Bill Eberle, an Ocean City resident and e-bike owner, questions whether responsible riders would be unfairly punished if a ban is approved.
By DONALD WITTKOWSKI
Electric bikes won’t be banished from Ocean City’s Boardwalk – at least not anytime soon.
A proposed ordinance to prohibit the increasingly popular e-bikes from the Boardwalk was tabled by City Council on Thursday night for further discussion following concerns from the public that an outright ban would be too harsh.
Councilman Terry Crowley Jr., who initially proposed tabling the ordinance, said he didn’t want to make a rash decision to ban e-bikes for the summer tourism season. He suggested forming a committee to take more time to study the issue.
“To sit here and make a gut decision, we’re going to miss something,” Crowley said.
Virtually all of the Council members agreed with Crowley’s comments while voting 6-1 to table the ordinance. Karen Bergman cast the dissenting vote. Instead, Bergman proposed a compromise to restrict e-bikes on the Boardwalk from 5 a.m. to 10 a.m. each day.
Bergman felt that by limiting the hours of e-bikes to the early morning hours, when the Boardwalk is usually less crowded with pedestrians, it would reduce the possibility of accidents. She voted against tabling the ordinance because she felt that any delays in imposing restrictions on e-bikes might compromise safety.
“I just think we’re too late in the game to table this,” she said.
Mayor Jay Gillian had proposed the ban after listening to complaints from Ocean City residents about teenagers recklessly riding their e-bikes around town and the possibility of them hitting pedestrians on the Boardwalk.
“Prohibiting low-speed electric bicycles on the Boardwalk but permitting them on the other city bike paths will address the public safety concerns about the Boardwalk without depriving the users of low-speed electric bicycles of ample safe spaces in which to ride their bikes,” the ordinance says.

Bill Eberle, an Ocean City resident and e-bike owner, questions whether responsible riders would be unfairly punished if a ban is approved.
Robin Shaffer, an Ocean City resident and member of the Board of Education, questioned whether an e-bike ban might expose the city to complaints that it was violating provisions of the Americans With Disabilities Act.
“It’s a drastic step to ban them outright,” Shaffer said while calling on Council to “take a pause” and study the issue further.
Susan Cracovaner, one of the local residents to speak in favor of an outright ban on e-bikes, said there is currently no speed limit on the Boardwalk, which raises the possibility of accidents.
Cracovaner also said e-bikes are typically two or three times heavier than regular bikes, so they could do more damage if there is an accident on the Boardwalk. During a Council meeting in April, Cracovaner said that her husband had been nearly run over by an e-bike on the Boardwalk.
Councilman Bob Barr, who has cerebral palsy and is an advocate for the disabled, stressed that he did not want the city to take any action that might be viewed as discriminatory against disabled or elderly e-bike riders.
At the same time, Barr said that he also wants to talk to Police Chief Jay Prettyman about ways to prevent teens from riding e-bikes recklessly on the Boardwalk.
“We need to send a message to these teenagers that we will not tolerate this,” Barr said.
Councilman Jody Levchuk also expressed fear that reckless e-bike riders could cause a serious or even fatal accident. He said the last thing he wants to do is “end up at a kid’s funeral here.”
Levchuk said he has a few “clever ideas” he wants to discuss with the police chief for e-bikes on the Boardwalk. He also emphasized the need for more public education about e-bikes to improve safety.
Councilman Tom Rotondi, echoing some of the complaints from the public, said he doesn’t want to unnecessarily punish responsible e-bike riders for “a handful” of reckless ones.
Rotondi felt that by rushing a ban on e-bikes before the issue could be studied further would amount to governing “by schizophrenia or shooting from the hip.”
For now, e-bikes will continue to be allowed on the Boardwalk.