑bikes.
  • Stronger technical standards (weight cap for Class 2; braking distance) could lower crash risk, especially for heavier bikes and in poor weather.
  • Seeking battery safety standards could reduce fire risk from lithium‑ion batteries.

Opponents' View#

  • A possible trade‑off is that a 55 kg weight limit for Class 2 e‑bikes could exclude some e‑cargo bikes and adaptive bikes, affecting families and small businesses that rely on heavier models.
  • Requiring features like an adjustable saddle and banning operator foot platforms may rule out some step‑through or adaptive designs; it is unclear how accessibility needs would be handled.
  • Delivery workers who use moped/scooter‑style vehicles could face extra costs for licensing and insurance and may lose access to bike lanes, which could affect their routes and travel times.
  • The motion depends on the Province changing the law; timelines and final rules are uncertain, and the City cannot guarantee outcomes.
  • Enforcement details are not provided; it is unclear how the City and police would verify speed, power, weight, and braking standards in the field.
  • The item does not include funding for education, signage, or enforcement; implementing changes later could require resources that are not yet identified.