One day they zipped around campus and Uptown Normal—the next, they were gone. The Town of Normal’s decision to ban electric scooters in December 2024 sparked debate among Illinois State University students.
James Hansberry, a freshman digital media major, was particularly unhappy with the ban.
“I think it’s going to be hard for those who need transportation to get where they need to go,” Hansberry said. “It hurts transportation in general, and it also hurts those who already bought a scooter.”
The Town of Normal cited safety concerns as the main reason for the ban. Will Stanley, a freshman game design major, agreed with the town's reasoning.
“I think it’s great,” Stanley said. “I got shoulder-checked the other day by one and almost ate grass.”
Others were split on the all-out ban of e-scooters, with some urging for a happy medium to be met instead.
“I think it’s crazy they banned them outright,” said Lucas Iversen, a freshman communications major. “I think it’d be better if (the town) made (the scooters) road only, but a full ban is bad. They’re overstepping.”
“I think the Town of Normal is overreaching their power,” said Ethan Scotti, a sophomore business administration major. “It’s not that serious I don’t think. I think they could be used safely.”
Others felt the ban was a more positive move taken by the Town of Normal concerning ISU's campus.
“I don’t think our campus is big enough where you need a scooter like that,” said Hayden Nitz, a freshman finance major. “I live in Tri-Towers and I can walk from there to Watterson pretty quickly.”
Many universities across the United States have e-scooters on campus available for rental. Some students wondered whether this system would be implementable at ISU if the ban were lifted.
“I went to the U of I one weekend and there were scooters littered everywhere,” said Landon Kienitz, a freshman cybersecurity major. “They were in the street, and half the time they were broken. It’s (a good idea) in concept, but not good in actuality.”
Patrick DuBrock, a freshman business administration major, said the infrastructure would have to improve first before allowing electric scooters.
“The sidewalks are small now as is and have too many people walking around who could get hit. I almost have before,” DuBrock said.
For now, e-scooters will remain off the streets in Normal. Whether the ban remains permanent is unclear, but one thing is certain—transportation on and around ISU’s campus just became a little less electric.