Health
15yo girl left with fractured skull after e-scooter crash
Key Points
On Tuesday police and emergency services were called to Old Princes Highway at Nairne after reports of a 15-year-old girl crashing her e-scooter. In a separate incident an 18-year-old man crashed an e-bike into a parked car on Kensington Road. The SA government is set to review e-mobility device laws in July.
On Tuesday police and emergency services were called to Old Princes Highway at Nairne after reports of a 15-year-old girl crashing her e-scooter.
In a separate incident an 18-year-old man crashed an e-bike into a parked car on Kensington Road.
What's next?
The SA government is set to review e-mobility device laws in July.
Two separate e-device accidents, one of which left a 15-year-old girl with a fractured skull, has raised "genuine" concern about the use of such devices, a month out of a review into SA's laws.
Just before 11:45pm on Tuesday, police and emergency services were called to Old Princes Highway at Nairne after reports a 15-year-old girl had crashed an e-scooter.
Police said the rider, from Mount Barker, was treated by SA Ambulance at the scene and taken to hospital with non-life threatening injures.
Earlier that night, police were called to Kensington Road after reports an e-bike had crashed into a parked Subaru sedan.
The rider, an 18-year-old man from Adelaide, was treated by an ambulance crew and taken to hospital with non-life threatening injuries.
“The person in Nairne has a fractured skull and the 18-year-old in Norwood has a broken leg," SA Police Commissioner Grant Stevens told 891 ABC Adelaide on Wednesday morning.
"The one in Norwood has received an expiation notice because of the way they were riding ...," he said.
When questioned about the effectiveness of road safety messaging, Commissioner Stevens said a majority of people do the right thing but there was "genuine concern about the use of these personal mobility devices".
"When you think about the number of these devices that are out and about now, if you have a small number or proportion of people who are doing the wrong thing that can be quite significant in terms of actual numbers," he said.
"That’s where our focus is. You don’t have to be on the streets for too long in a metropolitan area to see people on scooters zipping about without helmets on."
The SA government is set to review e-mobility device laws in July.
"I know that my team have been compiling information, including statistical information about the number of incidents [and] the contributing factors, which will be the basis of what advice we provide to government," Commissioner Stevens said.
"It's not fair for me to elaborate on that right now."