According to this thread, the OP states he sees young kids joy riding around on store scooters more often than those for whom the devices are intended.
He even speculates that some parents might use the possibility of scooter play time in order to coax their kids into a trip to the store.
I’ve seen plenty of questionable public behavior by kids (adults too, of course), but I have never, ever seen this happen. Others in the thread expressed similar reactions.
So I’m curious to see some hard scientific data on the topic.
Since I can’t see that, I thought I’d ask some Dopers
Never seen it. Because it would not be tolerated here I believe. Someone would report it almost immediatelY. And the store would not hesitate for a moment, to immediately act, I believe.
They are not cheap to maintain or provide, I should think ANY store would be foolish to allow them to become a child’s amusement ride. It’s hard to imagine other customers would NOT speak up directly and express their outrage. It’s pretty hard to imagine a store full of people being cool with it and just going on about their business.
UK I have used the scooters following an operation. In every case I had to get the key from customer services. They wouldn’t give the key out to (non disabled) kids so no, never seen it.
Once at a local Fred Meyer. The mother was hopeless. The kids were wreaking minor havoc, running into displays and knocking things over. A store employee finally interceded.
Never seen that, but I have seen teenagers “cart bowling” on the parking lot – that’s running a cart up to full speed, then letting it roll into a distant car.
I vaguely recall seeing some college kids (obviously drunk) having a ball on one at 2am in the morning.
Also, my store has those carts made to look like race cars that the kids can sit in. Also, they have the mini carts that the kids can push around. So I don’t imagine kids at this store have any real desire to ride the scooters anyway.
Nope, although I wouldn’t be surprised. When I worked at Kmart we kept had a few wheelchairs and occassionally you’d get some kid try to play with them, but it was easy just to shoo them away.
I voted “once”. I saw this just a couple of weeks ago - at Target maybe? Three or four high school age girls piled on the motorized shopping cart. I would never have thought that kids would go joyriding on those, so I just assumed one of the girls was handicapped and the others hopped on. It’s not like they were just tooling around the store, it looked like they were actually shopping, so I don’t know if they were screwing around or not.