City of Winnipeg to endorse free bike registry

Poised to do away with city-run registry in favour of 529 Garage

Image | stolen-bike

Caption: Nothing but a wheel is left locked to a bike rack at the University of Winnipeg in this file photo. The city is now proposing the endorsement of a 529 Garage, a free bike registry. (Brett Purdy/CBC)

The City of Winnipeg is poised to do away with its existing bike registry and replace it with an external registry that has no service fee.
On Tuesday, city council's community services committee will consider a report (external link)recommending Winnipeg wind down its bike registry(external link) and endorse a cloud-based database called 529 Garage instead.
While the city would no longer own and control bike registry data, it would have access to the information when it needs it, according to the report. So would police.
"Moving to this new system will enable the city to enhance their role in evolving crime prevention strategies, proactively enforce and deter bike thefts, and provide recovery, storage, and auctioning of unclaimed bikes," bylaw enforcement licensing co-ordinator Terry Cormier writes in the report.
The city would spend about $50,000 a year on 529 Garage, according to the report.
Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham called for the replacement of the existing bike registry back in June.
At the time, the city said roughly half of the 2,000 bikes reported stolen in Winnipeg every year are recovered — but only 10 per cent of those bikes ended up back with their rightful owners.
Several cities in Canada, including Vancouver and London, Ont., have partnered with 529 Garage(external link), which was founded in Portland, Ore., in 2013.