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Department of Transportation Services/2022

About the Author

Catherine Toth Fox

Born and raised on Oahu, Catherine Toth Fox is an editor, writer, children鈥檚 book author, blogger and former journalism instructor. She is currently the editor at large for Hawaii Magazine and lives in Honolulu with her husband, son and two dogs. You can follow her on Instagram @catherinetothfox. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.

Financial incentives will offset the cost of e-bikes, but is that enough to offset the danger of riding them in Honolulu traffic?

A new state-funded rebate program is aimed at encouraging more people to commute on e-bikes and electric mopeds instead of cars, while helping to reduce the rising costs of both living and transportation for residents.

The program,  allows anyone who has purchased an e-bike or electric moped at a retail store after July 1 and meets certain other criteria to get back either 20% of the retail cost or $500, whichever amount is lower.

To qualify , fill out  and meet at least one of the eligibility criteria: participate in a low-income assistance program (such as Section 8), not own a motor vehicle with four or more wheels and currently be enrolled at a school or college.

The cost of new e-bikes ranges from $1,000 to $3,000, so this rebate would be helpful in offsetting that expense. And the popularity for this way of getting around is way up in the U.S.

The pandemic fueled a boom in bikes, period, and e-bike sales in particular in the year ending in 2021, according to the market research firm NPD Group. That means e-bikes are outpacing the sale of electric cars, owners of which already get government subsidies. Why shouldn鈥檛 e-bike riders get a break, too?

This comes at a time, too, when traffic fatalities are rising. , the highest number since 108 in 2019, according to the state Department of Transportation.

Already, in 2023,  鈥 11 on Oahu alone 鈥 including three on scooters and one bicyclist.

I鈥檓 all for more people ditching their cars 鈥 lessening roadway traffic and carbon emissions 鈥 and finding alternative ways to get around. When I was working in Downtown Honolulu, I walked three miles to the office and caught the bus back home.

But would I brave Pali Highway and the narrow streets of nearby neighborhoods on a bike, even an e-bike? And in this rain? No way.

Cyclist in traffic on Kapiolani Boulevard near McCully.
Riding a bike on Honolulu streets can be a terrifying experience. E-bikes and electric mopeds have to brave the same traffic. (Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2019)

There was a time when I rode a bike to work. I lived in Aina Haina and worked near Diamond Head. It took me about half an hour to bike to work 鈥 and I gripped those handlebars for dear life. One section, just as Kalanianaole Highway turns into H1, is especially harrowing; the bike lane just ends as cars whip by on the Waialae off-ramp by Kahala Mall.

I ended my regular bike commutes after a near-accident on Kalakaua Avenue by the Waikiki Aquarium. The bike lanes there are on the streetside of the parking stalls on the makai end of the road. As I rode along, a driver who didn鈥檛 see me suddenly swung his car door open. I swerved into the street and fell off my bike. Luckily, there were no oncoming cars; otherwise, I don鈥檛 think I would have survived with just a few scratches and bruises.

What will get more people on bikes, e-bikes and scooters isn鈥檛 just financial help. It鈥檚 safer roadways.

“That鈥檚 the other half of the equation,鈥 agrees Sen. Chris Lee, chair of the Transportation and Culture and the Arts committee. “How do we go about creating a safe and protected infrastructure that enables people to walk, bike, scoot without having to worry about being killed? It鈥檚 problematic.鈥

He points to , a multinational road traffic safety project that started in Sweden and aims to achieve zero traffic deaths and injuries by prioritizing safety over speed and convenience when it comes to roadways. It can be done, he says, but it will take time. Like, decades. But it can happen.

“There鈥檚 an assumption in the U.S., and Hawaii, too, that these kinds of fatalities and dangers on the road is an accepted way of life, and we just have to deal with it鈥 Lee says. 鈥淭hat has to change.鈥

There has been progress in making Hawaii a more pedestrian- and bike-friendly state. In 2014 Honolulu鈥檚 first protected bike lane was installed on King Street, , according to the state.

Six years later another protected, two-way bike lane opened on Pensacola Street, connecting Makiki to the King Street bike path.

The installation of a protected bike lane on King Street led to a 50% reduction in pedestrian-vehicle collisions. (Department of Transportation/2022)

The state鈥檚 , Biki, launched in urban Honolulu in 2017. It reported , the latest data available, up 31% from 2020.

Of those surveyed, 59% said they use Biki to commute and 49% said they signed up to drive less.

In a mark of success, the League of American Bicyclists 鈥 an improvement from years past.

Lee also mentioned a future project to build a bike path that runs from Nanakuli all the way to Manoa.

“There鈥檚 an urgency for all of this,鈥 he says. “Our safety stats have been getting worse … That鈥檚 why this stuff is being rolled out as fast as we can.鈥

I think I鈥檒l wait on getting that e-bike for now.


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About the Author

Catherine Toth Fox

Born and raised on Oahu, Catherine Toth Fox is an editor, writer, children鈥檚 book author, blogger and former journalism instructor. She is currently the editor at large for Hawaii Magazine and lives in Honolulu with her husband, son and two dogs. You can follow her on Instagram @catherinetothfox. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.


Latest Comments (0)

They already have a bike lane from the west side to town, it's called rail. Dump the train and create a completely free E-bike, scooter, skateboard lane to Kaka'ako. Both the state and city talk out the side of their mouths about more biking. They can paint lanes on existing roads, but that doesn't separate people from cars, it's a false sense of security. Furthermore, the city doesn't have any protected/secured bike storage/parking in the urban core. I've seen it in SF, actual covered, locked, bike storage stalls at buildings throughout the city. I've had 2 bikes stolen in Kaka'ako (by homeless, who make the rounds) and my coworker's wheels stolen off his bike, while locked to another outside rack. You want to know who has all the bikes in town? There hasn't been a single dollar spent on widening and/or improving roads in the central core of Honolulu, yet we have spent $8B on an elevated railway. Think about creating separate paths, off the roads for bikes, wider sidewalks, elevated overpasses for pedestrians at busy intersections and actually schedule maintenance for paving and maybe you could say progress was being made.

wailani1961 · 1 year ago

My ebike is 4 years old and I have over 13,000 miles on it. Ebikes that can throttle over 20 mph without pedaling are considered moped classification. Not to be confused with pedal assist only ebikes. I agree with this article, the roads need to be much safer before encouraging more ebike sales with rebates. I continue to ride my bike practically every day, but my head is on swivel and Honolulu has some of the worst drivers in the US. The worst bike lane is on King street. Every time I ride up traffic, the drivers are only looking to merge in by looking one way because it is a one way street. However, I have witnessed two accidents because the bicyclists are not watching the cars jutting out of all the businesses. The motorized scooters and skateboards fly by me all the time and it芒聙聶s only a matter of time before they will have their next fatality. Urban Honolulu was never designed to be pedestrian or bicycle friendly.

Sharetheroad · 1 year ago

My neighborhood, which is well inside urban Honolulu, doesn't even have sidewalks. And I'm supposed to care about e-bikes and bike lanes? How about addressing even some basic walkability issues first?

EasyRider · 1 year ago

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