I'm not sure where the line is between LSV and mobility scooter. LSV are allowed provincially if a municipality allows them but afaik, no municipality has done that. Given that thing is a two-seater I suspect it is LSV. LSV requires liability insurance. I have no idea if anyone offers liability insurance for them. They also require a valid drivers license.
Enclosed mobility scooters seem to be a very grey area. I can't find a legal definition. Sticking a "mobility vehicle" plate on an LSV doesn't fly anymore than an ebike plate on a ducati. Common sense would have mobility scooters top out at fast walking speeds and travel on the sidewalk and LSV's up to the low 30's on the road but I can't find that enshrined in law for MS.
Learn about using a low-speed vehicle in Ontario.
www.ontario.ca
Toronto says that thing is either road only or nowhere depending on whether it legally qualifies as LSV.
I've seen two LSVs in Mississauga where they are not approved. They didn't have plates and I assume no insurance. Driver's license ???? The roads were 60KPH which is over the regulation limit.
Low-speed vehicles (LSVs) are approved for use in the following Ontario municipalities:
- Lambton Shores: The first jurisdiction in Ontario to approve LSVs, in April 2021
- Norfolk County: Approved LSVs in 2021
- Haldimand County: Approved LSVs in 2021
LSVs are similar to golf carts but have standard vehicle features like headlights and windshield wipers. They can only travel up to 40 km/h and can only be driven on roads with a maximum speed limit of 50 km/h. To operate an LSV, you must: Have a valid driver's license, Have a license for the LSV, and Have insurance for the LSV.
Municipalities can set additional requirements for LSVs, including safety requirements. Penalties for violating the pilot regulation include fines, by-law offenses, and serious consequences for driving while impaired.
In Ontario, the rules for e-bikes and sidewalks are quite straightforward. As a general rule,
you are not allowed to ride your e-bike on sidewalks in the province. This regulation is in place to ensure pedestrian safety and to maintain the orderly flow of traffic.
No, drivers in British Columbia do not lose their driver's license at age 80, but they must renew it every two years and get a medical examination:
Driver's Medical Examination Report (DMER)
Drivers must have a DMER completed by their doctor or nurse practitioner at age 80, 85, and every two years after that. The DMER includes checks for cognition, eyesight, and overall physical health.
So Mr LSV driver in the video COULD have gotten his licence renewed but maybe couldn't due to not being fit to drive. Maybe his comprehension is very good either, hogging a sidewalk. What if he meets a person in an actual wheelchair. How do they pass or does he ram them onto the road.
He got the thing with next no Kms on it for half price, possibly because the previous owner, after buying it, found out that it wasn't legal where he wanted to drive.
Gutless politicians will do nothing.
Seniors are fighting the age related retesting. They feel that their need to drive is more important than running over an innocent party and crippling them for life.
500 feet from my place an elderly driver, going home at night from visiting her son ran over a jogger and dragged her a half mile to their driveway and then went inside. A person out for a walk noticed the body later.
In court the driver apologized saying she'd never done anything like that before.
Yes the cities have lost their minds.