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Showing posts with label motor scooter news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label motor scooter news. Show all posts

Sunday

Online petition and letter-writing campaign by local scooter riders

PHOTOS BY HARRY LYNCH An unattended, untethered
scooter is parked conveniently at the front steps of
Caldwell Hall on UNC's campus Tuesday morning. The handy,
go-practically-anywhere scooters, which had been unregulated
on campus, have recently come under new rules.

insurance motor scooter - Chapel Hill : An online petition and letter-writing campaign by scooter riders has gained the attention of officials in the UNC, now say they will have a second look at the May decision to regulate the small, environmentally friendly vehicles. UNC Board of Trustees approved an annual plan for parking two months ago for scooter riders to buy permits to park in designated lots.

The new regulation will affect 15 August. UNC has never before regulated scooters, and those who use them have enjoyed the freedom to putter across the campus and park near their destinations. But an increase in scooters - probably caused by last year's rise in gasoline prices - led the officials included in the campus parking regulations.

UNC employees pay between $ 174 and $ 371 for a scooter license year, based on salary level. For students, the cost would be $ 175 or $ 44 if they also have a campus parking permit. That share space with scooters motorcycles in certain lots.

In comparison: In the State of North Carolina, all scooter users must buy a permit for $ 60, although students with campus parking permits to pay only $ 5 for new scooters label. At Duke, scooters permits are $ 25, or free if you have a car permit.

At UNC, the change has scooter riders need to cry about the new cost and concerned about the safety of their vehicles. Some see it as an insult to passengers trying to be environmentally responsible.

UNC officials say it is a security measure. UNC for a long time, and the mandate that allows motorcyclists to buy these scooters - with small engines of 50 cubic centimeters or less - have not been covered so far.

"We're not saying that you do not want to ride scooters," said Carolyn Elfland, associate vice rector of the campus. "We want them parked. They are not governed. Just go anywhere."

In fact, you can go almost anywhere, and Brian Moynihan, much of the charm. He and his wife live in Carrboro and work in buildings on the medical campus of the UNC. So I go in every day to work on the scooter and Moynihan park - for free - Moynihan outside the building.

Moynihan, a graduate student in information science from the UNC program, created an online petition protesting the new rules and scooter riders seek to plead their case managers. Quickly attracted more than 200 signatories, many of whom say the policy change will bring more cars to school.

"If people have to pay, it could re-use their cars," said Moynihan. "That is exactly what we do not want that to happen."

Roger Perry, chairman of the UNC Board of Trustees, said it expects its board to review the regulations when it meets later this month.

Elfland said that the change is not a money grab. In fact, it is difficult to project the potential revenue because no one knows how many scooter riders are in the UNC.

David Jansen, owner of Scooter, Inc., a provider of Carrboro scooter, it is estimated that there are "hundreds" of bikes in Carrboro alone.

"It seems like a decision based on revenue for the university because they lose revenue every time someone is going to pay a fee for parking the power of a scooter," he said.

Scooter interest peaked last year when gas prices rose to $ 4 per gallon and has conical shape, because, said Jansen.

"The scooter remains the last urban commuting vehicle," he said.

Scooters usually cost between $ 2,000 and $ 4,500, said Jansen, who receive about 80 miles to the gallon.

At UNC, many of the chain of his bicycle racks scooters, while some just lean them against buildings. Elfland said that the university plans to offer large dowels like scooters bicycle racks that can be secured.

Cheryl Stout, deputy director of the UNC for parking services, said it had no knowledge of accidents caused by scooters on campus. But she has noticed the increasing number of motorcycles, and campus policy prohibits scooters from being operated on sidewalks, a rule is rarely applied in the past.

"It has definitely become a concern," he said. "These motorcycles were traveling at high speed on pavements." by: insurance motor scooter

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Tuesday

insurance motor scooter - Scooter around town in one




insurance motor scooter - MAIL CITY / OSCAWANA - There was no doubt in the minds of Tom Anderson, when it comes to your business location scooter.

"The heyday of motorcycles was when this building was built," said Anderson, 50, of the 1940s gas station that has been vacant for nearly 15 years in the southwest corner of Howard Avenue and Azeele Street.

The art deco gas station, 401 S. Howard Ave, is located right next to MacDinton and provides the perfect environment for the harvest of the company Anderson, SoHo scooters.

He is in love with the history and evolution of the motorcycles as it is with efficiency, touting the property as a form of social responsibility. Anderson is the store with her twin sister, Coletta, who said he has seen increasingly popular scooters in the Carrollwood neighborhood too.

"They are a lot of fun," he said, "addictive."

Fuel is about 80 to 100 mpg. Prices start at $ 1,200. And face up to 40 mph. Maintenance involves oil changes every 1000 miles, and to the extent that run regularly are relatively easy to maintain. Tyde Gentile, master technician of the store, compared to the attention of something between a bicycle and a riding lawnmower.

Operation is easy - no clutch, no gears. Simply turn the handle and go. Anderson rents scooters for $ 35 for two hours or $ 65 for the day. They come in a variety of colors as well as many accessories.

About 54 percent of riders are women, he said. Bikes come in pink, but it also has a selection that are more like motorcycles or bicycles sport.

"It becomes an extension of the personality of the rider," said Anderson. "The Goths, the mods, the scooter commuter, the chicken scooter. ..."

20 years ago, Anderson opened a personal watercraft, ski Banana Bay Co., along the Courtney Campbell Causeway before joining the corporate world. He sold his business to open the store ATM scooter.

"I thought it was a change," said Anderson, who commute from her home in South Tampa to work on a scooter. "We must move away from our dependence on fossil fuels and find a more socially responsible way of getting from point A to point B."

He said scooters make sense for South Tampa. While not optimal for roads, where competition with automobiles and producing the plan to make a workout of driving less, in the city's roads are perfect, he said.

"It's a great way to experience the neighborhood," Anderson said while crossing the streets around the store. "It's social as well."

Since opening in April, a scooter club has started to gather at the store on Sunday to spend the day exploring the city on two wheels.

Justin Ayan, 27, has owned his scooter for a year. Hyde Park barber said everything that is within five to 10 miles.

"It's perfect," Ayan said, noting that having paid for a vehicle is a good profit. "A scooter is 1000 times more fun than a car journey."

The club, always looking for fun, has grown to about 15 people. Due to popularity, which will soon be starting a website.

"It's one of those things that once you start, you'll get hooked," said Ayan - by

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Thursday

Woman: Scooter Criminal A World


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Woman: Scooter thief claimed oil change - An 85-year-old Pennsylvania woman said the man who stole her electric scooter told her he was taking it for an oil change and other repairs.

Betty Keefer, 85, said the man showed up at her Greensburg, Penn., home March 11, said he was taking the black Sonic Pride scooter for repairs and promised to return the item within a week, WTAE-TV, Pittsburgh, reported Thursday.

Keefer said she was somewhat suspicious of the man's claims but allowed him to take the scooter anyway.

"I had an idea he'd try to steal it. He's a bad, bad ... I told police if they find him, put him in jail forever," Keefer said.

Police said the man left Keefer with a note that he signed with the first name Frank and a last name that investigators believe to be McGinnis, McGinniz or McGinriz.


Greeley brawl included a scooter - A 32-year-old woman suspected of beating another woman with a child's scooter has been arrested in Greeley.

Renee Soto is being held on suspicion of third-degree assault, Greeley Police Department spokesman Sgt. Joe Tymkowych said Wednesday.

Soto and Amanda Watkins, 26, got into an argument about noon Sunday when Watkins talked to Soto's 3-year-old child about "harassing or hitting" a cat, police said.

The incident happened near Soto's home in the 1900 block of Seventh Avenue, Tymkowych said.

As Watkins talked to the child about the cat, Soto came out of her home, and an argument escalated into a fight between the two women, Tymkowych said.

"It was a fistfight, with hair-pulling and scratching," Tymkowych said.

A witness who stopped to break up the fight told police that Soto grabbed a "Razor," a two-wheel kick scooter with a handle bar, and hit Watkins with it across the back and in the head.

Watkins fell to the ground, and witnesses came to her aid, covering her with a blanket. Soto had gone back into her home with the 3-year-old and left out of a rear exit when police arrived, Tymkowych said.

Watkins, who told police that she is nine weeks pregnant, was treated at North Colorado Medical Center for minor injuries and released.

The women did not know each other before Sunday's confrontation, Tymkowych said.

Soto is being held at the Weld County Jail in lieu of $20,000 bail.

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Imposing a 100 percent motorcycle and scooter tariff

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The American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) today strongly criticized the Bush Administration's consideration of a possible 100 percent tariff on a broad range of popular European motorcycles and scooters in retaliation for European Union (EU) restrictions on imported American beef.

"In this tough recessionary climate, it's ludicrous for the U.S. Trade Representative to even consider imposing a 100 percent motorcycle and scooter tariff, because the move will cost countless Americans their jobs," said Ed Moreland, AMA vice present for government relations.

"This very day, the Administration and the U.S. Congress are planning to bail out troubled U.S. automakers to the tune of billions of dollars to save American jobs," Moreland said. "How, in good conscience, can the U.S. Trade Representative turn around and propose a measure that will spell the end of many motorcycle and scooter dealerships, and put their employees out in the street?"

U.S. trade officials are looking at a list of more than 100 European goods for the possible imposition of 100 percent import duties in response to the EU's ongoing import ban on American beef treated with growth hormones. EU officials haven't lifted the 20-year-old ban despite a World Trade organization order to end it. Now the U.S. wants to impose $116.8 million in import duties to equal the amount of money it claims the U.S beef industry loses each year because of the ban.

Included on the hit list are motorcycles and scooters with engines displacing 51cc to 500cc, representing popular on- and off-highway machines from brands such as Aprilia, Beta, BMW, Fantic, Gas Gas, Husaberg, Husqvarna, KTM, Montesa, Piaggio, Scorpa, Sherco, TM and Vespa.

"In America, the majority of motorcycles and scooters under 500cc are sold through local dealerships," Moreland said. "Collectively, these dealerships contribute to the employment of a substantial number of Americans working in sales, service, parts and general operations. Unjustified trade sanctions on European-produced motorcycles and scooters will choke off this vital business, dealerships will close at an alarming rate, and the negative effects will spread downstream through the aftermarket and recreational-equipment sectors, and even the motorsports entertainment industry. Countless Americans will find themselves without jobs."

The AMA sent comments to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative by a Dec. 8 deadline to express the opinions of the Association's 300,000 members on the possible tariffs. "It is simply unconscionable that motorcycles and scooters are on the list in the first place. They have no place in a trade war over beef," Moreland said. "Furthermore, we find it tragically ironic that, as part of the auto bailout plan, federal lawmakers are considering requirements for American car makers to produce more fuel-efficient vehicles, and yet the motorcycles and scooters that the U.S. trade representative is considering for the 100 percent tariff get three to five times better fuel economy than many cars."It is unknown when U.S. officials will decide on which European goods will be hit with the stiff tariffs.

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Rob a Waldorf scooter store

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A man and a boy were arrested Monday after trying to rob a Waldorf scooter store and leading police on a brief chase on Route 301, authorities said.Elliott M. Knox Jr., 21, and a 15-year-old boy from Severn face burglary charges in connection with the incident, which police said might have been an effort to nab products to sell to holiday shoppers. In breaking the front door at Scooter Express on Park Waldorf Lane, the pair triggered the alarm and fled.

"They did not get anything," said Diane Richardson, a spokeswoman for the Charles County Sheriff's Office. "I guess they didn't anticipate the alarm."

Nor did they anticipate that a detective would be working an off-duty patrol assignment at a nearby shopping plaza. David Gross said he heard on his radio that an alarm had gone off at the scooter store. Seconds later, he saw a sport-utility vehicle and a U-Haul truck pull into a gas station across the street from where he was.

"I'm like, 'Eh, something doesn't look right here,' " Gross said.

He watched as men from the U-Haul and the SUV sat at the station but didn't buy gas. One of them, he said, picked up a pay phone but did not make a call. Gross said he tried to pull the U-Haul over when it left the station going north on Route 301.

But the driver didn't stop, even after pulling into the parking lot at the Waldorf Jaycees community center.

"I just turned my lights on, and then they accelerated," Gross said.

As the U-Haul picked up speed in the parking lot, both doors flung open, and two people jumped out, Gross said. The truck jumped concrete dividers between parking spots and came within 25 feet of the Jaycees building before another officer, Katlin Goddard, jumped in and hit the brakes.

While Goddard stopped the truck, Gross got out of his car and chased the boy, he said. Knox was found a short time later by a police dog, who had picked up a scent from a skull cap in the truck, Gross said. Efforts to locate a lawyer or family members for Knox were unsuccessful. He has no fixed address, police said.

Police said they found evidence linking the pair to the burglary, but they would not elaborate. They also found a small amount of marijuana, Richardson said. The SUV continued north on Route 301 after the U-Haul pulled off, Gross said. He said police were trying to find the owner.

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Tuesday

The scooter revolution



insurance motor scooter blogspot

A couple suggestions to make Chicago a scooter-friendly place:

We should start designating parking lots/spaces around Chicago for just scooters. They should be cheaper to park than cars. There should be some sort of tax break/incentive for buying a scooter. Somehow, we should designate a lane on the highways for scooters.

The scooter revolution is coming to America, there is no doubt about that, Chicago should step up and welcome it.

The City would never be that proactive. In addition to dedicated parking spaces, scooter drivers also need something to lock their "bikes" to and more bicycle locking stations, too.

But as I said, the City would never be that proactive. The City Council is much too reactive. We have to wait until there's a rash of scooter thefts before they'll do anything about it.

The benefits to riding a scooter come in the form of lower fuel and vehicle costs. But if you want to give scooter owners a tax break, why not walkers, bicyclists, skateboarders, ect? Better to make all modes face true costs of their modes, than to attempt to single out one mode for subsidy

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Monday

Mobility scooter service

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DRIVING your own mobility scooter for a small weekly fee has meant a new independence and been an "absolute Godsend" for a group of Marton residents who were once laid up at home with a range of disabilities.

Thanks to the Marton Lions Club, the four are on the move again and loving it. For a service fee of just $5 a week this troop has been mobilised. They can not only hit the town now, do the bookshop, supermarket, pharmacy and café, they can even dally a while and travelling with friends.

Lions club organiser Bradyn Moss said the club had started by buying one scooter more than seven years ago to help one elderly man, a diabetic who had had his legs amputated. The $3500 cost of a new scooter had been totally prohibitive for the man and his wife, so Lions members voted to step in and help. The club now has 12 on the go, with four new scooters arriving in two weeks, the demand is incredible. Even have a waiting list.

It was fantastic for both of them. He was able to get out of the house, and his wife was able to enjoy some precious free time. The old chap would head down to his local each day and bar staff would lift him out of his scooter and on to a bar stool for a couple of hours and a couple of fine whiskies. It wasn't until after the man died and his widow returned the scooter that the Lions realised there was a real need in Marton for disability scooter rentals.

When Mr Moss spoke for the first time at a national conference of Lions Clubs last month about the scooter rentals, other clubs around New Zealand were inspired, about half a dozen clubs are now trying to set up the service in their towns. Yesterday scooter group said that to say the service had made them happy was an understatement.

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Thursday

Glasgow And Scotish Motor Scooter news

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Glasgow Airport Police Unit Motor Scooter

Glasgow Airport Police Unit have launched a bid to reduce their carbon footprint with the introduction of an electric scooter to their fleet.

Strathclyde Police are the first in the UK to purchase such a scooter. The machine has no carbon emissions, making it environmentally-friendly, and reaches speeds of up to 62mph.

The Vectrix scooter just needs to be plugged in to charge and will be used by officers to control traffic around Glasgow Airport. The Vectrix electric scooter has no emissions whatsoever and works by plugging into a 13amp plug.

Motor scooter scottish version.


The Scottish version of the folding scooter has taken the world by storm – selling more than 700,000 since its launch four years ago.

Already available in the UK, Denmark, Australia and Canada – where it has also scooped a top industry accolade at the country's national toy fair – the scooter is set to be patented in Spain, Germany, France, Italy and Russia. The Flashing Storm scooter is now the proud holder of the best children's outdoor product title, handed out by the British Association of Toy Retailers.

Flashing Storm is the brainchild of toy inventor Martin Grossman and is the latest product to come from the stable of toy and novelty maker H Grossman. The company's hitherto best-known creation was a bizarre alien head which gave birth to twins suspended in a placenta-like goo, which became a must-have for youngsters in the late 1990s.

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Monday

Newter Scooter the neutral Scooter for animal

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TEMPLE, Ariz. - the care of the animals and the ordering of the county of Maricopa offer a service to the residents of valley, the neutral Scooter, a surgical unit of art of the car-portrait-contained which offers procedures spay and neutrals, inexpensive vaccines, the response to cruelty and the negligence animal, sorting for disasters, and other medical departments.

The neutral Scooter will be in Tempe Saturday, Jan. 26 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. (9 hours) of the morning with 1 TOKEN ENTRY in the fate of the south of parking of the public library of Temple, 3500 S. Rural Rd.

The neutral Scooter will offer the inexpensive vaccines and the services of authorization on the spot. The goods spay and neutral No-cost will be available to those which qualify. For more information, www.maricopa.gov/pets visits.

Neuter Scooter offers low-cost spay and neuter services and vaccines.

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Sunday

Ontario scooter man collided by another scooter.

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A Ontario man fights for its life in a Taiwanese hospital after a head-on collision last week to the left it in a coma with injuries of the brain and the Rueckenmarks. Matte Stever, 27, drove a scooter, around last Tuesday to work when another scooter carrying a teenage couple collided with him.

Family and friends try now to raise more than $100,000 take it, in order to get it house. Up to now provisional estimates of the costs of getting the Stever of house were high. The lowest projected costs were $133,000 to fly to it on a private jet back. OHIP and insurance do not cover it, the said family. Its parents, Mary and Roger Stever, have already more than $10,000 flying to Taiwan, in order to be spent with their son, the said rice. Family and friends Stevers plan to hold a use and a Hockeyspiel in order to raise money to get in order to help, it house.

Deliveries can be formed for the bank of Montreal in Picton, Rotary club of Picton and the Picton hospital Foundation..

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Saturday

Killed in scooter crash

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An 87-year-old man riding a mobility scooter was struck and and died after being hit by a lorry as he tried to cross a road in Bradford on a mobility scooter.

The accident happened as the pensionerhe began to cross the A658 Harrogate Road at an uncontrolled crossing near the junction with Hazlecroft.

He was taken to Bradford Royal Infirmary with serious injuries but was pronounced dead a short time later. None of the people in the minivan were injured.

The victim's name and age were not released immediately.

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Tuesday

Scooters Today

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Meet the ZiPee, a cute and functional electric scooter and one solution the UK’s pollution problem (ZiPee stands for Zero Input of Pollution from Emissions into the Environment). The ZiPee is a scooter marketed for London commuters, enticing them to trade in their gas guzzling vehicles for their everyday journeys. Hoping to change the outlook of passengers and urging them to make a choice in their commuting habits, the ZiPee is ideal for travel within London and other cities.

Retailing at £799, the electric scooter is capable of 30 miles on a single charge, takes only two hours to charge up and if you run out of power the incorporated pedals can get you home safely. You only have to be 14 to ride one and there are no requirements for road tax, insurance, licence or registration. Even the London Congestion Charge can’t get you!

It’s not just about the scooter though. The ZiPee is also used in local school projects to educate students on the benefits of travelling by electricity, inspiring the next generation of travellers. Changing consumers’ habits is hard, and will take time, but with the help of social entrepreneurs like ZiPee bikes, the next generation of commuters can start with good habits.

Italy 2007 motorbike, scooter, moped sales.

Italy's Ancma association for the two wheel industry said sales of motorbikes, scooters and mopeds rose 4.9 pct in 2007 to 566,169, from a year earlier.

Scooter sales fell 1.72 pct to 279,001, motorbike sales fell 2.88 pct to 156,472, while sales of two-wheelers up to 50cc engine capacity rose 11.86 pct to 130,696, the association said.

In the over-50cc category, Honda (nyse: HMC - news - people ) scooters SH150, SH300 and SH125 were top sellers in 2007 with respective sales of 21,778, 18,644 and 15,983.

Fourth and fifth sellers were Yamaha's scooters X MAX 250 and T MAX 500 with respectively 11,451 and 10,589 sales Ancma said.

Honda's Hornet 600 was top selling motorbike, at seventh in the overall ranking, selling 8,982 units, it said.

For machines of up to 50cc engines, based on data provided by constructors, Ancma said Piaggio
and its Gilera brand sold 42,767 units out of the 130,696 total, followed by its Aprilia brand with 25,240.

Taiwan's Kymco sold 14,791 followed by Italy's Malaguti 13,527 and Yamaha 12,088.

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Sunday

A scooter coming along

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THE Local Government Association is seeking a statewide review of mobility scooters amid claims they are crowding footpaths and endangering pedestrians.

The association wants the Iemma Government to overhaul the rules governing use of the motorised devices, which a spokeswoman said are "increasingly an issue in coastal areas and some rural areas, where people are moving to retire".

A beacon for NSW retirees is Ballina, which is wrestling with the problem. Mayor Phillip Silver says there "are probably more [mobility] scooters here per head of population than anywhere else in the country".

The Ballina Chamber of Commerce has appealed to Ballina Shire Council to take into account the growing use of the scooters when redrawing a management plan for the city's footpaths.

Chamber manager Nadia Eliott-Burgess said that, while businesses welcomed the custom of older shoppers, special usage rules or road and footpath conditions might be needed.

"If you walk up River Street you will probably see half a dozen of them," Ms Eliott-Burgess said.

"You'll see a dozen on a busy day. If I'm coming out of a shop and there's a scooter coming along, should I be stopping or should the scooter be stopping?"

She knew of scooters overturning on some sections of footpath.

John Payne, general manager for NSW of leading scooter manufacturer Invacare, said the market was "growing substantially". The machines retailed from between $2500 and $10,000 and were popular among the elderly, who had decreased mobility but wished to live an independent lifestyle, he said.

Tom Pavlovich, who runs Scooters & Mobility in Ballina, said sales had surged in the two years he had been in business.

Mr Pavlovich said he gave buyers instructions on how to avoid trouble on the devices, which the Roads and Traffic Authority rules stipulate might not be driven over 10 kmh and must weigh less than 110 kilograms. He said he was not aware of any serious pedestrian collisions involving the scooters, although one purchaser had crashed into a garage door.

Ballina retiree Vince O'Shea, 79, uses his scooter to get to the shops and visit friends. "[Scooters] give you a certain amount of independence," he said. "I usually give way to anybody that's coming towards me."

Mr Silver - who is wheelchair bound - said he was unsure whether Ballina Shire Council had the power to develop protocols for the scooters or whether it would be necessary to involve the RTA. He was hopeful a solution could be reached to the satisfaction of business owners and scooter users.

NSW StaySafe Committee chairman Geoff Corrigan said the usage of scooters had been raised by his committee members. He said no decision had been taken about whether to activate a review.

A scooter for Rudy


A few days ago, Rudy Giuliani earned some good-natured jeers when, during an appearance at Segway Inc. — maker of the two-wheeled “Personal Transporter” — he declined to ride one of the devices.

He must have heard the jibes. Giuliani rode into his first event of the morning Saturday on board a two-wheeled, motorized scooter. It was hard to see if it actually was a Segway.

“I could of done twice as much campaigning if I had that thinng,” Giuliani said in his remarks to the FIRST Robotic Competition Kickoff in Manchester.

“I’ll try it on Fifth Avenue,” Giuliani said, getting laughs from the tech-oriented crowd.

But the laughs stopped, however, when Giuliani told the New England audience that he would welcome the winners of the robotic competition to the White House as if they were the New York Yankees. That remark got him some boos.

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Friday

Scooter refund refused as wife, 80, dies - insurance motor scooter

insurance motor scooter

PENSIONER Marjorie Williams’ wish was to use her new mobility scooter on Porthcawl seafront on Christmas Day.

The much-needed present costing almost £600 had been bought for her by her devoted husband of 62 years, Kenneth.

But the 80-year-old, who suffered from arthritis, died suddenly from a heart attack before she was able to use it, and the family say the shop’s refusal to take it back is compounding their grief.

“Every time my dad looked at the scooter it was cutting him to bits, especially as she never got to fulfil her dream of using it in Porthcawl,” said the couple’s son Rhys Williams, 51, a property developer of Llanharry, near Pontyclun.

“It had never been used as it was bought just a fortnight before her death, so we asked Cardiff Medical and Mobility if they would take it back. I felt absolutely certain they would because of the type of business they are in, but they told myself and my father that they don’t do refunds.

“I think it’s immoral and I’ve now had to put the scooter in my garage because the sight of it upsets my father too much.”

But James Turnbull, one of the owners of Cardiff Medical and Mobility, of Rhydlafar Drive, St Fagans, Cardiff, said the family business was well within its rights to refuse a full refund.

“We sold the product to them on December 10 and they approached us on Christmas Eve. There is nothing wrong with the product and Mr Williams is not entitled to his money back.

“It’s not unusual for people to buy products off us and then for the person who the product was bought for to die. If we refunded every product we sold, we wouldn’t have a business.

“We have been going 24 years and pride ourselves on good customer service.”

Mr Williams, who played full-back for Cardiff RFC between 1979 and 1985, said his father, of Church Villas, Llanharan, who runs Ken’s butchers in Pontyclun, did not expect a full refund, but did expect the shop to help him out by coming to some arrangement.

But Mr Turnbull said Mr Williams only asked for a full refund and did not ask for the shop to consider other options.

He said the business may take the scooter back if it has not been used and would offer a 50 per cent refund.

Mr Williams said: “I never mentioned a full refund, but 50 per cent is unacceptable. We will just have to sell the scooter on ebay.

“Mum’s death has been devastating for all of us and this has only made it worse.”

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