Gov. DeSantis vetoes e-bike speeding bill, signs bills to rename South Florida roads after Trump and Kirk, among others
Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoed three bills late Thursday, his first rejection of legislation passed this year, and signed 15 others.
The three quashed bills would have imposed new rules for riding electric bicycles (SB 382), allowed high school students to assist poll workers and get community service credits for graduation (HB 461), and created an exemption to federal and state regulations on signs near interstate roads in Davie (HB 4075).
All three bills passed the Legislature unanimously.
One of the bills he vetoed involves safety regulations for e-bikes and e-scooters
In his veto message on the electric bicycle bill, DeSantis expressed concern about its provision banning riders from going more than 10 miles per hour within 50 feet of a pedestrian. A violation would be punished the same as a nonmoving violation of a vehicle, with fines of more than $100.
Also, such a violation "would inevitably be enforced with speed detection and surveillance devices," DeSantis' letter states.
DeSantis was also leery of the task force the bill set up to study and make recommendations for further electric bicycle regulations.
"This bill will likely lead to enhanced surveillance by local governments against citizens. Moreover, the bill creates a task force, yet substantive changes are also implemented before any task force recommendations," DeSantis wrote.
The veto has drawn criticism from local officials, including Coral Springs City Commissioner Joshua Simmons, who had sought state assistance in addressing electric mobility device safety. Coral Springs officials report that there have been 81 accidents involving electric mobility devices since September.
"I am disappointed," Simmons said. "I know that there are families all across Florida that were looking forward to moving in the next step of having some state guidance when it comes to e-bikes and e-motor machines, because people are getting hurt".
Local riders also emphasized the importance of safety equipment. Aaron Lind, 14, and his 15-year-old brother, Joshua, noted the dangers of riding without protection.
"If you don't have a helmet when you crash, you could hit your head, you could pass out, you could get internal bleeding, because helmets take the force away from your head," Aaron Lind said.
"You're on a fast piece of metal in an area with a lot of other people," Joshua Lind added.
Coral Springs and other municipalities plan to proceed with their own education and enforcement campaigns in the absence of state-level guidance.
Other bills he vetoed and signed into law
For the bill to ensure high school students can get credit for volunteering as assistant poll workers, DeSantis lauded the intention of the bill but suspected it could be used by liberal groups and he cited the Southern Poverty Law Center's backing of the measure.
"While the House and Senate sponsors had a noble intent in filing the bill, the application of the bill may result in an avenue for polls to be staffed with volunteers that may not be subject to Florida's prohibition on single party registered poll workers for general elections," DeSantis wrote in his veto message. "Given the bill received support in committee by representatives of the Southern Poverty Law Center, this may indeed be the consequence of the legislation."
Attorney General James Uthmeier issued subpoenas to the SPLC in May, saying the group "appears to be running a deceptive organization that pays informants to manufacture racism on its behalf."
The third bill would've allowed Davie, a town in Broward County, an exemption from state and federal advertising laws for lands near I-75 to put up a sign promoting the "agricultural heritage" of the area. DeSantis vetoed the bill because he was concerned it would lead to cuts in federal transportation funds issued to the state.
Among the bills he signed into law was a measure (HB 33) to name part of State Road 985 in Miami-Dade County after slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk, and to name part of State Road 870 in Broward County after President Donald Trump.
The bill passed along largely partisan lines, with one Democrat, Sen. Darryl Rouson of Tampa, voting for it.