E-bikes welcome on 'motorized use' Forest Service trails, roads

Electric bicycles (e-bikes) have grown in popularity for both recreational use and hunting on public lands and are currently welcome on more than 52,000 miles of roads and 7,700 miles of trails throughout the Northern Region’s nine National Forests and Dakota Prairie Grasslands where motorized vehicle travel is authorized.

The USDA Forest Service considers e-bikes as motorized vehicles and therefore does not allow their use on non-motorized National Forest System (NFS) roads and trails. According to the Forest Service’s Travel Management Rule (TMR) “motor vehicle” is defined as any vehicle which is self-propelled, other than: (1) a vehicle operated on rails; and (2) any wheelchair or mobility device, including one that is battery-powered, that is designed solely for use by a mobility-impaired person for locomotion, and that is suitable for use in an indoor pedestrian area (36 CFR 212.1). E-bikes have a motor, thereby are self-propelled, and are not covered by the exceptions in the definition.

Therefore, e-bikes are motor vehicles and are subject to regulation under the TMR, which requires designation of NFS roads, NFS trails and areas on NFS lands for motor vehicle use (36 CFR 212.51(a)). Direction on e-bikes was included in a response in the Federal Register notice for the final over-snow vehicle rule. The response dated Jan. 28. 2015 stated, “New technologies that merge bicycles and motors, such as e-bikes, are considered motor vehicles under §212.1 of the TMR” (80 Fed. Reg. 4503).

The Forest Service encourages e-bike riders to consult their local National Forest or Grassland’s Motor Vehicle Use Map to ensure they’re riding on an approved, motorized use road or trail, and to exercise caution when traveling among other motor vehicles.

The mission of the Forest Service is to sustain the health, diversity and productivity of the nation’s forests and grasslands to meet the needs of present and future generations. The agency manages 193 million acres of public land, provides assistance to state and private landowners and maintains the largest forestry research organization in the world.

The Forest Service Northern Region includes nine National Forests and 1.2 million acres of National Grasslands in North and South Dakota. These public lands provide timber for people, forage for cattle and wildlife, habitat for fish, plants, and animals, and some of the best recreational opportunities in the country.

 

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