Council members voiced growing concern about increasingly risky and sometimes illegal e-bike riding in Murrieta and directed staff on June 2 to draft a package of enforcement, education and outreach measures.
Multiple council members recounted near-miss incidents and cited incidents of high-speed or multiple riders, riders performing stunts, riding in vehicle lanes, and students using e-bikes unsafely on sidewalks and near schools. Council asked staff to review best-practice municipal approaches (Council Member Stone cited Rancho Santa Margarita’s model), coordinate with the Murrieta Valley Unified School District on education and possible school-based licensing or requirements, consider additional signage spelling out rules for e-bikes and bike lanes, and examine enforcement tools including impoundment, higher fines, and targeted enforcement operations.
City staff said state legislation is active on e-bike rules and that staff will evaluate existing ordinances elsewhere, enforcement practicality, and educational outreach options. The council did not adopt a new ordinance at the meeting but gave clear direction to return with a draft policy, an enforcement and education plan, and recommended language for signage and outreach to students and parents.