By C.J. Hirschfield
The good news at Lake Merritt:
hundreds of young crabs and an increased number of topsmelt fish, striped bass
and bat rays have been sighted recently, and a newly repaired aeration unit
near the pergola has resulted in a sweeter-smelling environment. “It’s all an
indication that the water is doing fairly well,” says Lake Merritt Institute
executive director James Robinson.
The not-so-good news: twenty or
so electric Lime rental scooters have been fished out of the lake by James and
his intrepid volunteer crew over the last few months.
Scooter in Lake Merritt. |
James Robinson has been working around the lake since 2005, when he began teaching sailing at the Lake Merritt Sailboat House. He also teaches science and boat safety to fourth- and fifth-graders. When the first scooter was found
in the lake, James was surprised, but no more.
James Robinson |
The scooters arrived in Oakland
shortly after San Francisco forced Lime to stop renting them until regulations governing
their use could be put in place. Here in Oakland, it’s been like the Wild West,
with kids under 18 – and adults, too – riding at 15 miles per hour on
sidewalks, without helmets. Lime has placed scooter stations wherever it chooses,
without receiving permission from businesses or the city of Oakland.
Google “scooters in Oakland” and
the first hit is the
website of a law firm specializing in accidents. I myself have witnessed many near-misses on
the sidewalks in the last month or so.
The Oakland City Council just
approved its first draft of regulations that it hopes will bring order to the
chaos, and maybe save some lives. As someone who lives and works by the lake, I
would like to believe that these regulations – riding in bike lanes only,
parking so as not to block sidewalks, encouraging helmet use – will be
enforced. But how?
Meanwhile, back to our wonderful
Lake Merritt. Why are scooters being dumped there? Is it a protest against the
hipsters who use them? An anti-gentrification statement? A declaration about how Oakland feels about
the controversial Uber, which recently made a “sizeable” investment in Lime?
Maybe, as James suggested to me,
it’s young people doing it “just because they can.”
James and the Institute’s
volunteers have a couple of ways to scoop the scooters out. If the vehicles are
near the shore, they use fishing nets. But when they’re thrown from a
pedestrian bridge, they can be down deep, and a boat is required to bring them
up.
James didn’t have an easy time
contacting someone at Lime, but he
finally connected with someone, and the scooter was
picked up. He hasn’t had consistent contact with them. “I just want the
scooters out of the lake,” says James. “Whatever gets to resolution of the
issue, I’m all for it.”
District 3 City Council staffer
Justin Lee has been working
hard to convince
Lime that the company will need to increase its community service and
engagement in Oakland if it wants to do business in this city. He arranged for
us to speak with Albert Lin, Lime’s East Bay operations manager.
Lime scooter awaiting pickup on Grand Avenue |
When we asked him about the
environmental impact of Lime scooters on the lake, Albert promised to ask the
company’s engineers and get back to me. As this column goes to press, we haven’t had a
response.
Even before the scooters arrived, the Lake
Merritt Institute and its volunteers had their hands full retrieving
about 1,000 to 5,000 pounds of trash from the lake every
month.
In
June, James told me, trash volume was twice what it was a year ago, due in
large part to the influx of what he calls “household items” – dressers, tables,
blankets and such—that he believes may be coming from the homeless encampments
that circle the lake. “Some of these manmade things are definitely harmful to
the environment,” he says. He’s also noticed that metal trash cans are being
tossed into the lake.
The news about
scooters isn’t all bad. Many of parking lots in downtown and Uptown are now
turning into commercial and residential high rises, and convenient, car-free
mobility makes a lot of sense. Scooters are a promising option.
What
we need are rules that ensure sidewalk and rider safety, and the common-sense
consensus that tossing scooters into our beautiful Lake Merritt is not the way
to go.
For
information on how you can help keep our lake healthy, contact the nonprofit
Lake Merritt Institute.
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