[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 212 (Monday, November 2, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 69206-69223]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-22239]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

Bureau of Land Management

43 CFR Part 8340

[LLWO430000.L12200000.XM0000.20x 24 1A]
RIN 1004-AE72


Increasing Recreational Opportunities Through the Use of Electric 
Bikes

AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is amending its off-road 
vehicle (ORV) regulations to add a definition for electric bikes (e-
bikes) and, where certain criteria are met and an authorized officer 
expressly determines through a formal decision that e-bikes should be 
treated the same as non-motorized bicycles, expressly exempt those e-
bikes from the definition of ORV. The regulatory change effectuated by 
this rule has the potential to facilitate increased recreational 
opportunities for all Americans, especially those with physical 
limitations, and could encourage additional enjoyment of lands and 
waters managed by the BLM.

DATES: This final rule is effective on December 2, 2020.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Britta Nelson, National Conservation 
Lands and Community Partnerships, 303-236-0539. Persons who use a 
telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) may call the Federal Relay 
Service (FRS) at 1-800-877-8339, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, to 
leave a message or question with the previously mentioned point of 
contact. You will receive a reply during normal business hours.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Background
II. Discussion of the Final Rule and Comments on the Proposed Rule
III. Procedural Matters

I. Background

    The Federal Land Policy and Management Act (FLPMA) directs the BLM 
to manage public lands for multiple use and sustained yield (unless 
otherwise provided by law) and to provide for outdoor recreation (43 
U.S.C. 1702). Many visitors ride bicycles on BLM-managed public lands. 
Improvements in bicycle technology have made bicycling an option for 
more people and have made public lands more accessible to cyclists. One 
bicycle design modification growing in popularity is the addition of a 
small electric motor that provides power assistance to the rider and 
reduces the physical exertion required. Electric bicycles (also known 
as e-bikes) are available in an ever-expanding range of design types 
(urban commuter, full suspension mountain, fat-tire, gear hauler bikes, 
etc.) and electric assist capabilities (limited by speed, wattage, 
output algorithms, etc.). E-bikes are commonly used in different 
capacities, such as transportation and recreation.
    By reducing the physical demand associated with bicycling, e-bikes 
expand recreational opportunities for the public, including for people 
with limitations stemming from age, illness, disability, or fitness, 
and in more challenging environments, such as high altitudes or 
mountainous terrain. The presence of a small electric motor on e-bikes, 
however, has created uncertainty about whether e-bikes should be 
treated in the same manner as other types of non-motorized bicycles or 
as ORVs subject to the BLM's regulations at 43 CFR part 8340.
    On August 29, 2019, the Secretary of the Interior issued 
Secretary's Order (SO) 3376 to address regulatory uncertainty regarding 
how agencies within the Department of the Interior (DOI) manage e-
bikes. Specifically, SO 3376 sets forth the general policy of the DOI 
that e-bikes should be allowed where non-motorized types of bicycles 
are allowed and not allowed where non-motorized types of bicycles are 
prohibited. SO 3376 directs the BLM to revise its ORV regulations at 43 
CFR 8340.0-5 to be consistent with SO 3376. The Bureau of Reclamation, 
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and National Park Service are also 
revising their regulations for consistency with SO 3376.

II. Discussion of the Final Rule and Comments on the Proposed Rule

    The BLM published a proposed rule on April 10, 2020 (85 FR 20229), 
soliciting public comments for 60 days. During the comment period, the 
BLM received almost 24,000 submissions from members of the public, 
including senior citizens, avid cyclists, hikers, equestrians and 
equestrian associations, and cycling organizations and manufacturers, 
as well as state and local governments. Each public comment was 
considered in the development of the final rule. Many comments were 
supportive of the proposed rule, with some expressing support for 
increased opportunities for people to ride e-bikes on public lands and 
for e-bikes to be treated similarly to traditional, non-motorized bikes 
by land managers. The BLM also received comments that were critical of 
the proposed rule. Some of these comments expressed concern over 
potential user conflicts or resource damage that may result from 
allowing e-bikes on roads and trails that are currently closed to ORVs. 
Meanwhile, some comments expressed a desire for consistency in the 
management of e-bikes across different agencies.
    In the proposed rule, the BLM requested information from the public 
on the potential social and physical impacts of e-bike use on public 
lands. Studies and reports were provided in conjunction with many of 
the comments and cover a variety of topics, such as safety, hazards, 
health benefits, user conflict, attitudes and perceptions, elk 
behavior, soil displacement, speed comparisons, impacts to grizzly 
bears, snowmobiles, impacts to wildlife, impacts of roads, strategic 
planning, crash likelihood, and battery flammability. While some 
studies and reports address e-bikes specifically, others do not. Many 
studies extrapolate their findings to e-bike use, management, and 
effects. The BLM

[[Page 69207]]

considered these studies and reports while developing the final rule.
    Comments received that are similar in nature have been categorized 
by subject and, in some instances, have been combined with related 
comments.

Discussion of Comments by Topic

Need for a Rule
    Comment: Some commenters stated the rule would be inconsistent with 
the direction in Executive Order (E.O.) 11644, ``Use of Off-Road 
Vehicles on the Public Lands.'' These commenters assert that the rule's 
exclusion of e-bikes from the ORV requirements of this E.O. is 
arbitrary and capricious.
    Response: E.O. 11644 was issued by President Nixon in 1972 and 
amended by President Carter in 1977 (E.O. 11989). It establishes 
policies and procedures for managing the use of ORVs to protect the 
resources of the public lands, promote safety of all users of the 
lands, and minimize conflicts among those users. The E.O. defines ORVs 
as any motorized vehicle designed for or capable of cross-country 
travel on or immediately over land, water, sand, snow, ice, marsh, 
swampland, or other natural terrain. Certain vehicles that would 
otherwise fall within this broad definition are expressly excluded, 
including, but not limited to, any registered motorboat; any fire, 
military, emergency, or law enforcement vehicle when used for emergency 
purposes; and any vehicle whose use is expressly authorized by the 
respective agency head under a permit, lease, license, or contract. 
Under the E.O., the administrative designation of the specific areas 
and trails on which the use of ORVs may be permitted must be based on 
specific criteria designed to protect resources, promote user safety, 
and minimize conflicts among the various uses of public lands.
    E-bikes are not referenced in E.O. 11644, which is not surprising 
given that the technological advances needed to popularize them, such 
as torque motors and power controls, were not developed until the mid-
1990s. While the e-bikes addressed in this rule have a small electric 
motor and are capable of cross-country travel over land, there are 
multiple reasons why it is reasonable to provide authorized officers 
with discretion to manage Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes in the same manner 
as non-motorized bicycles and unlike ORVs, where appropriate.
    First, providing authorized officers with discretion to manage e-
bikes similar to non-motorized bicycles in certain instances does not 
undercut the E.O.'s intent. E.O. 11644 was designed to address the 
expanding and wholly unregulated use of ORVs on public lands, much of 
which involved cross-country travel that did not occur on identified 
roads and trails and was harming historical and archaeological sites, 
among other resources. Such use was also putting ORV users at risk, 
particularly due to the existence of uncovered abandoned mine shafts on 
public lands. By comparison, the Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bike use that 
could be allowed under this rule would be limited to roads and trails 
that traditional, non-motorized bicycles can already use. Therefore, 
users will not likely expose resources or themselves to the type of 
harm that E.O. 11644 was intended to mitigate.
    Second, the Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes that are the subject of this 
rule differ significantly in their engineering from the types of ORVs 
that are identified in E.O. 11644 and that the Executive Branch sought 
to regulate in 1972. These vehicles include the ``motorcycles, mini-
bikes, trial bikes, snowmobiles, dune-buggies, [and] all-terrain 
vehicles,'' which are expressly referenced in E.O. 11644. They also 
include ``motorcycles of various sorts (minibikes, dirt bikes, enduros, 
motocross bikes, etc.), four-wheel drive vehicles such as Jeeps, Land 
Rovers, or pickups, snowmobiles, dune buggies, and all-terrain 
vehicles'' mentioned in a 1979 report by the Council on Environmental 
Quality (CEQ) that discusses the requirements of E.O. 11644 in great 
detail and evaluates efforts undertaken by federal land management 
agencies to comply with them. Although E.O. 11644 and the CEQ report 
did not attempt to list every type of vehicle that may fall within the 
definition of ORV, the marked differences in the overall design and 
function between the identified vehicles and Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes 
is telling. The clearly-identified ORVs have internal combustion 
engines and do not have pedals or other design features that allow for 
human propulsion. To be treated similar to a non-motorized bicycle 
under this rule, however, an e-bike must have operable pedals, be 
capable of relying on human power, and only derive some assistance from 
a small, electric motor. Moreover, the ORVs that the E.O. clearly 
applies to are uniformly larger, louder, and, due to their more 
powerful engines, capable of achieving greater speeds than Class 1, 2, 
and 3 e-bikes.
    Third, as a result of the aforementioned engineering differences, 
e-bikes, unlike the larger, more powerful vehicles referenced in E.O. 
11644 tend to affect resources and other public land users in a manner 
and scope similar to traditional, non-motorized bicycles. Allowing e-
bikes on roads and trails that are already open to non-motorized bike 
use will therefore not result in the types of resource impacts and user 
conflicts that E.O. 11644 was designed to address. For example, the 
ORVs referenced in E.O. 11644 and the 1979 CEQ report are powered by 
internal combustion engines that generate loud noises (i.e., anywhere 
from 90-110 decibels, depending on the type of vehicle), which are 
capable of carrying over long distances. The noise associated with e-
bikes includes the sound of their tires rolling over a road or trail 
and, at most, a low, steady whine that may be emitted when the electric 
motor is engaged. While the effects of noise on wildlife differ across 
taxonomic groups and reactions to sound are different for every 
visitor, the impacts on quietude, wildlife behavioral patterns, and 
other recreational uses caused by e-bikes are expected to be similar to 
those caused by traditional, non-motorized bicycles and substantially 
less than those resulting from typical motor vehicle use or even the 
vehicles listed in the E.O. Also, unlike those latter vehicles, e-bikes 
do not emit exhaust that could impact air quality and the health of 
nearby users. Finally, a review of available models shows that Class 1, 
2, and 3 e-bikes are generally much lighter than even the lightest ORV 
listed in the E.O. A typical e-bike weighs approximately 45-50 pounds, 
which is only slightly heavier than a typical traditional, non-
motorized bicycle's weight of 30-35 pounds. In comparison, minibikes, 
which are the lightest ORV listed in E.O. 11644, weigh an average of 
115-130 pounds, typical trial bikes can weigh 145 pounds, and 
motorcycles can weigh approximately 300-400 pounds. The significantly 
lower weight of e-bikes, combined with the lower levels of torque that 
they are capable of generating, and the lower speeds that they are 
capable of reaching, limit their potential to cause soil compaction and 
erosion. This was demonstrated by a recent study conducted by the 
International Mountain Bicycling Association. That study, which 
measured relative levels of soil displacement and erosion resulting 
from traditional, non-motorized mountain bikes, e-bikes, and gasoline-
powered dirt bikes, found that soil displacement and tread disturbance 
from e-bikes and traditional, non-motorized mountain bikes were not 
significantly different, and both were much less than those associated 
with gas-powered dirt bikes.

[[Page 69208]]

Although the study focused on the impacts from Class 1 e-bikes, it is 
likely that the impacts would be similar for Class 2 e-bikes. Both 
classes provide motorized assistance up to 20 miles per hour and, under 
this rule, Class 2 e-bikes may not be ridden in throttle-only actuation 
for extended periods of time. Class 3 e-bikes, which aside from 
providing motorized assistance up to 28 miles per hour, are generally 
similar in design, engineering, size, and weight to Class 1 e-bikes.
    Fourth, managing Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes similarly to 
traditional, non-motorized bicycles and distinguishing them from other 
motor vehicles is consistent with how other federal agencies regulate 
e-bikes. Defined by Congress in the Consumer Product Safety Act (Pub. 
L. 107-319, Dec. 4, 2002; codified at 15 U.S.C. 2085) as low-speed 
electric bicycles, e-bikes are not considered to be motor vehicles 
under 49 U.S.C. 30102; therefore, they are not subject to regulation by 
the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Instead, e-bikes 
are regulated similarly to non-motorized bicycles and considered 
consumer products regulated by the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
    Comment: Some commenters stated that the rule is unnecessary 
because the BLM manages sufficient motorized trails for e-bikes.
    Response: The BLM currently manages, and will continue to manage, 
motorized trails for e-bikes, among other uses. The popularity of e-
bikes, however, is increasing significantly. Market research from the 
NPD Group's bicycle industry statistics from 2018 shows that e-bikes 
are currently the fastest growing bicycle type in the market with e-
bike sales totaling $77.1 million in 2017, up 91% from 2016, with sales 
of e-bikes growing more than eight-fold since 2014. Considering e-
bikes' growing popularity, the BLM needs additional administrative 
tools to regulate them appropriately. This rule will provide authorized 
officers with greater flexibility to manage e-bikes in the future and 
enable BLM's management of e-bikes to be more consistent with the 
approach of adjacent land managers and other DOI agencies.
    Comment: Some commenters stated that the BLM does not need a 
rulemaking to designate trail access for e-bikes, where appropriate.
    Response: This final rule provides additional specificity regarding 
how the BLM may allow the use of e-bikes, or classes of e-bikes, on 
non-motorized roads and trails; clarifies that, under certain 
conditions, e-bikes are to be treated similarly to traditional 
bicycles; and provides authorized officers the discretion to treat them 
accordingly. Under existing regulations, e-bikes are managed as ORVs 
and can be allowed, based on site-specific considerations, on roads and 
trails that are located in areas designated as ``Open'' or ``Limited'' 
to ORV use in applicable land use plans. E-bikes are not currently 
allowed in areas that land use plans have closed to ORV use, some of 
which contain roads and trails available to traditional, non-motorized 
bicycles. Because this rule provides authorized officers with 
discretion to issue a decision that excludes Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes 
from the definition of ORVs at 43 CFR 8340.0-5(a), the final rule could 
facilitate e-bike use on roads and trails in areas that are closed to 
ORV use and help the BLM achieve its goal of providing greater access 
to public lands, particularly to people with limitations.
    Comment: Several commenters suggested that the BLM should abandon 
the rulemaking and that the DOI should fund additional studies to 
consider the impacts of e-bikes on public lands.
    Response: The BLM considered the studies and reports received in 
response to the BLM's request for information on the proposed rule and 
determined that the current body of literature supports its decision to 
empower authorized officers to allow e-bikes on non-motorized roads and 
trails. The current literature indicates that e-bikes do not tend to be 
more dangerous than traditional, non-motorized bicycles and that e-
bikes and non-motorized bicycles have similar impacts on public health 
and safety. Where e-bike accidents do occur, they tend to involve a 
single e-bike during mounting and dismounting and are less likely to 
involve other road users. The current body of literature also indicates 
that e-bikes displace soil and contribute to erosion in ways that are 
similar to traditional, non-motorized bicycles. Moreover, a 2019 review 
conducted by Boulder County, Colorado, found little in the literature 
to suggest that e-bikes are more likely to impact wildlife differently 
than traditional, non-motorized bicycles.
    In sum, the current body of literature is sufficient for the BLM to 
conclude that the differences in impacts between e-bikes and non-
motorized bicycles will, at most, likely be minor. The BLM recognizes, 
however, that e-bikes are an emerging technology and acknowledges that 
the body of literature on e-bikes will increase over time. Authorized 
officers will have the opportunity to consider new scientific and other 
relevant information when determining whether to authorize e-bikes on 
non-motorized roads and trails through future site-specific decision-
making processes.
    Comment: Some commenters stated that the BLM failed to provide a 
reasoned explanation for the proposed changes in defining e-bikes as 
non-motorized. Several commenters suggested that the BLM continue to 
manage e-bikes as ORVs.
    Response: As previously noted, allowing authorized officers to 
exclude e-bikes from the definition of ORV in certain situations will 
help the BLM account for the fact that, in both their engineering and 
impacts, e-bikes are more like traditional, non-motorized bicycles than 
other motorized vehicles. The rule change will also help align how 
agencies across the DOI regulate e-bikes and make the BLM's regulation 
of e-bikes more consistent with that of other non-DOI federal agencies, 
such as the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the 
Consumer Product Safety Commission. Finally, because the rule will 
provide authorized officers with the authority to allow e-bikes on 
roads and trails that are located within ``OHV Closed'' areas under 
applicable land use plans, the rule will help fulfill the DOI's policy 
of increasing recreational opportunities for all Americans, especially 
those with physical limitations.
    Comment: Some commenters stated that the rule does not reconcile a 
discrepancy with the BLM's Travel and Transportation Management Manual.
    Response: After publication of this final rule, the BLM may 
determine it is necessary to update agency policy, including manuals, 
handbooks, and other guidance materials, for consistency with the new 
rule.
User Conflicts
    Comment: Several commenters expressed concern about potential 
conflicts between e-bikes and other users of public lands. These 
concerns included potential safety issues from user interactions and 
speed differences between e-bike users and equestrians or hikers. These 
commenters suggested that increased e-bike use would cause certain 
users to avoid using trails where these conflicts could occur and could 
change the visitation patterns of existing trail users. Some commenters 
stated the rule may lead to ``technological displacement,'' whereby 
recreational users with new and more advanced forms of transportation 
degrade the experience of and displace traditional users.
    Response: The BLM will consider potential conflicts with other 
users when considering whether Class 1, 2, or 3 e-bikes should be 
allowed on specific

[[Page 69209]]

roads and trails through future planning or implementation-level 
decision-making processes. While the existing body of literature 
demonstrates that e-bikes tend to be ridden in a manner similar to 
traditional, non-motorized bicycles and are generally compatible with 
existing recreational uses of BLM-managed roads and trails that are 
already open to traditional bicycle use, the agency recognizes that 
there may be situations where that is not the case. The BLM also 
recognizes that new technologies can, in some situations, result in the 
displacement of other, less technologically advanced recreational uses. 
The BLM will consider potential conflicts between e-bikes and other 
recreational uses on individual roads and trails through future 
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) processes before any new e-
bike use is authorized.
    Comment: Commenters stated that the BLM needs to analyze the 
potential liability that could result from e-bike accidents and 
injuries before finalizing a rule.
    Response: The BLM will consider potential user conflicts and other 
public health and safety concerns in accordance with applicable law as 
part of a site-specific analysis. In the event that accidents or 
injuries were to occur as a result of or in conjunction with e-bike 
use, liability, if any, would be determined in accordance with 
applicable laws, which may include the Federal Tort Claims Act.
    Comment: Some commenters expressed a concern that the rule would 
result in existing motorized trail opportunities being lost if those 
trails are reclassified for the exclusive use of bikes or e-bikes.
    Response: The final rule will allow the BLM more flexibility to 
increase e-bike opportunities on existing non-motorized trails without 
reclassifying existing ORV trails. Under this rule, Class 1, 2, and 3 
e-bikes may be excluded from the definition of ORV and thereby allowed 
on certain non-motorized roads or trails where they were previously 
prohibited. The rule would not affect the use of e-bikes or other 
motorized vehicles on the use of roads and trails where ORV use is 
currently allowed.
Economic and Threshold Analysis
    Comment: Several commenters disagreed with conclusions in the 
Economic and Threshold Analysis that the rule would not impact public 
safety.
    Response: This rule is not self-executing--it does not authorize 
any new e-bike use on BLM-managed roads and trails--and does not have 
any direct impacts on public safety. The BLM prepared an Economic and 
Threshold Analysis for the proposed rule, which concluded that the rule 
itself would not adversely affect, in a substantial way, the economy, a 
sector of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the 
environment, public health or safety, or state, local, or tribal 
governments or communities. The Economic and Threshold Analysis and 
proposed rule discussed the potential for an increase in conflicts 
among trail users following site-specific implementation of the rule, 
as well as an increase in the risk of injury or need for rescue. The 
existing body of literature concerning the impacts of e-bikes suggests, 
however, that the potential for conflicts and an increase in the risk 
of injury is likely to be low. Studies from Europe that focus on 
commuter use found that e-bike use results in accidents and hospital 
admissions at a similar rate to conventional, non-motorized bicycle 
use. Another study found that the road situations in which crashes 
occur do not differ between e-bikes and traditional bikes and that 
crashes with e-bikes are about equally severe as crashes with 
traditional bikes. Still another study showed riders of e-bike and 
traditional, non-motorized bicycles exhibit similar safety behavior. 
Given differences in current use across sites, potential e-bike use, 
and visitor preferences, it is not feasible to estimate the net effect 
of e-bike use across all BLM road and trails at this time. Therefore, 
based on the existing literature, the BLM concludes that e-bike use 
will likely have minimal impacts on public safety.
    Comment: Some commenters suggested that the economic consequences 
of the displacement of traditional trail users must be addressed in the 
final rule.
    Response: The rule is not self-executing, so no users will be 
displaced as a result of the rule. Potential conflicts between users 
will be evaluated in a site-specific analysis.
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) Analysis
    Comment: Commenters stated that the rule disregards research 
demonstrating adverse impacts from e-bikes and has not analyzed e-bike 
compatibility.
    Response: The body of research on impacts and compatibility of e-
bike use is still developing. For that reason, as discussed earlier, 
the BLM's proposed rule requested information from the public on the 
potential social and physical impacts of e-bike use on public lands. 
The BLM received many studies and reports in response to its request, 
which it reviewed and considered in coordination with the other DOI 
agencies promulgating e-bike rules. Although not all the studies and 
reports specifically addressed e-bike use, many of them contained 
useful information that the BLM considered when drafting this final 
rule. For example, they demonstrated that the public tends to ride e-
bikes and traditional, non-motorized bicycles at similar speeds. In one 
survey of bikes on county trails, the average e-bike speed was less 
(13.8 miles per hour (mph)) than the average conventional bike speed 
(14.5 mph). Other studies found that on-road, e-bike riders (13.3 
kilometers per hour (kph)) achieved higher speeds than regular 
bicyclists (10.4 kph), but shared use path (greenway) speeds of e-bike 
riders (11.0 kph) were lower than regular bicyclists (12.6 kph), and 
that average riding speed on an e-mountain bike was approximately 4 mph 
faster than speeds on a conventional mountain bike.
    Another study, which found that e-bike users are equally likely to 
be admitted to hospitals as traditional bike users if they need 
treatment at an emergency department after a bicycle crash, 
demonstrated that e-bikes and traditional, non-motorized bicycles have 
similar impacts on public health. Other studies demonstrated that all 
forms of recreation may have negative impacts on wildlife behavior and 
habitat and that elk tend to avoid areas where humans recreate, 
resulting in habitat compression. Many of these studies, however, did 
not address e-bikes specifically, and none of them conclusively 
demonstrated that e-bikes have more adverse impacts on wildlife than 
non-motorized bicycles.
    Authorized officers will account for the information in these 
studies, as well as any relevant future studies, when considering 
whether to authorize the use of e-bikes on non-motorized roads and 
trails. These studies will be particularly useful at the site-specific 
level, where more detailed information on potential effects will be 
available and authorized officers can consider specific user 
incompatibility, resource impacts, and other issues.
    Comment: Some commenters asserted that the rule cannot be 
categorically excluded under 43 CFR 46.210(i) because it is not ``of an 
administrative, financial, legal, technical, or procedural nature.''
    Response: This rule is administrative and procedural in nature and 
satisfies the first prong of the categorical exclusion at 43 CFR 
46.210(i). The rule is not self-executing and does not authorize the 
use of any e-bikes use in areas where e-bikes are currently not 
allowed. The rule merely establishes a

[[Page 69210]]

definition of e-bikes and creates a process for authorized officers to 
consider when determining whether to authorize e-bike use on public 
lands. That process describes how authorized officers will consider 
whether to allow for e-bike use on roads and trails. The rule preserves 
authorized officers' discretion to either approve or deny the use of e-
bikes on roads and trails and to impose limitations or restrictions on 
authorized e-bike use to minimize impacts on resources and conflicts 
with other recreational uses. Additionally, the rule maintains the 
public's ability to participate in any such BLM decision-making 
process. When considering whether to allow Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes on 
non-motorized roads and trails, the BLM must comply with NEPA and other 
laws providing for public participation. Before deciding to authorize 
e-bike use, the BLM will consider comments it receives from Federal, 
state, county, and local agencies, Tribes, local landowners, and other 
interested members of the public. Under BLM policy, application of the 
minimization criteria identified in E.O. 11644 and incorporated into 43 
CFR 8342.1 involves limiting the degree or magnitude of the action, as 
those terms are defined in the CEQ's NEPA regulations. Although this 
rule would not require the BLM to apply the minimization criteria to 
authorize e-bike use on non-motorized roads and trails, the BLM's legal 
obligation to consider the degree or magnitude of impacts associated 
with e-bike use through the NEPA process will nonetheless facilitate 
the minimization of impacts on resources and users. The rule, because 
it is administrative and procedural in nature and would not result in 
any on-the-ground changes or other environmental effects, satisfies the 
first prong of the categorical exclusion at 43 CFR 46.210(i).
    Comment: Some commenters requested an environmental assessment or 
environmental impact statement to analyze the environmental 
consequences of the rulemaking to help inform future decisions about 
whether to authorize e-bike use. These commenters stated that the rule 
cannot be categorically excluded under 43 CFR 46.210(i) because the 
environmental effects are not ``too broad, speculative, or conjectural 
to lend themselves to meaningful analysis.''
    Response: This rule also satisfies the second prong of the 
categorical exclusion at 43 CFR 46.210(i). Unlike some rules, this rule 
is not suited to the preparation of a NEPA analysis from which future 
site-specific analyses can tier. The future implementation of the 
procedures in this rule is uncertain. Moreover, the environmental 
consequences from any such future implementation would be evaluated in 
future NEPA documents but at this time are too broad, speculative, and 
conjectural to evaluate meaningfully. As discussed previously in this 
rule, the body of literature concerning the impacts of e-bike use is 
still developing. While the existing literature demonstrates that the 
general impacts associated with e-bikes are very similar to those from 
traditional, non-motorized bicycles, the actual impacts that may result 
from allowing e-bikes on roads and trails on which non-motorized 
bicycles are allowed will depend primarily on the site-specific 
conditions of the roads and trails on which e-bike use is contemplated. 
These conditions vary significantly across BLM-managed lands and, as a 
result, given existing literature, are currently too speculative to 
lend themselves to meaningful analysis at a Bureau-wide scale. For 
example, some roads and trails may be on sagebrush steppe or high 
plateaus, while others are in Eastern hardwood forests and on the 
Pacific coast. Some roads and trails may be in areas that are commonly 
visited by backpackers, bird watchers, and other recreational users 
seeking solitude, while others may be located in areas commonly 
utilized by equestrians, rock climbers, or hunters. Additionally, some 
roads and trails may be in areas near urban centers that see 
significant visitation, while others are in remote areas that see very 
few visitors. As a result of these differences, local conditions will 
ultimately dictate what impacts can be expected from e-bike use on 
certain roads and trails. Therefore, the BLM will not be able to 
analyze meaningfully those impacts through the NEPA processes until it 
can account for that site-specificity through future land use planning 
or implementation-level proposals. As a result, the BLM's reliance on 
the second prong of the categorical exclusion at 43 CFR 46.210(i) is 
appropriate.
    Comment: Some commenters requested the preparation of supporting 
analyses to determine thresholds for wildlife disturbance from e-bikes 
on BLM land, including information regarding the extent to which 
affected trails overlap with designated critical habitat.
    Response: The BLM will consider the impacts of Class 1, 2, and 3 e-
bikes on wildlife through the NEPA process that accompanies future 
site-specific proposals to authorize e-bike use on roads and trails on 
which traditional, non-motorized bicycles are currently allowed. 
Considering impacts on wildlife at the site-specific level will allow 
the BLM to better evaluate the potential effects of e-bike use on 
specific populations of animals; consult with the appropriate federal, 
state, and local resources agencies regarding potential resource 
impacts; and develop site-specific design features and/or mitigation 
strategies. It would be shortsighted for a rule of this nature to 
prescribe disturbance thresholds, even making them mandatory, as that 
would preclude the use of future science and information or require 
further revisions to the regulations in order to incorporate new 
science and information.
    Comment: Some commenters state that future implementation actions 
allowing Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes on roads and trails are connected 
actions under NEPA that are inextricably intertwined with the proposed 
rule and must be fully analyzed now. Similarly, other commenters state 
that the BLM has improperly segmented these connected actions to rely 
on the categorical exclusion at 43 CFR. 46.210(i).
    Response: Future implementation actions allowing or disallowing e-
bikes on roads and trails that are open to traditional, non-motorized 
bicycles are not connected actions that are inextricably intertwined 
with the rule and must undergo NEPA analysis in conjunction with this 
rulemaking. Future decision-making is facilitated by the rule, but it 
is not required or automatically triggered by it. Instead, authorized 
officers will determine whether to initiate proposals to allow Class 1, 
2, and 3 e-bikes on currently non-motorized roads and trails on an 
individualized basis. Authorized officers will also determine whether 
to allow or disallow e-bikes on those roads and trails on an 
individualized basis, as the rule does not mandate any specific 
outcomes. Additionally, future proposals to allow or disallow e-bikes 
are not connected actions because the BLM could authorize e-bike use on 
roads and trails on which traditional, non-motorized bicycles are 
allowed in the absence of this rule. As some commenters pointed out, 
the BLM could allow Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes on roads and trails that 
are currently non-motorized under its current regulations and travel 
management policies and without excluding them from the definition of 
ORV. Indeed, as these same commenters additionally noted, some BLM 
field offices are currently considering opening single-track mountain 
biking trails to e-bikes through their current travel management plans. 
Finally, future implementation actions are not connected actions

[[Page 69211]]

because they are not interdependent or dependent on a larger action for 
their justification. Site-specific decision-making can proceed under 
the rule in the absence of, and completely independent from, other 
site-specific proposals to allow e-bike use on BLM-managed lands.
Extraordinary Circumstances
    Comment: Some commenters stated that extraordinary circumstances 
under 43 CFR 46.215 apply to this rulemaking, prohibiting the BLM from 
relying on the categorical exclusion at 43 CFR 46.210(i). Commenters 
cited the following extraordinary circumstances under 43 CFR 46.215.
    (a) Significant impacts on public health or safety.
     Comment: Commenters stated that they provided 
documentation of significant safety impacts of e-bikes within their 
comment, including citations to numerous supporting studies.
     Response: Because this rule will not result in any on-the-
ground changes or authorize any new e-bike use on BLM lands, it will 
not have any direct impacts on public health and safety. Additionally, 
relevant literature demonstrates that the rule should not have 
significant indirect impacts on public health or safety as a result of 
future site-specific decisions allowing e-bikes on roads and trails 
upon which non-motorized bicycles are allowed. For example, studies 
show that, although e-bikes enable riders to travel longer distances 
and carry more cargo with them, they are generally ridden at speeds 
similar to non-motorized bicycles. In fact, a survey conducted by 
Boulder County, Colorado, found that, on average, e-bikes were ridden 
more slowly than non-motorized bicycles on county trails. Other studies 
found that e-bike and non-motorized bicycle riders behave similarly, 
violate applicable rules similarly, have similar accident rates, and 
are admitted to hospitals after a crash at similar rates. While the 
relevant body of literature on e-bikes continues to develop, existing 
research allows the BLM to predict that the effects of this rule on 
public health and safety will be insignificant.
    (b) Significant impacts on natural resources and unique geographic 
characteristics.
     Comment: Commenters stated that the rule will have 
significant impacts on recreation, national monuments, and other 
vulnerable categories identified in 43 CFR 46.215(b).
     Response: The rule will not have significant impacts on 
the natural resources and unique geographic characteristics identified 
in 43 CFR 46.215(b). This rule will not result in any on-the-ground 
changes. Specifically, it will not authorize the use of Class 1, 2, or 
3 e-bikes on any roads or trails upon which they are currently 
prohibited. Any future changes would require future NEPA processes that 
will consider the impacts that e-bikes may have on natural resources 
and unique geographic characteristics. If e-bike use is proposed in an 
area identified in 43 CFR 46.215(b), such as a national monument, then 
the potential significance of impacts would be a factor in determining 
the appropriate level of NEPA analysis at that time.
    (c) Highly controversial environmental effects or unresolved 
conflicts concerning alternative uses of available resources.
     Comment: Commenters stated that e-bike use on public lands 
is becoming highly controversial and involves unresolved conflicts 
concerning alternative uses of available resources, with generally no 
effort to study the impacts of e-bike use. Commenters stated that there 
is conflicting data about the significance of impacts of e-bikes in 
comparison with motorized vehicles and traditional mountain bikes, 
creating disputes regarding the effects of conflicts from e-bike use on 
non-motorized trails. Some commenters stated that e-bike use is highly 
controversial, with numerous major stakeholders and interest groups 
taking ``pro'' and ``con'' sides, fitting the definition of ``highly 
controversial.''
     Response: 43 CFR 46.215(c) pertains to whether the 
environmental effects of a proposed action are highly controversial 
(i.e., there is significant scientific disagreement about whether a 
specific action will impact the environment, and how). There is not 
significant scientific disagreement about how or whether this rule will 
impact the environment. Because this rule merely creates a process for 
allowing Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bike use in the future and does not 
directly authorize their use on any roads or trails upon which they are 
currently prohibited, it will have no impact on the environment. There 
also is not a significant scientific disagreement about how e-bikes 
generally impact the environment. While the body of literature 
concerning the environmental impacts of e-bikes is still developing, 
the studies that were submitted by the public during the public comment 
period demonstrate that the impacts associated with e-bikes are similar 
to the well-understood impacts associated with traditional, non-
motorized bicycles. Notably, the studies show that e-bikes and 
traditional, non-motorized bicycles travel at relatively similar 
speeds, pose similar health and public safety risks, impact wildlife 
similarly, and displace soil and contribute to erosion in ways that are 
similar to each other and significantly different than a gas-powered 
dirt bike. In sum, the studies are consistent in their discussion of 
impacts associated with e-bikes and do not demonstrate significant 
scientific disagreement about this rule or how e-bikes, generally, may 
impact the environment.
    (d) Highly uncertain and potentially significant environmental 
effects or involve unique and unknown environmental risk.
     Comment: Commenters stated that the extent of 
environmental impacts is uncertain, given that e-bikes are growing in 
popularity as an emerging recreational use with data collection and 
studies warranted. Commenters stated that the BLM does not consider the 
uncertain and potential impacts of e-bike use, defers this analysis, 
and directs pre-determined outcomes. Commenters stated that the 
categorical exclusion should not apply because of unique risks 
presented by e-bikes (e.g., backcountry use, safety, and user conflicts 
due to the speed of an e-bike).
     Response: This rule does not change any on-the-ground e-
bike allowances, and the environmental effects associated with it are 
not highly uncertain. To the extent that the rule will have any 
environmental effects, they will result from future site-specific 
decisions, which are left to the discretion of the authorized officer 
and will be supported by additional NEPA processes. Moreover, the 
environmental effects associated with e-bikes generally are not highly 
uncertain. While there is always some uncertainty when making 
predictions about how human activities will impact the natural world, 
the existing literature demonstrates that e-bike impacts are similar to 
those of traditional, non-motorized bicycles. Allowing e-bikes on roads 
and trails that are already open to non-motorized bicycles will 
therefore not have significant impacts on the environment. Studies 
discussing impacts on wildlife are instructive in this regard. They 
show that, while all forms of recreation may negatively impact wildlife 
habitat, motorized all-terrain vehicles tend to have greater adverse 
impacts on wildlife compared to traditional, non-motorized bicycles, 
and there is little in the peer-reviewed literature to suggest that e-
bikes have greater negative impacts than traditional, non-motorized 
bicycles. Similarly, a study performed by the

[[Page 69212]]

International Mountain Bicycling Association found that soil 
displacement and tread disturbance from e-bikes and traditional, non-
motorized mountain bikes were not significantly different; in fact, 
both were much less than those associated with gas-powered dirt bikes. 
In light of this existing body of literature, and the absence of any 
studies clearly showing that e-bikes impact the environment in a manner 
that differs significantly from non-motorized bicycles, the BLM has 
reasonably concluded that the impacts associated with this rule are not 
highly uncertain. To the extent that the existing body of literature on 
the impacts of e-bikes continues to develop, authorized officers will 
consider new, relevant studies when analyzing future site-specific 
proposals.
    (e) Establish a precedent for future action or represent a decision 
in principle about future actions with potentially significant 
environmental effects.
     Comment: Commenters stated that the rule establishes a 
precedent for future actions with potentially significant environmental 
effects, creates a presumption that e-bikes are allowed on non-
motorized trails, and largely predetermines the outcome of relevant 
land management planning or implementation-level decisions. Commenters 
stated that the rule encourages BLM offices to make decisions without 
addressing the potentially significant environmental effects. 
Commenters stated that the rule fails to consider its precedential 
importance and the associated commercialization of BLM-administered 
lands, opening the floodgates for numerous similar technological 
impacts.
     Response: The rule does not establish a precedent or 
represent a decision in principle about how authorized officers should 
treat e-bikes in the future. As discussed later in greater detail, the 
BLM recognizes how language in the proposed rule, which provided that 
authorized officers ``should generally allow'' e-bikes on roads and 
trails upon which mechanized, non-motorized use is allowed, could be 
understood to create a presumption in favor of e-bike use that would 
bias future BLM decision-making. In response, the BLM has revised the 
final rule to state that authorized officers ``may allow'' e-bikes on 
roads and trails open to non-motorized bicycles. This change is 
intended to clarify that authorized officers have full discretion to 
determine whether e-bike use, or the use of only certain classes of e-
bikes, is appropriate on individual roads and trails. Therefore, it 
reinforces that authorized officers have authority to, and should, 
consider the potential impacts associated with e-bikes before 
authorizing their site-specific use and it emphasizes that the rule 
does not direct any specific substantive changes or establish a 
precedent for purposes of 43 CFR 46.215(e).
    (f) Direct relationship to other actions with individually 
insignificant but cumulatively significant environmental effects.
     Comment: Commenters stated that cumulative impacts of all 
BLM units approving e-bikes will be significant when considered 
nationwide.
     Response: The rule will not have a direct relationship to 
other actions with individually insignificant but cumulatively 
significant environmental effects. The rule, and future implementation 
actions that will occur in accordance with it, are not connected 
actions and their impacts do not have to be analyzed in tandem. The 
rule will not automatically trigger future proposals to authorize e-
bikes on roads and trails that are open to traditional, non-motorized 
bicycles. Whether such decisions will occur will be determined by 
authorized officers on an individualized basis. At the same time, the 
rule does not mandate any specific outcomes. It provides authorized 
officers with discretion to determine whether e-bike use is appropriate 
on individual roads and trails and does not require or suggest that 
authorized officers consider how determinations are being made in other 
field offices. To the contrary, in light of limited agency resources 
and highly variable geography, the BLM designed the rule to allow site-
specific decision-making to proceed in the absence of, and completely 
independent from, other site-specific proposals to allow e-bike use on 
BLM-managed lands.
    (g) Significant impacts on properties listed, or eligible for 
listing, on the National Register of Historic Places.
     Comment: Commenters stated that many BLM units contain 
current or potentially listed historic places, and some were 
established specifically to protect such places, so in light of their 
special national importance, the rule for system-wide approval is 
improper.
     Response: The rule does not change current authorized 
uses. Therefore, the rule itself will not have significant impacts on 
properties listed, or eligible for listing, on the National Register of 
Historic Places. If the BLM does propose to allow Class 1, 2, or 3 e-
bikes on non-motorized roads and trails, the authorized officer will 
consider the potential impacts on historic properties in determining 
the appropriate level of NEPA analysis for the proposed action. Even in 
that situation, however, impacts on historic properties are unlikely to 
be significant. That is because the rule will only allow e-bike use on 
non-motorized roads and trails that are already open to traditional, 
non-motorized bicycles, and, as discussed throughout this rule, the 
impacts associated with e-bikes are similar to those associated with 
traditional, non-motorized bicycles.
    (h) Significant impacts on species listed, or proposed to be 
listed, on the list of endangered or threatened species or significant 
impacts on designated critical habitat.
     Comment: Commenters stated that the BLM has not complied 
with Section 7(a)(2) of the Endangered Species Act and that the rule 
will have significant impacts on endangered or threatened species.
     Response: For the same reasons it will not have 
significant impacts on properties listed, or eligible for listing, on 
the National Register of Historic Places, the rule will not have 
significant impacts on species listed, or proposed to be listed, as 
endangered or threatened species, or on designated critical habitat for 
these species. As noted previously, the rule does not allow e-bike use 
on any roads or trails on which it is currently prohibited. Any new e-
bike allowances will be the result of future site-specific decision-
making processes that will comply with the Endangered Species Act, as 
applicable. Additionally, because any future allowances will be limited 
to roads and trails on which traditional, non-motorized bicycles are 
allowed, the BLM anticipates that any impacts stemming from new e-bike 
use will be insignificant.
    (i) Violate a federal law, or a state, local, or tribal law or 
requirement imposed for the protection of the environment.
     Comment: Commenters stated that allowing e-bikes on non-
motorized trails threatens to violate laws designed to protect 
resources on public lands and that allowing e-bikes on non-motorized 
trails without designating those trails for motorized use is contrary 
to federal law and longstanding travel management regulations and 
policies. Commenters stated that the rule also threatens to violate 
various state and local laws governing e-bike use on trails and that 
state, local, and Forest Service definitions and requirements for e-
bikes differ and conflict from BLM proposals. Commenters stated that 
this creates the potential for significant jurisdictional challenges 
and violations of such differing standards imposed for the

[[Page 69213]]

protection of the environment. Commenters stated that these 
extraordinary circumstances require the BLM to conduct additional 
analysis for the rule.
     Response: This final rule does not violate a federal law 
or requirement imposed for the protection of the environment. As 
discussed previously, although the e-bikes addressed in this rule have 
a small electric motor, their engineering and impacts and their 
similarities to non-motorized bicycles and differences from other 
motorized vehicles result in this rule being consistent with the 
overall design and intent of E.O. 11644. Allowing authorized officers 
to exclude e-bikes from the E.O.'s definition of ORV also makes the 
BLM's management of e-bikes more consistent with that of other federal 
agencies, including the Consumer Product Safety Commission. 
Additionally, the rule does not violate a state, local, or tribal law 
or requirement imposed for the protection of the environment. The rule 
provides authorized officers with the discretion to consider applicable 
state, local, or tribal laws and requirements when determining whether 
to allow e-bikes on roads and trails that are open to traditional, non-
motorized bicycles. Authorized officers will account for these laws and 
requirements when deciding whether e-bike use is appropriate on 
specific roads and trails.
Public Comment Process
    Comment: Some commenters stated that the length of the public 
review period was not sufficient and that a public meeting should be 
scheduled. Some commenters stated that the pandemic has created 
obstacles to public participation and that rulemaking should be 
postponed. Some commenters asserted that the BLM was failing to comply 
with its requirements under FLPMA for public involvement. The 
commenters state that FLPMA requires that the BLM give ``the public 
adequate notice and an opportunity to comment upon the formulation of 
standards and criteria for, and to participate in, the preparation and 
execution of plans and programs for, and the management of, the public 
lands.''
    Response: In accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act and 
applicable policy, the BLM provided a 60-day public comment period that 
began on Friday, April 10, 2020, and ended on Tuesday, June 9, 2020. 
During that time, the BLM received almost 24,000 public comments, which 
suggests that the 60-day public review period was adequate for the 
public to respond to the proposed rule. Public meetings are not 
required for informal rulemaking under the Administrative Procedure 
Act. The BLM will provide the public with opportunities to respond to 
future, site-specific implementation of the rule in accordance with 
NEPA and other applicable laws.
E-Bike Definition
    Comment: Some commenters stated that the e-bike classification 
system and its associated speed limits are not supported by evidence.
    Response: The definition of e-bike included in this the rule, which 
relies on a ``3-class system'' originally created by the bicycling 
industry, establishes a consistent definition for use across all DOI 
agencies. To date, at least 28 states have adopted the 3-class system 
into their regulations for e-bikes. The BLM incorporated the 3-class 
system into its definition of e-bike to achieve greater consistency 
with how other jurisdictions and entities are regulating e-bikes.
    Comment: Some commenters asserted that the rule limits the 
discretion of the authorized officer to make individualized decisions 
on e-bike use and that e-bike use should be managed separately from 
traditional bike use.
    Response: The BLM has revised paragraph 8342.2(d) to provide that 
authorized officers ``may allow'' e-bikes on roads and trails upon 
which mechanized, non-motorized use is allowed. This change is intended 
to clarify that the rule does not mandate any specific outcomes and to 
alleviate any concern that the rule limits the discretion of authorized 
officers about whether and where to allow e-bike use on BLM-managed 
public lands. The authorized officer will consider site-specific 
conditions, including environmental impacts and potential user 
conflicts, before deciding to allow or disallow e-bike use on specific 
roads and trails.
    Comment: Commenters suggested that the BLM limit e-bike use to 
trails that are very wide or paved and to not permit their use on 
steep, single-track trails. Other commenters suggested that the BLM 
specifically allow e-bikes on motorized paths and non-motorized paths 
with improved surfaces.
    Response: Each trail, area, field office, district office, etc., 
presents a unique set of circumstances that may make e-bike use 
appropriate in certain situations and not in others. The inherent 
variability in BLM-managed lands is better accounted for by a rule that 
establishes a framework for future decision-making and relies on local 
expertise to determine where e-bike use should be allowed. Through 
planning or implementation-level decision-making processes, authorized 
officers will determine whether certain types of roads and trails are 
appropriate for e-bike use.
    Comment: Some commenters suggested that, instead of excluding e-
bikes from the definition of ORVs, the BLM should add a category of 
``low-powered vehicles'' to the regulations for management separately 
from bicycles or ORVs.
    Response: The intent of this rule is to expand recreational access 
to public lands through the use of e-bikes, treat e-bikes similarly to 
traditional bikes, as appropriate, and to establish consistency in the 
DOI regarding how e-bikes are managed. Other ``low-powered'' vehicles, 
such as scooters and skateboards, are not similar to, and provide a 
different experience than, traditional, non-motorized bicycles, and are 
not addressed in this rule.
    Comment: Some commenters requested that the rule be revised to 
state that all bicycle trails and routes would be open to e-bikes.
    Response: Rather than promulgating a rule that opens all 
mechanized, non-motorized trails and roads to e-bike use, the BLM 
believes that authorized officers should have the discretion and 
flexibility to determine where e-bikes will be allowed through 
subsequent decision-making. Authorized officers are most familiar with 
an area's natural and cultural resources, operating budget, visitor use 
patterns, and enforcement capabilities. They are therefore in the best 
position to determine where e-bike use is most appropriate. While the 
BLM believes that there are many situations in which e-bike use would 
be appropriate on roads and trails upon which mechanized, non-motorized 
use is permitted, there are certain instances where that may not be the 
case, such as where legislation or a presidential proclamation 
prohibits motorized use of a trail.
    Comment: Some commenters suggested that only Class 1 e-bikes should 
be excluded from the definition of ORV. Several commenters suggested 
that the BLM should continue to define Class 2 and Class 3 e-bikes as 
ORVs. Some commenters pointed out that the different classes of e-bikes 
may have different impacts on the public lands and suggest that only 
Class 1 e-bikes should be allowed on unpaved surfaces.
    Response: While the definition of e-bikes includes Class 1, 2, and 
3 e-bikes, the BLM recognizes that there are differences among the 
classes that may

[[Page 69214]]

result in certain classes of e-bikes being inappropriate on individual 
roads and trails. The BLM has drafted the rule with these differences 
in mind. Under the rule, Class 2 e-bikes being ridden in throttle-only 
actuation for extended periods of time cannot be excluded from the 
definition of ORV and, therefore, must remain on roads and trails that 
are available for ORV use. This should reduce the potential physical 
damage that may result from throttle-only actuation and help ensure 
that the impacts associated with Class 2 e-bikes are similar to those 
associated with Class 1 e-bikes, which also stop providing motorized 
assistance to riders at 20 miles per hour. The BLM has also revised the 
language in 43 CFR 8342.2(d) rule to clarify that authorized officers 
may distinguish between the classes of e-bikes where necessary to 
address potential resource and user impacts. Pursuant to this change, 
authorized officers may consider potential resource conflicts and other 
relevant factors and determine that only Class 1 e-bikes should be 
allowed on a particular road or trail.
    Comment: Some commenters suggested that three-wheeled e-bikes are 
incompatible with single-track trails and require an appropriate width 
corridor.
    Response: Under paragraph 8342.2(d) of the final rule (Designation 
Procedures), the authorized officer may determine whether e-bike use in 
general, or the use of particular classes of e-bikes, would be 
appropriate on certain roads or trails. The authorized officer may also 
determine whether the use of three-wheeled e-bikes is appropriate based 
on site-specific circumstances, such as trail width and potential user 
conflicts.
Authorized Officer's Discretion
    Comment: Some commenters expressed concern that the rule does not 
allow the authorized officer to make individualized decisions and 
restrictions within the classes and between e-bikes and traditional 
bikes. The commenters requested a change in the rule text to allow 
authorized officers to impose specific limitations on e-bike use or to 
close any road, trail, or portion thereof to e-bike use.
    Response: The rule was always intended to provide authorized 
officers with discretion to allow either e-bikes, or certain classes of 
e-bikes, on particular roads or trails. In response to comments 
received, however, the BLM revised the final rule to include specific 
regulatory text in 43 CFR 8342.2(d)(1) to make clear that authorized 
officers may distinguish between ``certain classes'' of e-bikes when 
determining where e-bikes should be allowed. Authorized officers will 
make these site-specific decisions in consideration of potential 
resource impacts and user conflicts and in accordance with NEPA and 
other applicable laws.
    Comment: Several commenters suggested that the BLM include specific 
factors in the regulations that the authorized officer must consider 
before allowing e-bikes on a particular route or trail. Some commenters 
suggested adding a requirement for the authorized officer to minimize 
environmental impacts and user conflicts.
    Response: This rule provides authorized officers with discretion to 
determine, through a planning or implementation-level decision, whether 
Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes should be allowed on roads and trails on 
which mechanized, non-motorized uses are allowed. In making this 
decision, authorized officers will consider potential impacts to 
resources, conflicts with other users, and other relevant factors. The 
specific factors, however, will vary greatly based on the site-specific 
conditions at issue, and some factors may not be applicable in each 
circumstance. The BLM, therefore, prefers to allow authorized officers 
to determine the appropriate factors to consider when deciding whether 
to allow e-bikes on particular roads or trails. The BLM may include a 
discussion of possible factors to consider in future guidance issued to 
implement these regulations.
Other E-Bike Management
    Comment: Some commenters requested an addition to the rule text to 
manage other e-bikes that are not Class 1, 2, or 3 as motorized 
vehicles.
    Response: The final rule addresses only Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes. 
The BLM will continue to manage all other types of e-bikes as ORVs. E-
bikes that do not meet the qualifications of Class 1, 2, or 3 bikes 
will not be eligible for exclusion from the definition of ORV at 43 CFR 
8340.0-5 and must remain on roads and trails open to ORV use.
    Comment: Some commenters requested an addition to the rule text 
that an eligible e-bike must be equipped with a seat or saddle for the 
rider.
    Response: The BLM does not believe it is necessary to require an e-
bike to be equipped with a seat or saddle. Some e-bikes that otherwise 
meet the definition of e-bike--such as trial bikes--may not have a 
seat, and the current definition, including the requirement that an e-
bike have fully operational pedals, is sufficient to exclude other 
types of electric vehicles, such as scooters or skateboards.
    Comment: Some commenters expressed concern that definitions for 
Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes will need to be revisited and updated to 
reflect future technologies.
    Response: The BLM acknowledges that future changes in technology 
may result in some e-bikes not being eligible for exclusion from the 
definition of ORV at 43 CFR 8340.0-5 if they do not fit into the 
definition established by this rule.
    Comment: Some commenters suggested that the rule should require any 
e-bike on BLM-managed lands to be certified by an accredited, 
independent third-party certification body that examines electrical and 
safety hazards.
    Response: The BLM believes that existing federal regulations are 
sufficient to address potential safety hazards related to e-bike design 
and manufacturing. E-bikes that fall within the definition of low-speed 
electric bicycle at 15 U.S.C. 2085 are considered consumer products 
that are subject to product safety regulations promulgated by the 
Consumer Product Safety Commission, and e-bikes that do not fall within 
the definition of low-speed electric bicycle must comply with National 
Highway Traffic Safety Administration vehicle standards. To the extent 
that the operation of e-bikes on public lands may affect health and 
safety, the BLM will consider those potential impacts at the site-
specific level when considering a planning or implementation-level 
proposal.
    Comment: Some commenters requested that the BLM address hunting, 
game retrieval, and cross-country travel in the final rule.
    Response: Under the final rule, only Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes that 
are being ridden on roads and trails upon which mechanized, non-
motorized use is allowed will be eligible for exclusion from the 
definition of ORV at 43 CFR 8340.0-5(a). E-bikes being ridden cross 
country will not be eligible for exclusion from the definition of ORV. 
Such use is allowed only in areas designated as ``OHV Open'' under 
applicable land use plans. E-bikes may be utilized in hunting and game 
retrieval to the extent that their use conforms to the governing land 
use plan and is consistent with applicable road and trail allowances.
Conflict With State and Local Government
    Comment: Some commenters stated that the rule would conflict with 
state and local jurisdictions that exclude e-bikes from non-motorized 
trails. Some commenters stated that the rule would conflict with state-
based user fee

[[Page 69215]]

programs that define e-bikes as motorized.
    Response: The final rule does not conflict with state and local 
rules that exclude e-bikes from non-motorized trails. First, the rule 
only applies to BLM-managed roads and trails. Second, as noted 
previously, the rule does not authorize any new e-bike use on non-
motorized roads and trails. Instead, the rule provides authorized 
officers with discretion to determine whether certain non-motorized 
roads and trails are appropriate for Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bike use 
through planning or implementation-level decision-making processes. In 
making those determinations, authorized officers may consider many 
factors, including how e-bikes are regulated in adjacent jurisdictions. 
The BLM will coordinate with other federal, state, local, and tribal 
entities to address potential conflicts with other requirements or 
jurisdictions when making site-specific decisions to allow or disallow 
e-bikes.
Trail Funding
    Comment: Some commenters stated that e-bikes would be incompatible 
on non-motorized trail networks that were constructed with grant 
funding from the Recreational Trails Program and other Federal funding 
sources. Some commenters stated that e-bike use might impact future 
trail funding from federal programs such as the Land and Water 
Conservation Fund.
    Response: Class 1, 2, or 3 e-bike use may be inappropriate on 
certain roads and trails that were constructed or are maintained using 
funding sources which may prohibit or be inconsistent with motorized 
use, such as the Recreational Trails Program and other Federal funding 
sources authorized by Title 23, Chapter 2 of the United States Code. 
The BLM has designed the rule to provide authorized officers with the 
ability to consider whether e-bike use is consistent with potential 
funding sources when determining which roads and trails to allow e-bike 
use. Authorized officers will take these and other types of site-
specific considerations into account when making future planning or 
implementation-level decisions concerning e-bike use.
Compliance With Laws, Policies, and Plans
    Comment: Some commenters asserted that the BLM failed to consider 
alternatives to the proposed rule.
    Response: The BLM considered less restrictive alternatives in 
promulgating this rule, including an approach that would have opened 
all public lands to e-bikes, unless otherwise restricted. That 
approach, however, would not account for the variability in BLM-managed 
lands or the resource concerns and potential user conflicts that are 
often specific to individual roads and trails and could lead to e-bike 
use in places where it is not appropriate. The BLM, therefore, 
concluded that determinations about where Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bike use 
is appropriate should be made by authorized officers at the site-
specific level. Their knowledge of and access to local information will 
help minimize the potential impacts associated with allowing e-bikes on 
non-motorized roads and trails.
    Comment: Some comments asserted that the rule is inconsistent with 
the direction of SO 3376.
    Response: This rule is consistent with the general direction in SO 
3376 that the BLM treat e-bikes similarly to traditional, non-motorized 
bicycles; however, SO 3376 is a policy document that was not ``intended 
to, and d[id] not create any right or benefit, substantive or 
procedural, enforceable at law or equity by a party against the United 
States.'' While SO 3376 directs the BLM to exclude all e-bikes from the 
definition of ORV, the BLM, in coordination with DOI, ultimately 
decided that it would be more appropriate for authorized officers to 
analyze site-specific factors and determine where Class 1, 2, and 3 e-
bike use is appropriate on an individual basis. Because of potential 
resource impacts, user conflicts, and other relevant considerations, 
Class 1, 2, or 3 e-bike use may not be appropriate on certain public 
lands where traditional, non-motorized bicycles are allowed.
    Comment: Commenters indicated that the rule would facilitate access 
to public lands for those with disabilities. Many commenters described 
their reliance on e-bikes and cited health conditions that prevent them 
from using traditional bikes. A number of commenters described their 
specific need for three-wheeled e-bikes, explaining that these bikes 
are necessary to provide balance for bike users who have a disability 
and want to access public lands.
    Response: This rule is intended to facilitate increased 
recreational opportunities for all Americans, including those with 
physical limitations, and to encourage the enjoyment of lands and 
waters managed by the BLM.
    Comment: Some commenters stated that the rule must adhere to all 
existing state and federal conservation easements and resource 
management plans.
    Response: This rule does not amend or alter any existing land use 
plans, easements, or authorizations. Any decisions to allow e-bike use 
under this final rule will be made through the land use planning or 
implementation-level processes at the local level. The BLM recognizes 
that some uses of public lands may impact other uses. Authorized 
officers will consider conservation easements and other types of 
commitments made for use of lands when determining which non-motorized 
roads and trails are appropriate for e-bike use.
    Comment: Some commenters asked the BLM to identify how the 
rulemaking and future implementation of the rule will comply with 
Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act.
    Response: The rule is administrative and procedural in nature. It 
creates a process by which authorized officers may allow Class 1, 2, 
and 3 e-bikes on roads and trails that are available to traditional, 
non-motorized bicycle use. The rule does not change any current e-bike 
allowances on public lands. It will, therefore, have no impact on 
listed species or designated critical habitat. Any future changes will 
be made by authorized officers through site-specific land use planning 
or implementation-level decision-making processes that will comply with 
applicable law, including NEPA and the Endangered Species Act. As part 
of those future decision-making processes, the BLM will engage in 
consultation under Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act, as 
necessary.
    Comment: Some commenters stated that the BLM must update or conduct 
a wilderness characteristics inventory in response to the proposed 
rule. Some commenters further stated that the BLM should not allow e-
bike use on lands with wilderness characteristics.
    Response: BLM policy provides that the agency will consider whether 
to update or conduct a wilderness characteristics inventory for the 
first time when, among other situations, the BLM is undertaking a land 
use planning process, has new information concerning resource 
conditions, or a project that may impact wilderness characteristics is 
undergoing NEPA analysis. This rule, which does not authorize any new 
e-bike use on BLM-managed public lands, will not impact wilderness 
characteristics. As a result, the BLM has not updated or conducted a 
wilderness characteristics inventory in response to the rule. The BLM, 
however, may update or conduct a wilderness characteristics inventory, 
where applicable, in conjunction with future land use planning or 
implementation-

[[Page 69216]]

level decision-making processes that consider authorizing Class 1, 2, 
or 3 e-bike use on non-motorized roads and trails.
    Comment: Some commenters stated that e-bikes must be prohibited on 
national scenic or historic trails and in designated wilderness. Some 
commenters stated that e-bikes on trails connecting to national scenic 
or historic trails are likely to degrade the trail experience and pose 
safety concerns to hikers and equestrians using nationally designated 
trails. Some commenters stated that the BLM proposed rule is in direct 
conflict with Section 7(c) of the National Trails System Act, which 
states: The use of motorized vehicles by the general public along any 
national scenic trail shall be prohibited and nothing in this Act shall 
be construed as authorizing the use of motorized vehicles . . . .' ''
    Response: The rule, which does not allow any new or additional 
Class 1, 2, or 3 e-bike use on BLM-managed public lands, will not allow 
e-bike use in designated wilderness or other areas where traditional, 
non-motorized bicycle use is not allowed. The authorized officer will 
determine, on a site-specific basis and through the NEPA process, if 
Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bike use is appropriate on roads and trails upon 
which traditional, non-motorized bicycles are allowed. In making this 
determination, authorized officers, who are presumed to act in 
accordance with applicable laws, will consider whether any statutory or 
regulatory provisions either prohibit or otherwise make e-bike use 
inappropriate on certain roads and trails.
    Comment: One commenter stated that the rule does not recognize that 
non-motorized bicycles are a form of surface transportation use allowed 
in Conservation System Units (CSUs) designated by the 1980 Alaska 
National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA). This commenter 
further stated that the rule should recognize the statutory allowance 
in Section 1110(a) of ANILCA and allow e-bikes in these same CSUs.
    Response: The BLM recognizes that ANILCA and its implementing 
regulations authorize the use of non-motorized surface transportation, 
including non-motorized bicycles, in CSUs unless such use is prohibited 
or otherwise restricted in accordance with the procedures set forth in 
43 CFR 36.11(h). That rule does not apply to e-bikes, which have small 
electric motors and therefore do not qualify as non-motorized surface 
transportation. At this time, the BLM does not intend or have the 
information necessary to create a separate e-bike regulatory framework 
for Alaska. Instead, authorized officers will determine if Class 1, 2, 
and 3 e-bike use is appropriate on non-motorized roads and trails in 
CSUs on a site-specific basis in accordance with NEPA and other 
applicable laws. Authorized officers will consider traditional uses and 
travel to and from villages and homesites in making those 
determinations.
    Comment: Some commenters expressed concern that the e-bike rule may 
remove future opportunities for coordination between the BLM and 
entities that have a partnership or agreement with the BLM such as a 
memorandum of understanding. Some commenters expressed concern that the 
rule is not supported under the BLM's National Recreation Strategy, 
which would undermine existing agreements created under the vision of 
the strategy.
    Response: The rule will not affect the ability of the BLM to work 
with partners and stakeholders to achieve mutual objectives. Although 
BLM guidance and strategies may be updated to provide direction for e-
bike regulation implementation, the BLM concludes that this rule is 
consistent and compatible with the National Recreation Strategy, which 
calls for the BLM to increase and improve collaboration with community 
networks of service providers, help communities produce greater well-
being and socioeconomic health, and deliver outstanding recreation 
experiences to visitors while sustaining the distinctive character of 
public lands recreation settings.
    Comment: Several commenters expressed concern that excluding e-
bikes from the definition of ORV at 43 CFR 8340.0-5(a) would eliminate 
the requirement for the BLM to comply with certain environmental 
protections in the agency's ORV regulations and apply the designation 
criteria at 43 CFR 8342.1 when deciding where e-bike use is 
appropriate.
    Response: For the reasons provided previously, the BLM has 
determined that, where certain criteria are met, authorized officers 
may determine that it is appropriate to exclude Class 1, 2, and 3 e-
bikes from the definition of ORV at 43 CFR 8340.0-5(a). In such 
situations, the BLM may allow e-bikes to use roads and trails upon 
which traditional, non-motorized bicycles are allowed without formally 
applying the designation criteria at 43 CFR 8342.1. The agency, 
however, would still provide the public with opportunities to 
participate in agency decision-making processes in accordance with NEPA 
and other applicable laws, and the BLM would still consider resource 
impacts and user conflicts as part of the NEPA process that would 
support future site-specific decisions.
Implementation
    Comment: Some commenters stated that the rule may present 
enforcement challenges. For example, commenters stated that e-bike use 
will facilitate illegal trail access by unauthorized vehicles and that 
the BLM will not be able to enforce the requirement that the throttle 
on Class 2 e-bikes not be used exclusively to propel the e-bike for 
extended periods of time.
    Response: The BLM acknowledges that implementation of this rule 
poses certain enforcement challenges; however, those challenges are not 
unique. They regularly arise in the context of enforcing laws that 
govern recreational use of public lands. For example, the regulations 
governing use of ORVs at 43 CFR 8341.1 prohibit the operation of ORVs 
in violation of state laws and regulations relating to use, standards, 
registration, operation, and inspection of ORVs and without a valid 
state operator's license or learner's permit. Those same regulations 
also prohibit operation of an ORV in a reckless, careless, or negligent 
manner, while under the influence of alcohol, narcotics, or dangerous 
drugs, and in a manner that causes, or is likely to cause, significant, 
undue damage to or disturbance of resources and other uses of the 
public lands. Determining when a violation of these regulations occurs 
can be fact-specific, requiring the exercise of specialized judgment on 
the part of law enforcement officers. Similarly, determining that the 
public is complying with aspects of this rule, such as the requirement 
that, to be excluded from the definition of ORV, a Class 2 e-bike 
cannot be ridden for an extended period of time using just its 
throttle, will involve the exercise of specialized skill, training, and 
judgment by law enforcement officers. Based on their experience 
enforcing other regulations that condition how the public recreates on 
public lands, BLM law enforcement officers have the expertise necessary 
to properly exercise their discretion to enforce the requirements of 
this rule in a reasonable manner that ensures protection of public 
health, safety, and resources and users of the public lands. Moreover, 
the agency believes that enforcement challenges posed by this 
requirement are warranted given the requirement's potential benefits to 
affected public land resources and users. In particular, the 
requirement prohibiting throttle use on Class 2 e-bikes for extended 
periods of time will allow riders to benefit from

[[Page 69217]]

the throttle function for limited durations, such as when first 
starting out on an incline, while ensuring that Class 2 e-bikes will 
generally be ridden, and will therefore impact natural resources, in a 
manner similar to Class 1 e-bikes.
    Comment: Some commenters stated that e-bikes can easily be modified 
to exceed horsepower and speed restrictions.
    Response: E-bikes can be modified; however, if an e-bike is 
modified in such a manner that it does not qualify as a Class 1, 2, or 
3 e-bike, it will not be eligible for exclusion from the definition of 
ORV and will continue to be regulated in accordance with the BLM's ORV 
regulations at 43 CFR part 8340.
    Comment: Some commenters suggest that the BLM should require users 
of e-bikes who tamper with or modify an e-bike, changing the speed 
capability, to replace the manufacturer's classification label.
    Response: The BLM does not require any sort of label on e-bikes and 
will not impose a requirement to remove or modify the label if the e-
bike is modified. If an e-bike is modified after purchase, the e-bike 
may not qualify as a Class 1, 2, or 3 e-bike and would therefore be 
managed as an ORV in accordance with the regulations at 43 CFR part 
8340.
    Comment: Some commenters requested clarification on the appropriate 
next steps for implementation.
    Response: The specific steps that the BLM will take to implement 
this rule are beyond the scope of this rulemaking process. After 
publication of this final rule, the BLM may determine that it is 
necessary to update agency policy, including manuals, handbooks, and 
other guidance materials, to comply with the new rule.
    Comment: Some commenters stated that the introduction of e-bikes 
will require a revision of existing sign standards to clearly identify 
where e-bikes are allowed, and further, which classes are allowed. One 
commenter recommended that the BLM maintain a trail sign standard with 
allowable use demarcations to depict traditional bicycles and e-bikes 
independently.
    Response: The BLM agrees that the successful introduction of e-
bikes onto public lands depends on clear and consistent communication 
to the public about where e-bikes are allowed and, further, which 
classes are allowed. The BLM is working with the other land management 
agencies within DOI to establish standard signs for e-bikes. The goal 
of this effort is to create a consistent visual framework indicating 
where e-bikes are allowed on public lands managed by DOI.
    Comment: Some commenters requested a timeline for future NEPA 
analyses to be conducted by field offices.
    Response: Under the final rule, the authorized officer may allow 
Class 1, 2, or 3 e-bikes to use non-motorized roads and trails through 
a site-specific land use planning or implementation-level decision. The 
specific timing of future site-specific decisions and supporting NEPA 
processes will depend on a number of variables, such as budget, 
resources, agency priorities, and officer discretion.
    Comment: Some commenters stated that authorized officers would 
implement the rule inconsistently, which would result in public 
confusion.
    Response: The rule provides authorized officers flexibility to 
determine where e-bike use is appropriate on a case-by-case basis. The 
BLM may issue subsequent guidance to help achieve consistent 
implementation of the rule across the agency.
    Comment: Commenters stated that e-bike access on non-motorized 
trails would exacerbate erosion, disturb wildlife habitat through 
trail-widening and destruction of vegetation adjacent to trails, impact 
wildlife through disturbance and collisions, create a safety risk to 
equestrians and pedestrians (potential collisions, startling horses), 
and that speed limits should be imposed on trails. Commenters also 
stated that facilitating backcountry access to less-experienced e-bike 
users may create unsafe conditions for these users, would contribute to 
overcrowding of trails and parking areas, and generate noise that would 
disturb wildlife and other recreationists. Conversely, other commenters 
stated that e bikes are very quiet, which creates an added safety risk 
to wildlife, equestrians, and pedestrians.
    Response: The BLM reviewed a substantial number of studies and 
reports, including those submitted by the public, to better understand 
how site-specific implementation of the rule may impact public land 
resources and users. That literature indicates that many people hold 
misconceptions about what constitutes an e-bike, and that these 
misconceptions foster fears and concerns about trail conflicts and 
access that typically abate as people gain greater familiarity with e-
bikes. The literature indicates that riders of e-bikes and non-
motorized bicycles exhibit similar safety behavior and have similar 
wrong-way, stop sign, and traffic signal compliance. While there is 
evidence that e-bikes travel faster than non-motorized bicycles in some 
situations, and slower than non-motorized bicycles in others, the 
literature generally indicates that the two are often ridden at similar 
speeds, and that average riding speed is determined largely by cultural 
norms, law enforcement, and physical infrastructure. The literature 
also indicates that all forms of recreation may adversely impact 
wildlife habitat, both motorized and nonmotorized recreation can result 
in habitat compression, and all-terrain vehicle use has greater adverse 
impacts on ungulate behavior than biking, hiking, and horseback riding. 
There is little research to suggest, however, that e-bikes have greater 
impacts on wildlife than non-motorized bicycles. Finally, the 
literature indicates that impacts from Class 1 e-bikes and traditional, 
non-motorized mountain bikes were not significantly different, while 
motorcycles led to much greater soil displacement and erosion. In fact, 
an emerging body of research suggests that the degree to which 
recreational uses impact soils, water quality, and vegetation depends 
more on trail design and construction than the specific types of 
activities. In sum, the literature indicates that the additional e-bike 
use that authorized officers may allow under the rule is unlikely to 
have significant adverse impacts on public land resources or users and 
that the impacts that may occur are likely to be similar to those 
already being caused by non-motorized bicycle use.
    With that said, the impacts associated with e-bike use will largely 
depend on site specificity, including the geography, wildlife, habitat, 
and uses associated with individual roads and trails. The BLM has 
designed this rule to account for that variability. Rather than 
attempting to apply blanket allowances or prohibitions on e-bike use, 
the rule provides authorized officers with the discretion to determine, 
based on local knowledge and in accordance with NEPA and other 
applicable laws, on which specific roads and trails e-bike use may be 
appropriate. In making these determinations, authorized officers will 
consider impacts to public land resources and other recreational uses, 
as appropriate.

Discussion of the Final Rule

    Existing BLM regulations do not explicitly address the use of e-
bikes on public lands. Under the BLM's current Travel and 
Transportation Management Manual (MS-1626), however, e-bikes are 
managed as ORVs, as defined at 43 CFR 8340.0-5(a), and are allowed only 
in those areas and on those roads or

[[Page 69218]]

trails that are designated as ``ORV Open'' or ``ORV Limited''. 
Additionally, e-bikes currently must be operated in accordance with the 
regulations governing ORVs at 43 CFR 8341.1.
    Under the final rule, authorized officers may allow, through 
subsequent decision-making, Class 1, 2, and/or 3 e-bikes whose motor is 
not being used exclusively to propel the e-bike for an extended period 
of time on roads and trails upon which mechanized, non-motorized use is 
allowed. These authorizations must be included in a land-use planning 
or implementation-level decision. Such decisions must be made in 
accordance with applicable legal requirements, including NEPA. Under 
the final rule, where an authorized officer determines that Class 1, 2, 
and 3 e-bikes should be allowed on roads and trails upon which 
mechanized, non-motorized use is allowed, such e-bikes would be 
excluded from the definition of ORV at 43 CFR 8340.0-5(a) and would not 
be subject to the regulatory requirements in 43 CFR part 8340. E-bikes 
excluded from the definition of ORV at 43 CFR 8340.0-5(a) would be 
afforded all the rights and privileges, and be subject to all of the 
duties, of a non-motorized bicycle. Under the final rule, authorized 
officers may not allow e-bikes on roads and trails upon which 
mechanized, non-motorized bicycles are prohibited.
    A primary objective of the BLM's travel and transportation 
management is to establish a long-term, sustainable, multimodal travel 
network and transportation system that addresses the need for public, 
authorized, and administrative access to and across BLM-managed lands 
and related waters. Travel management planning occurs as part of 
regional or site-specific land use and implementation decisions. Such 
decisions typically involve public participation and must comply with 
NEPA. Travel management is an ongoing and dynamic process through which 
roads and trails for different modes of travel can be added and/or 
subtracted from the available travel system at any time through the 
appropriate planning and NEPA processes. These changes may be necessary 
based on access needs, resource objectives, and impacts to natural 
resources or the human environment. Any such decisions are made through 
an amendment to the existing land use plan, or through implementation 
level actions for a travel management plan.
    Under current land use plans and travel management plans, the use 
of ORVs (and, therefore, e-bikes) is allowed on the majority of roads 
and trails on BLM-administered public lands. The final rule will have 
no effect on the use of e-bikes and other motorized vehicles on such 
roads and trails; e-bikes, which the BLM currently manages as ORVs, and 
other motorized vehicles could continue to use roads and trails upon 
which ORV use is currently allowed. The final rule, however, by 
providing authorized officers discretion to allow Class 1, 2, and 3 e-
bike use on roads and trails upon which mechanized, non-motorized 
bicycle use is allowed, has the potential to facilitate an increase in 
recreational opportunities for all Americans, especially those with 
physical limitations, and encourage the enjoyment of the DOI-managed 
lands and waters.
    The BLM intends for the final rule to facilitate an increase in e-
bike ridership on public lands. The BLM recognizes that the appeal of 
many BLM-managed roads and trails to cyclists is the opportunity to 
experience a challenging road or trail that may have inherently limited 
ridership. Under the final rule, the use of an e-bike could cause 
increased ridership on these roads or trails. To address site-specific 
issues, the BLM will consider the environmental impacts from the use of 
e-bikes through a subsequent analysis. E-bike use must conform to 
governing land use plans, including conditions of use that may be 
specific to an area.
Sec.  8340.0-5 Definitions
    The rule adds a new definition for e-bikes and defines three 
classifications of e-bikes (see new paragraph (j) of this section). The 
rule also excludes Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes from the definition of 
ORV, pursuant to a subsequent decision by an authorized officer, where 
specific criteria are met (see new paragraph (a)(5) of this section).
    Paragraph (a) of this section defines an ORV as ``any motorized 
vehicle capable of, or designed for, travel on or immediately over 
land, water, or other natural terrain . . .'' and includes 5 
exceptions. The rule moves existing paragraph (a)(5) of this section to 
(a)(6) and adds a new (a)(5) that addresses e-bikes. Under paragraph 
(a)(5) of this section, a Class 1, 2, or 3 e-bike would be excluded 
from the definition of ORV if: (1) The e-bike is being used on roads 
and trails where mechanized, non-motorized use is allowed; (2) the e-
bike is not being used in a manner where the motor is being used 
exclusively to propel the e-bike for an extended period of time; and 
(3) an authorized officer has expressly determined, as part of a land-
use planning or implementation-level decision, that e-bikes should be 
treated the same as non-motorized bicycles on such roads and trails.
    Notably, Class 2 e-bikes are capable of propulsion without 
pedaling. Under the final rule, Class 2 e-bikes operated in throttle-
only actuation (i.e., relying only on the throttle without pedal 
assistance) for an extended period of time are not eligible to be 
excluded from the definition of ORV at 43 CFR 8340.0-5(a) and will 
continue to be regulated as ORVs.
    The BLM received several comments questioning the wisdom and 
enforceability of the requirement in the proposed rule that e-bikes 
must never be used in a manner where the motor is exclusively 
propelling the bicycle in order to be excluded from the definition of 
ORV. These commenters pointed out that regular bicycles are often 
ridden for periods of time without pedaling, for example when a rider 
is coasting downhill. Other commenters suggested that the BLM remove 
the clause stating that the bike's ``motorized features are being used 
to assist human propulsion,'' while other comments suggested removing 
``that are not being used in a manner where the motor is being used 
exclusively to propel the e-bike.'' In response to these comments, the 
BLM revised this paragraph to specify that an e-bike is eligible to be 
excluded from the definition of ORV so long as the rider is not relying 
exclusively on the motor to propel the bike ``for an extended period of 
time.'' The intent of this rule is to ensure e-bikes are used in a 
manner consistent with traditional, non-motorized bicycles. The revised 
text helps accomplish this goal by making clear that, like the rider of 
a traditional bicycle, an e-bike rider does not have to pedal 
continuously for the e-bike to be excluded from the definition of ORV. 
Relying exclusively on a Class 2 e-bike's throttle for an extended 
period of time, however, is inconsistent with the use of a non-
motorized bike, and e-bikes ridden in such a manner will be considered 
ORVs under the BLM's regulations. The BLM will coordinate with its 
partners during implementation of this rule to improve education and 
awareness of this requirement.
    Some commenters recommended that the BLM revise paragraph (a)(5) to 
additionally specify that an e-bike is eligible for exclusion from the 
definition of ORV only where it ``is not being used on any designated 
National Scenic Trail, except on segments where motorized ORV use is 
authorized.'' The suggested addition is unnecessary. Authorized 
officers will determine, on a site-specific basis and through the NEPA 
process, if Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bike use is appropriate on roads and 
trails upon

[[Page 69219]]

which traditional, non-motorized bicycles are allowed. In making that 
determination, authorized officers will consider whether any applicable 
statutory or regulatory provisions, such as the National Trails System 
Act, either prohibit or otherwise make e-bike use inappropriate on 
certain roads and trails.
    Another commenter suggested adding language to paragraph 
(a)(5)(iii) specifying that e-bikes excluded from the definition of ORV 
and allowed to use non-motorized roads and trails ``are independent 
of'' non-motorized bicycles.'' This addition is unnecessary. The rule 
draws a clear distinction between e-bikes and non-motorized bicycles, 
and an authorized officers determination that e-bikes, or certain 
classes of e-bikes, may use certain non-motorized roads or trails will 
not limit the BLM's ability to continue to manage e-bikes separately 
from non-motorized bicycles, where necessary.
    A commenter suggested adding language to paragraph (a)(5) 
specifying that e-bikes that are excluded from the definition of ORV 
would be operated and managed under the designation procedures of 43 
CFR 8342.2. The BLM has not incorporated this suggestion into the final 
rule. The designation procedures at 43 CFR 8342.2 are specific to the 
operation and management of ORVs and apply to actions, such as the 
creation of area designations in land use plans, which would be 
inapplicable to the management of e-bikes that are excluded from the 
definition of ORV. Although the BLM has not incorporated this 
suggestion into the final rule, the agency can still apply certain 
aspects of section 8342.2 into the management of e-bikes, where 
appropriate. For example, NEPA and other laws providing for public 
participation can provide interested user groups, Federal, State, 
county and local agencies, local landowners, and other parties 
opportunities to participate in future decision-making processes 
concerning where e-bike use is appropriate. Similarly, the BLM will 
retain the ability to identify non-motorized road and trails that are 
available for e-bike use, as appropriate.
    Finally, one commenter suggested the deletion of paragraph 
(a)(5)(iii), and another commenter suggested deleting paragraph (a)(a), 
(ii), and (iii). The BLM did not accept either of these suggestions. 
Adopting them would make the rule self-executing and result in Class 1, 
2, and 3 e-bikes that satisfy the criteria at (a)(5)(i) and (ii) being 
automatically excluded from the definition of ORV. The BLM, however, 
recognizes that Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bike use may not be appropriate on 
all roads and trails on which non-motorized, traditional bicycles are 
allowed, and therefore has concluded that authorized officers should 
determine where e-bike use is appropriate on a site-specific basis.
    New paragraph (j) of this section includes the definition for 
electric bicycles, or e-bikes. E-bikes may have 2 or 3 wheels and must 
have fully operable pedals. The electric motor for an e-bike may not 
exceed 750 watts (one horsepower). E-bikes must fall into one of three 
classes, as described in paragraphs (j)(1) through (3) of this section.
    Paragraph (j)(1) describes Class 1 e-bikes, which are equipped with 
a motor that only provides assistance when the rider is pedaling and 
ceases to provide assistance when the speed of the bicycle reaches 20 
miles per hour.
    Paragraph (j)(2) of this section describes Class 2 e-bikes, which 
have a motor that, in addition to pedal assistance, can propel the 
bicycle without pedaling. This propulsion and pedal assistance ceases 
to provide assistance when the speed of the bicycle reaches 20 miles 
per hour.
    Paragraph (j)(3) of this section describes Class 3 e-bikes, which 
have a motor that only provides assistance when the rider is pedaling 
and ceases to provide assistance when the speed of the bicycle reaches 
28 miles per hour.
    The definition of e-bike in paragraph (j), including the three 
classes of e-bikes included in that definition, is consistent with the 
other DOI agencies that are also revising their regulations to address 
e-bike use. Having the same definition as other DOI agencies will 
facilitate consistent implementation of e-bike regulations across 
public lands administered by the DOI and aid coordination with other 
local, State, and Federal agencies.
    One commenter suggested that language be added to the definition of 
e-bike in paragraph (j) stating'' ``[E]-bikes shall be allowed where 
other types of bicycles are allowed; and prohibited where other types 
of bicycles are not allowed. They are not considered ORVs for the 
purposes of this Chapter.'' The BLM did not adopt this change, as it 
would result in a self-executing rule that fails to acknowledge that 
Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bike use may not be appropriate on all roads and 
trails on which non-motorized, traditional bicycles are allowed. Under 
the final rule, authorized officers will determine whether to allow e-
bikes on certain roads and trails on a site-specific basis.
    Some commenters requested that the BLM revise paragraph (j) to 
require an e-bike to be equipped with a seat or saddle for the rider. 
As stated previously, the BLM is not adding a requirement that an e-
bike be equipped with a seat or saddle because some bicycles, such as 
trial bikes, may not have a seat, and the BLM does not think it is 
necessary to categorically prohibit those types of e-bikes on non-
motorized roads and trails. By requiring e-bikes to have operable 
pedals, the definition ensures that other low-powered electric 
vehicles, such as scooters and skateboards, will not fall within the 
scope of this rule.
    One commenter suggested changing the portion of the current Class 2 
e-bike definition stating ``. . . and is not capable of providing 
assistance when the bicycle . . .'' to ``. . . and is not capable of 
such propulsion when the bicycle . . .''. The BLM did not make this 
change as there is no substantive difference between the language and 
changing the Class 2 definition in the manner suggested by the 
commenter would create inconsistencies with the Class 1 and 3 
definitions.
    One commenter suggested adding to paragraph (j) that ``no Class 1 
e-bike allowed to be operated on a non-motorized road or trail on BLM 
public lands shall be modified to exceed the 20 mph limit and no Class 
3 e-bike allowed to be operated on a non-motorized road or trail on BLM 
public lands shall be modified to exceed the 28 mph limit.'' The 
suggested addition is unnecessary. If a modified e-bike falls outside 
the definition of the three classes described in this rule, it will be 
managed as an ORV and will be prohibited on non-motorized roads and 
trails.
    Some commenters suggested adding language to paragraph (j) 
specifying that ``Devices with electric motors of 750 watts (1 hp) or 
more of power and not included as Class 1, Class 2 or Class 3 in the 
classification system above, or used in a manner prohibited by the 
regulations should be managed as motor vehicles under 43 CFR Part 
8340.'' The BLM has not made this change, as it is clear based on the 
current text of the rule that e-bikes that do not fall within the 
definition of e-bike in paragraph (j) and do not satisfy the criteria 
in paragraph (a)(5) remain ORVs and will be regulated as such.
Subpart 8342--Designation of Areas and Trails
Sec.  8342.2 Designation Procedures
    The rule adds a new paragraph (d) to 43 CFR 8342.2 that addresses 
how the BLM will issue decisions to authorize the use of e-bikes on 
public lands. It provides authorized officers with

[[Page 69220]]

discretion to determine whether Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes (or only 
certain classes of e-bikes) are appropriate on roads or trails upon 
which mechanized, non-motorized use is allowed. Under new paragraph 
(d), e-bikes being used on roads and trails where mechanized, non-
motorized use is allowed pursuant to a decision by an authorized 
officer will be given the same rights and privileges of a traditional, 
non-motorized bicycle and will be subject to all of the duties of a 
traditional, non-motorized bicycle. While the BLM intends for this rule 
to facilitate increased accessibility to public lands, e-bikes will not 
be given special access beyond what traditional, non-motorized bicycles 
are allowed. For example, e-bikes will not be allowed on roads or 
trails or in areas where traditional, non-motorized bicycle travel is 
prohibited, such as in designated wilderness.
    As originally proposed, this paragraph stated that authorized 
officers ``should generally allow'' e-bike on roads and trails on which 
traditional, non-motorized bicycles are allowed. Some commenters 
suggested that ``generally'' should be deleted and the rule should be 
revised to state that the BLM ``should allow'' e-bikes on roads and 
trails open to non-motorized bicycles. By comparison, other commenters 
expressed concern that the proposed text directed field managers to 
permit e-bikes on non-motorized trails and created a rebuttable 
presumption that would bias future NEPA processes. In response to these 
comments, the BLM has revised this paragraph to provide that authorized 
officers ``may'' allow e-bikes on certain roads and trails and removed 
the statement ``unless the authorized officer determines that e-bike 
use would be inappropriate on such roads or trails,'' which described 
when the authorized officer would not allow e-bike use. While the BLM 
wants to encourage the use of e-bikes on public lands, the agency feels 
strongly that field personnel are in the best position to determine 
where and when e-bike us is appropriate. The BLM has therefore sought 
to clarify that authorized officers will make unbiased, site-specific 
decisions that account for potential resource impacts and user 
conflicts. Such decisions will comply with NEPA and other relevant 
statutory or regulatory requirements, and outcomes will not be 
predetermined.
    One commenter suggested that the BLM replace the term 
``mechanical'' with ``motorized'' in paragraph (d). This change was not 
accepted, as it would limit the rule's application to traditional, non-
motorized bicycles and be inconsistent with the BLM's intention of 
facilitating greater e-bike access on public lands.
    Some commenters suggested that that the BLM add two new provisions 
to this section. First, that e-bikes may be ridden on streets, 
highways, or roads that are open to motorized vehicles, including the 
shoulder or bicycle lane, and second, that authorized officers should 
generally allow, as part of a land-use planning or implementation-level 
decision, e-bikes to be ridden on non-motorized bicycle paths with 
improved surfaces, such as concrete, asphalt, or crushed stone. The BLM 
has adopted neither suggestion. The BLM has declined to adopt the first 
suggestion because under the rule, e-bikes--both those excluded from 
the definition of ORV, and those that are not--can generally ride on 
BLM-managed streets, highways, or roads that are open to ORVs. There 
may be situations, however, where bicycle use is inappropriate or 
potentially unsafe on certain roads that are open to ORVs. It is 
therefore important that authorized officers retain discretion to 
prohibit both e-bike and traditional, non-motorized bicycle use on 
certain roads open to ORVs, where appropriate. The BLM has declined to 
adopt the second suggestion for similar reasons. Rather than suggesting 
that Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes should generally be allowed on paths 
with improved surfaces, the BLM believes that authorized officer need 
full discretion to determine where e-bike use is appropriate on a site-
specific basis.
    The BLM received several comments expressing concern or confusion 
about whether authorized officers could allow only certain classes of 
e-bikes on a road or trail. To clarify that authorized officers do have 
discretion to make this distinction, the BLM has revised paragraph 
8342.2(d) to provide that the authorized officer may approve the use of 
``e-bikes, or certain classes of e-bikes,'' on a particular road or 
trail.
    One commenter suggested that the BLM add text to this section 
stating that authorized officers may impose specific restrictions and 
limitations on e-bike use, or may close any road, trail, or portion 
thereof to e-bike use to address public health and safety concerns, 
natural resource protection, and other management activities and 
objectives. While the BLM agrees that flexibility in the management of 
e-bikes is important, revising the text in accordance with this 
suggestion is unnecessary. The rule provides authorized officer with 
discretion to allow or disallow e-bike use on roads and trails that are 
open to traditional, non-motorized bicycles. In making those 
determinations, authorized officers may impose limitations and 
restrictions on e-bike use--such as limiting certain roads and trails 
to only certain classes of e-bikes, or limiting e-bike use to certain 
times of the year--to minimize impacts on public land resources and 
user conflicts. Authorized officers also have discretion to make future 
adjustments to those limitations and restrictions, either by amending 
previous decisions concerning e-bikes or imposing closures or 
restrictions pursuant to applicable authority.
    A commenter suggested that this section should direct authorized 
officers to designate all public roads and trails as either open, 
limited, or closed to Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes to address what it 
perceived as a ``predecisional undertone'' caused by the direction in 
the proposed rule that authorized officers ``should generally allow'' 
e-bikes on roads and trails open to non-motorized bicycles. The BLM has 
declined to adopt this suggestion. As discussed above, the BLM has 
revised this section to clarify that authorized officers ``may allow'' 
e-bikes on roads and trails open to traditional, non-motorized 
bicycles, where appropriate, in accordance with NEPA and other 
applicable laws.
    Another commenter suggested that the BLM add criteria that the 
authorized officer should consider when determining if Class 1, 2, and 
3 e-bike use would be appropriate on non-motorized roads or trails, 
including: (1) The speed and characteristics of the different classes 
of e-bikes; (2) the likely effect of riding e-bikes or a particular 
class of e-bike on cultural or natural resources; and (3) other road 
and trail users. The commenter also suggested updating this section to 
provide that e-bike users shall be afforded all the rights and 
privileges and be subject to ``only'' rather than ``all of'' the duties 
of users of non-motorized bicycles. The BLM has not adopted these 
suggestions. There are many considerations that authorized officers may 
take into account when determining where e-bike use is appropriate, 
including the items suggested by the commenter. It is neither possible 
nor necessary to account for all these considerations in the rule, 
which provides authorized officers with wide discretion to consider any 
and all criteria that may be appropriate to individual site-specific 
decisions. As discussed previously, the BLM may develop subsequent 
guidance to support implementation of the rule.
    Finally, a commenter suggested that the BLM add additional language 
to paragraph (d) prohibiting Class 2 and 3 e-bikes on trails limited to 
mechanized,

[[Page 69221]]

non-motorized use. The comment also suggested prohibiting any three-
wheeled e-bike with a combined tire tread width of 15 inches or more on 
single track trails limited to mechanized, non-motorized use. The 
commenter indicated that these changes are necessary to limit user 
conflicts and minimize damage to soil and vegetation. The BLM 
disagrees. The rule provides authorized officers with sufficient 
discretion to utilize local knowledge to determine whether e-bikes, or 
only certain types or classes of e-bikes, are appropriate on individual 
roads and trails that are limited to mechanized, non-motorized use. In 
light of this discretion, it is unnecessary to categorically prohibit 
certain classes and types of e-bikes on certain types of roads and 
trails through this rule.

III. Procedural Matters

Regulatory Planning and Review (Executive Orders 12866 and 13563)

    Executive Order 12866 provides that the Office of Information and 
Regulatory Affairs in the Office of Management and Budget will review 
all significant rules. The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs 
has determined that the rule is not a significant regulatory action as 
defined by Executive Order 12866.
    Executive Order 13563 reaffirms the principles of E.O. 12866 while 
calling for improvements in the nation's regulatory system to promote 
predictability, to reduce uncertainty, and to use the best, most 
innovative, and least burdensome tools for achieving regulatory ends. 
The executive order directs agencies to consider regulatory approaches 
that reduce burdens and maintain flexibility and freedom of choice for 
the public where these approaches are relevant, feasible, and 
consistent with regulatory objectives. E.O. 13563 emphasizes further 
that regulations must be based on the best available science and that 
the rulemaking process must allow for public participation and an open 
exchange of ideas. We have developed this rule in a manner consistent 
with these requirements.
    The rule addresses how the BLM will allow visitors to operate e-
bikes on public lands and directs the BLM to specifically address e-
bike usage in future land-use planning or implementation-level 
decisions. The rule amends 43 CFR 8340.0-5 to define Class 1, 2, and 3 
of e-bikes. The rule provides authorized officers the discretion to 
allow, through subsequent decision-making in a land use planning or 
implementation-level decision, Class 1, 2, and 3 e-bikes on roads and 
trails upon which mechanized, non-motorized use is allowed, where 
appropriate. Where certain criteria are met, the rule excludes Class 1, 
2, and 3 e-bikes from the definition of ORV at 43 CFR 8340.0-5(a).
    This rule is not self-executing. The rule, in and of itself, does 
not change existing allowances for e-bike usage on BLM-administered 
public lands. It neither allows e-bikes on roads and trails that are 
currently closed to ORVs but open to mechanized, non-motorized bicycle 
use, nor affects the use of e-bikes and other motorized vehicles on 
roads and trails where ORV use is currently allowed. While the BLM 
intends for this rule to facilitate increased accessibility to public 
lands, e-bikes will not be given special access beyond what 
traditional, non-motorized bicycles are allowed.
    The BLM reviewed the requirements of the rule and determined that 
it does not adversely affect in a material way the economy, a sector of 
the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public 
health or safety, or State, local, or tribal governments or 
communities. For more detailed information, see the Economic and 
Threshold analysis prepared for this rule. This analysis has been 
posted in the docket for the rule on the Federal eRulemaking Portal: 
https://www.regulations.gov. In the Searchbox, enter ``RIN 1004-AE72'', 
click the ``Search'' button, open the Docket Folder, and look under 
Supporting Documents.

Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs (E.O. 13771)

    The BLM has complied with E.O. 13771 and the Office of Management 
and Budget implementation guidance for that order.\1\ The rule is not a 
significant regulation action as defined by E.O. 12866 or a significant 
guidance document. Therefore, the rule is not an ``E.O. 13771 
regulatory action,'' as defined by Office of Management and Budget 
guidance. As such, the rule is not subject to the requirements of E.O. 
13771.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and 
Budget, Executive Order 13771, January 30, 2017. 82 FR 9339. 
Available at https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2017-02-03/pdf/2017-02451.pdf.
    See also, OMB Memorandum ``Regulatory Policy Officers at 
Executive Departments and Agencies Managing and Executive Directors 
of Certain Agencies and Commissions,'' April 5, 2017. Available at 
https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/memoranda/2017/M-17-21-OMB.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Regulatory Flexibility Act

    This rule will not have a significant economic effect on a 
substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory Flexibility 
Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.). This certification is based on 
information contained in the Economic and Threshold analysis prepared 
for this rule. Therefore, a final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is 
not required, and a Small Entity Compliance Guide is not required. This 
analysis has been posted in the docket for the rule on the Federal 
eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. In the Searchbox, 
enter ``RIN 1004-AE72'', click the ``Search'' button, open the Docket 
Folder, and look under Supporting Documents.

Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA)

    This rule is not a major rule under 5 U.S.C. 804(2), the Small 
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. This rule:
    (a) Does not have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million 
or more. The rule will not have a direct and quantifiable economic 
impact but is intended to increase recreational opportunities on public 
lands.
    (b) Will not cause a major increase in costs or prices for 
consumers, individual industries, Federal, State, or local government 
agencies, or geographic regions. This rule adds a definition for e-
bikes, indicates that the BLM should consider how they are managed on 
public lands in future land-use planning and implementation-level 
decisions, and excludes e-bikes from the definition of ORV when certain 
criteria are met.
    (c) Does not have significant adverse effects on competition, 
employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or the ability of US-
based enterprises to compete with foreign-based enterprises. The BLM 
expects this rule to facilitate additional recreational opportunities 
on public lands, which would be beneficial to local economies on 
impacted public lands.

Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    This rule does not impose an unfunded mandate on State, local, or 
tribal governments, or the private sector of more than $100 million per 
year. The rule does not have a significant or unique effect on State, 
local, or tribal governments or the private sector. The BLM will 
coordinate with impacted entities, as necessary and appropriate, when 
it makes land use planning decisions regarding the use of e-bikes on 
public lands in a particular area. A

[[Page 69222]]

statement containing the information required by the Unfunded Mandates 
Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) is not required.

Takings (E.O. 12630)

    This rule does not affect a taking of private property or otherwise 
have taking implications under E.O. 12630. This rule will only impact 
public lands and how they are managed by the BLM regarding the use of 
e-bikes. A takings implication assessment is not required.

Federalism (E.O. 13132)

    Under the criteria in section 1 of E.O. 13132, this rule does not 
have sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a 
federalism summary impact statement. This rule will not have 
substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship between 
the national government and the States, or on the distribution of power 
and responsibilities among the various levels of government. The BLM 
will coordinate with State and local governments, as appropriate, when 
making future planning and implementation level decisions under this 
rule regarding the use of e-bikes on public lands. A federalism summary 
impact statement is not required.

Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)

    This rule complies with the requirements of E.O. 12988. 
Specifically, this rule:
    (a) Meets the criteria of section 3(a) requiring that all 
regulations be reviewed to eliminate errors and ambiguity and be 
written to minimize litigation; and
    (b) Meets the criteria of section 3(b)(2) requiring that all 
regulations be written in clear language and contain clear legal 
standards.

Consultation With Indian Tribes (E.O. 13175 and Departmental Policy)

    The DOI strives to strengthen its government-to-government 
relationship with Indian tribes through a commitment to consultation 
with Indian tribes and recognition of their right to self-governance 
and tribal sovereignty. We have evaluated this rule under the 
Department's consultation policy and under the criteria in E.O. 13175 
and have determined that it has no substantial direct effects on 
federally recognized Indian tribes and that consultation under the 
Department's tribal consultation policy is not required. This 
rulemaking is an administrative change that directs the BLM to address 
e-bike use in future land-use planning or implementation-level 
decisions. The rule does not change existing allowances for e-bike 
usage on BLM-administered public lands. The rulemaking does not commit 
the agency to undertake any specific action, and the authorized 
officers retain the discretion to authorize e-bike use where 
appropriate. Tribal consultation will occur as required on a project-
specific basis as potential e-bike opportunities are considered by the 
BLM in the future.

Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.)

    This rule does not contain information collection requirements, and 
a submission to the Office of Management and Budget under the Paperwork 
Reduction Act is not required.

National Environmental Policy Act

    The BLM does not believe that this rule constitutes a major Federal 
action significantly affecting the quality of the human environment. A 
detailed statement under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 
(NEPA) is not required because the rule, as proposed, is categorically 
excluded from further analysis or documentation under NEPA in 
accordance with 43 CFR 46.210(i), which applies to:
    Policies, directives, regulations, and guidelines that are of an 
administrative, financial, legal, technical, or procedural nature; or 
whose environmental effects are too broad, speculative, or conjectural 
to lend themselves to meaningful analysis and will later be subject to 
the NEPA process, either collectively or case-by-case basis.
    The BLM received several comments asserting that the agency cannot 
rely on the categorical exclusion at 43 CFR 46.210(i) to comply with 
NEPA because the rule is not ``of an administrative, financial, legal, 
technical, or procedural nature,'' and because its environmental 
effects are not ``too broad, speculative, or conjectural to lend 
themselves to meaningful analysis.'' Commenters also stated that 
extraordinary circumstances under 43 CFR 46.215 are applicable to this 
rulemaking, thereby requiring additional analysis. Commenters state 
that the categorical exclusion should not apply because of unique risks 
presented by e-bikes.
    As previously discussed, this rule does not change the existing 
allowances for e-bike usage on public lands and will have no direct 
environmental effects. It will neither allow e-bikes on roads and 
trails that are currently closed to ORVs but open to mechanized, non-
motorized bicycle use, nor affect the use of e-bikes and other 
motorized vehicles on roads and trails where ORV use is currently 
allowed. The rule will (i) add a new definition for e-bikes; (ii) 
direct the BLM to specifically address e-bike usage in future land-use 
planning or implementation-level decisions; and (iii) set forth 
specific criteria for when e-bikes may be excluded from the definition 
of ORV at 43 CFR 8340.0-5(a). Before the public could use e-bikes on 
any roads or trails that are not currently open to ORV use, an 
authorized officer of the BLM must issue a land-use planning or 
implementation-level decision allowing for such use. That decision must 
comply with applicable law, including NEPA. As such, the final rule is 
administrative and procedural in nature. Moreover, the environmental 
effects associated with future land-use planning or implementation-
level decisions that do allow increased e-bike use are too speculative 
or conjectural at this time to lend themselves to meaningful analysis. 
Any environmental effects associated with future decisions will be 
subject to the NEPA process on a case-by-case basis. The BLM has also 
determined that the rule does not involve any of the extraordinary 
circumstances listed in 43 CFR 46.215 that require further analysis 
under NEPA.

Effects on the Energy Supply (E.O. 13211)

    This rule is not a significant energy action under the definition 
in E.O. 13211. This rule will not directly impact any allowed uses on 
public lands, as it only generally directs the BLM to consider allowing 
their use on existing trails and roads and in those areas where 
traditional bicycles are allowed. A Statement of Energy Effects is not 
required.

Author

    The principal author(s) of this rule are Evan Glenn and David 
Jeppesen, Recreation and Visitor Services Division; Rebecca Moore, 
Branch of Decision Support; Scott Whitesides and Sandra McGinnis, 
Branch of Planning and NEPA; Britta Nelson, National Conservation Lands 
Division; Charles Yudson, Division of Regulatory Affairs; assisted by 
the Office of the Solicitor.

David L. Bernhardt,
Secretary, U.S. Department of the Interior.

List of Subjects in 43 CFR Part 8340

    Public lands, Recreation and recreation areas, Traffic regulations.

    For the reasons set out in the discussion of the rule, the Bureau 
of Land Management proposes to amend 43 CFR part 8340 as follows:

[[Page 69223]]

PART 8340--OFF-ROAD VEHICLES

0
1. The authority citation for part 8340 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 43 U.S.C. 1201, 43 U.S.C. 315a, 16 U.S.C. 1531 et 
seq., 16 U.S.C. 1281c, 16 U.S.C. 670 et seq., 16 U.S.C. 460l-6a, 16 
U.S.C. 1241 et seq., and 43 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.

Subpart 8340--General

0
2. Revise Sec.  8340.0-5 to read as follows:


Sec.  8340.0-5   Definitions.

    As used in this part:
    (a) Off-road vehicle means any motorized vehicle capable of, or 
designed for, travel on or immediately over land, water, or other 
natural terrain, excluding:
    (1) Any nonamphibious registered motorboat;
    (2) Any military, fire, emergency, or law enforcement vehicle while 
being used for emergency purposes;
    (3) Any vehicle whose use is expressly authorized by the authorized 
officer, or otherwise officially approved;
    (4) Vehicles in official use;
    (5) E-bikes, as defined in paragraph (j) of this section:
    (i) While being used on roads and trails upon which mechanized, 
non-motorized use is allowed;
    (ii) That are being used in a manner where the motor is not 
exclusively propelling the e-bike for an extended period of time; and
    (iii) Where the authorized officer has expressly determined, as 
part of a land-use planning or implementation-level decision, that e-
bikes should be treated the same as non-motorized bicycles; and
    (6) Any combat or combat support vehicle when used in times of 
national defense emergencies.
    (b) Public lands means any lands the surface of which is 
administered by the Bureau of Land Management.
    (c) Bureau means the Bureau of Land Management.
    (d) Official use means use by an employee, agent, or designated 
representative of the Federal Government or one of its contractors, in 
the course of his employment, agency, or representation.
    (e) Planning system means the approach provided in Bureau 
regulations, directives and manuals to formulate multiple use plans for 
the public lands. This approach provides for public participation 
within the system.
    (f) Open area means an area where all types of vehicle use is 
permitted at all times, anywhere in the area subject to the operating 
regulations and vehicle standards set forth in subparts 8341 and 8342 
of this title.
    (g) Limited area means an area restricted at certain times, in 
certain areas, and/or to certain vehicular use. These restrictions may 
be of any type, but can generally be accommodated within the following 
type of categories: Numbers of vehicles; types of vehicles; time or 
season of vehicle use; permitted or licensed use only; use on existing 
roads and trails; use on designated roads and trails; and other 
restrictions.
    (h) Closed area means an area where off-road vehicle use is 
prohibited. Use of off-road vehicles in closed areas may be allowed for 
certain reasons; however, such use shall be made only with the approval 
of the authorized officer.
    (i) Spark arrester is any device which traps or destroys 80 percent 
or more of the exhaust particles to which it is subjected.
    (j) Electric bicycle (also known as an e-bike) means a two- or 
three-wheeled cycle with fully operable pedals and an electric motor of 
not more than 750 watts (1 h.p.) that meets the requirements of one of 
the following three classes:
    (1) Class 1 electric bicycle shall mean an electric bicycle 
equipped with a motor that provides assistance only when the rider is 
pedaling, and that ceases to provide assistance when the bicycle 
reaches the speed of 20 miles per hour.
    (2) Class 2 electric bicycle shall mean an electric bicycle 
equipped with a motor that may be used exclusively to propel the 
bicycle, and that is not capable of providing assistance when the 
bicycle reaches the speed of 20 miles per hour.
    (3) Class 3 electric bicycle shall mean an electric bicycle 
equipped with a motor that provides assistance only when the rider is 
pedaling, and that ceases to provide assistance when the bicycle 
reaches the speed of 28 miles per hour.

Subpart 8342--Designation of Areas and Trails

0
3. Amend Sec.  8342.2 by adding paragraph (d) to read as follows:


Sec.  8342.2  Designation procedures.

* * * * *
    (d) E-bikes. (1) Authorized officers may allow, as part of a land-
use planning or implementation-level decision, e-bikes, or certain 
classes of e-bikes, whose motorized features are not being used 
exclusively to propel the e-bike for an extended period of time on 
roads and trails upon which mechanized, non-motorized use is allowed; 
and
    (2) If the authorized officer allows e-bikes in accordance with 
this paragraph (d), an e-bike user shall be afforded all the rights and 
privileges, and be subject to all of the duties, of a user of a non-
motorized bicycle.

[FR Doc. 2020-22239 Filed 10-30-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-84-P