Bike licences a no-go in Ottawa

*Bike licences a no-go in Ottawa: Report*
By David Reevely, The Ottawa Citizen January 13, 2012
OTTAWA — Licensing bicycles is too expensive and cumbersome and provides negligible benefits anywhere it’s been tried, says a new report from Ottawa’s city staff.
Orléans Councillor Bob Monette asked city officials to look into the idea at the beginning of the summer, when the segregated bike lanes on Laurier Avenue were opening and the rights of cyclists versus pedestrians and motorists were in the news. He suggested that licensing bikes would provide a way to connect misbehaviour on the roads and paths to bikes’ owners, the way car licence plates help the police track down bad motorists.
Also, a formal registry of bicycles would help the police return stolen and recovered bikes to their owners.
Maybe, says the report the city has produced, but at a disproportionate cost. Several earlier looks at the idea of licensing bikes in Ottawa have concluded that the system would cost about $100,000 a year and would recover, at best, $40,000 in fees from cyclists. Worse, it would impose a barrier on would-be cyclists, who’d have to go through an extra layer of bureaucracy before they could legally ride — when the city actually wants people to take to their bikes because they don’t significantly contribute to traffic congestion and put less wear and tear on roads.
Enforcing the rules would be extra complicated because Gatineau cyclists mix with Ottawans and it’d be difficult to put a licensing requirement on them, and the city would also have to find a way to make the licensing regime work with services like the National Capital Commission’s Bixi bike-rentals.
“Given the foregoing limited benefits and significant challenges, and primarily based on the fact that bicycle licensing would act as a significant barrier to cycling, it is recommended that bicycle licensing not be implemented in the City of Ottawa,” the report concludes, though it notes that there might be some value in a voluntary registration system for recovering lost and stolen bikes.
Some cities, including Ottawa, have had bike-licensing systems in the distant past, but no city of any size does now. Regina has such a bylaw on the books, but in practice it’s not enforced; the system has been handed off to a community association, which operates it like a voluntary registry.
Besides Monette’s inquiry, there was virtually no political will for a licensing system at the city council table. Mayor Jim Watson said at the time that he’d oppose any effort to pass one.
dreevely@ottawacitizen.com
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