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Calif. considers requiring motorcycle Smog Checks

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California considers requiring motorcycle smog checks...
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-smog-motorcycles5-2009may05,0,6008850.story

Proponents say every effort will help in the air pollution and climate change fight.
Foes say it would be an infringement on bikers' rights.

By Susan Carpenter
May 5, 2009

Cars do it. Trucks do it. And now the state of California may require motorcycles to do it, too.

Biennial smog checks would be required for motorcycles manufactured in the 2000 model year and later under a bill making its way through the California Legislature.

Introduced in the Senate in late February, SB 435 targets bikes with illegally modified exhaust systems and would go into effect in 2012 if passed and signed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, an avid motorcyclist.

The measure has won support from health and environmental groups that say the move is critical to reducing the state's smog pollution but has angered motorcycle-rights groups, dealers and manufacturers, which say it's bad for business and an infringement of riders' freedoms.

Motorcycles account for 3.6% of registered vehicles in the state and make up just 0.8% of vehicle-miles traveled, yet account for 10% of passenger vehicles' smog-forming emissions, according to the California Air Resources Board, which backs the measure. Although fuel-efficient bikes emit significantly less carbon dioxide per mile, the ARB says they are, on average, 14 times more polluting per mile when it comes to emissions of oxides of nitrogen and hydrocarbons -- smog-forming pollutants that have been shown to trigger asthma attacks and worsen respiratory and cardiac illnesses.

The ARB estimates that 5.2 tons of pollutants would be prevented from entering the atmosphere daily if motorcycle smog checks become law.

"Five tons of smog out of 5,691 tons emitted daily from all statewide sources is so minuscule," said John Paliwoda, executive director of the California Motorcycle Dealers Assn. in Lake Elsinore. "Our feeling is that fewer people will want to buy motorcycles if they'd have to go through a smog check where no smog check is required right now."

Already, the industry is aching from the freezing of consumer credit and plummeting personal wealth, which have led to a 30.5% decline in new sales for the first quarter of 2009 over the same period last year, according to the Motorcycle Industry Council.

But the ARB says every emission source is fair game in its effort to corral pollutants linked to health problems and climate change.

"It's so difficult to find new sources of emissions reductions, particularly for L.A.," said Tom Cackette, the ARB's deputy director. "Some people think motorcycles look small, and percentage-wise they are tiny, but so is everything else that's available for emissions reductions."

California's existing smog check programs already stop 400 tons of smog-forming pollutants daily, primarily from light-duty cars, trucks and SUVs; but the state must, by 2023, come up with several hundred more tons of pollution savings per day to meet federal clean air requirements. The state also is committed to reducing greenhouse gases.

If motorcycle smog checks become law, the vehicles would join light-duty diesel trucks, which will be subject to smog checks beginning next year, and, potentially, older vehicles. A tougher measure, AB 859, is also working its way through the Legislature. It would require smog checks every year, rather than every other year.

In pursuing bikes of 280 cc and above made in the 2000 model year and beyond, SB 435 attempts to home in on the size of motorcycle more likely to have a modified exhaust system, and an era of bikes equipped with catalytic converters. Motorcycles that employ catalytic converters are more reliant on them to reduce emissions and are at greater risk of becoming gross polluters when those systems are removed.

It's these gross polluters that SB 435 is after.

Whether for improved performance, a different sound or a custom look, 38% of on-road motorcycle owners replace or modify their exhaust systems, according to the Motorcycle Industry Council's 2008 Owner Survey. Cruisers are the most common type of bike with a modified exhaust, followed by sport bikes, touring models and competition dirt bikes.

But a 2008 study of aftermarket activity by the ARB found that 85% of bikes 280 cc and larger had modified exhausts. "Most" of those, said Cackette, were illegal.

Not all modified exhausts are illegal; some comply with the emissions requirements that govern what makes and models can be sold in the state. But many modified exhausts remove the bikes' catalytic converters, causing them to emit twice the legal limit of hydrocarbons and oxides of nitrogen.

"Motorcyclists perhaps don't realize that those catalytic converters are absolutely critical to improving our air quality," said state Sen. Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills), author of SB 435. "I would like to challenge the motorcycle dealerships to work with us in educating motorcycle riders about the importance of keeping their catalytic converters on their bikes, as well as realizing that since all cars are part of the smog-check program and because we really have air pollution problems in so many parts of California, they need to be part of the solution."

California was home to nine of the country's 10 worst cities for smog, according to a recent report by the American Lung Assn., a co-sponsor of SB 435.

"I'm sure that many of these riders have families. They have children, who are especially susceptible to pollution," said Bonnie Holmes-Gen, senior policy director for the American Lung Assn. of California. "I believe people that ride are concerned about these issues also but maybe just don't understand how serious the problem is."

Although stalled in the Senate's Appropriations Committee, SB 435 is expected on the floor later this month and could be sent to the Assembly in June. A full vote would not be expected before August. Schwarzenegger "owns and rides motorcycles," but has not taken a position on the bill, said spokesman Aaron McLear.

The California Department of Consumer Affairs would oversee development of the test if the bill passes and has not estimated its cost to motorcycle owners. "It will probably be a simple test -- maybe a visual inspection or a tailpipe test," Pavley said. "It wouldn't be as complicated or sophisticated as it is for automobiles."

Tim Buche, president of the Motorcycle Industry Council in Irvine, said the aims of the test could be circumvented more easily by motorcyclists than by other motorists: Aftermarket exhaust systems, which cost $1,000 to $4,000, can be removed in several hours and reinstalled after the test.

"The whole impact to the consumer of not being able to customize and personalize your motorcycle and tune it as you would like is something we can't support," Buche said, "because we know how valued that is by our customers."
 



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For the amount of smog it would eliminate it does seem silly.

Did CA require catalytic converters on (or ban) lawn mowers and leaf blowers?

What about all of the tractors running around in the agricultural areas?

On the bright side, it would create a few more jobs, and I suppose motorcycles already get a few breaks that car drivers don't, like using the car pool lane and driving between lanes on the backed up freeways.
 






Because people didn't have enough reasons already to make fun of California. :( This is pretty lame. I think Arnawld will shoot it down though.
 






Arizona already does yearly emissions tests for motorcycles and has done so since at least early 90's. Its only and idle test, but its still a test...

~Mark
 






Because people didn't have enough reasons already to make fun of California. :( This is pretty lame. I think Arnawld will shoot it down though.

...I think he will pass it...Isn't this the way it always starts..:scratch:

...They say they basically only want to check the cat and muffler...With the Governator being an Enthusiast, if he says yes it's in the books...(Btw, his fan base is at an all time low right now)

The State needs money...It always starts off simple....After it's a law, then they can add more stuff for more funding of the deficit...:(
 






The State needs money...

Unfortunately, that is what it is all about.

It's amazing how corrupt all your politicians are.
 






...The ideas for less Smog is great but as mentioned, there are other areas that can be enforced first...

...California has lost so many Business's and people that have moved out of the State in the last 10 years...Los Angeles is now in a decline of it's own..(from Feb.)
http://www.newgeography.com/content/00618-the-decline-los-angeles

"Now L.A. seems to be fading rapidly toward irrelevancy. Its economy has tanked faster than that of the nation, with unemployment now close to 10%. The port appears in decline, the roads in awful shape and the once potent industrial base continues to shrink.

Job growth in the area, notes a forecast by the University of California at Santa Barbara, dropped 0.6% last year and is expected to plunge far more rapidly this year. Roughly one-fifth of the population depends on public assistance or benefits to survive."

...With the sales of new auto's making up 10% of the tax revenue in California and the Recent decline of these sales in the last 6 months plus (Recently heard), and the Sales of Motorcycles increasing when gas soared to $5 a gallon, you know they are next...

...But while the States economy is heading south and the States Deficit is out of control, we have the Governator to fix it..:rolleyes:..Yay

terminator-2-judgement-day.jpg
 






I hate to say it, but that is part of the problem. Arny thinks he's the "Governator" - unfortunately, no one wrote a script for him. It's hard to pretend when you don't know what you are pretending about.

Dont' take this wrong - I am not trying to rag on only your politicians. I think they all need to be replaced - right now. But that is another thread...
 












I wonder if they will require dyno smog checks for motorcycles - now that will be EXPENSIVE!
 






...I am curious to hear if Froader has heard any other info on this???...:scratch:
 






...I just found a couple updates to this...:biggthump
http://thekneeslider.com/archives/2009/06/01/california-drops-motorcycle-smog-check-proposal/
California Drops Motorcycle Smog Check Proposal

by Paul Crowe - "The Kneeslider" on 6/1/2009

in Motorcycle Laws and Regulations

A few months ago, California State Senator Fran Pavley introduced legislation which would have required smog checks for all motorcycles of model year 2000 or newer, beginning in 2012. The proposal has been amended to authorize police officers to fine bikers who have removed catalytic converters but the smog test provision has been dropped after the senate objected. The senate approved the amended bill which now goes to the state assembly. If it passes there, the governor’s signature is all that’s needed.
___________________________________________________________________________

Motorcycle Smog Check Bill Doused
http://la.curbed.com/archives/2009/06/httpwwwclutchandchromecomnewsmotorcyclenews0906013htm.php
Wednesday, June 3, 2009, by Dakota

... Earlier this year, Senator Fran Pavley (D-District 23) presented a bill that would require newer motorcycles to undergo smog testing, a suggestion that's been kicking around for some time now. Well, via the fine people at Clutch and Chrome, a motorcycle magazine, one learns that the bill, "which perplexed many environmentalists, angered riders and moved advocacy groups to action has been watered down from mandating smog checks for motorcycles." The magazine runs through all the reasons why motorcycles haven't had to undergo smog tests (they quote a L.A. Times editorial that says there isn't decent motorcycle technology to offset motorcycle emissions, hence the leniency on the part of the EPA). According to Clutch and Chrome, "while the bill drops the smog-test provision, it does authorize law enforcement officers to fine motorcyclists who remove the converters." [C and C]
 






Arizona has been doing this since the '80s. I was unlucky enough to have to get my bike tested in the middle of the summer. Nothing like sitting on blacktop that's being cooked by 110 degree temps for an hour or so...:rolleyes:
 












"Arizona has been doing this since the '80s."

Wow thats crazy, I want to see the emissions numbers and compare them to a candle
 






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