Authorities Target High-Powered E-Bike Rideouts in North Lakes and Mango Hill

Authorities are ramping up enforcement against organised e-bike “rideouts” occurring weekly across South East Queensland. Officers are specifically targeting areas in North Lakes, Mango Hill, Springfield and neighbouring Ripley, where they allege youth groups use social media to coordinate group rides on non-compliant, high-powered devices.



Chief Superintendent Mark Wheeler, from the Queensland Police Road Policing and Regional Support Command, confirmed that the service is allocating extra resources to Springfield, Ripley, North Lakes, Mango Hill, and the Gold Coast. Specialised teams now use digital intelligence to enact targeted responses to these gatherings.

Police allege that footage uploaded online shows groups using devices reaching speeds of 90 kilometres per hour, performing one-wheel stunts, and riding in large convoys through suburban streets.

Digital Monitoring and Police Strategy

QPS monitors these activities through its Digital Intelligence Coordination and Engagement (DICE) team. This unit tracks rideout announcements and helps coordinate the operational response. Online posts frequently discuss police patrol locations and offer tips on how to avoid interception.

Authorities describe these behaviours as posing a significant risk to the community. Officials emphasize that youth groups on e-devices are considered vulnerable road users who endanger themselves and the public when they disregard standard road rules.

Photo Credit: mPGC / Facebook

Safety Trends and Operation X-Ray Surety

Following 14 e-mobility fatalities across Queensland in 2025, authorities launched Operation X-Ray Surety. This statewide enforcement campaign ran from 3 November 2025 to 26 January 2026 to curb rising road trauma.

Between 3 November and 23 December, police issued 2,124 fines related to e-mobility devices. The most common offences included:

  • Failure to wear a helmet: 1,652 fines
  • Use of prohibited roads: 207 fines
  • Carrying passengers: 72 fines

Chief Supt Wheeler suggested that Christmas gift-giving likely increased the number of these devices on the road. He urged parents to ensure any e-bike they purchase complies with Queensland law, which requires motors to cut off at 25 kilometres per hour and limits power output to 250 watts.

North Lakes and Mango Hill Context

North Lakes and Mango Hill sit within the City of Moreton Bay, approximately 30 road kilometres north of Brisbane CBD. The master-planned communities developed rapidly from the early 2000s, with North Lakes growing from vacant farmland to a population of over 24,000 residents following the significant expansion of Westfield North Lakes in 2007

Mango Hill, located immediately south of North Lakes, developed alongside its neighbour through coordinated planning, with Mango Hill railway station opening in 2016 on the Redcliffe Peninsula line.

Both suburbs contain demographic profiles skewing toward young families. The concentration of youth groups seeking transport independence before obtaining driver licences contributes to e-bike adoption, with some turning to non-compliant devices.

The area’s relatively new road infrastructure provides locations where youth groups organise group rides, with rideout activity increasingly spilling onto busier thoroughfares including Anzac Avenue and Mango Hill Boulevard.

Legal Requirements and Potential Penalties

Queensland law classifies any e-bike exceeding 250 watts or a 25 km/h assisted speed as a motor vehicle. Consequently, these devices require registration, insurance, and a valid motorcycle licence.

Riders of non-compliant devices face a ‘compliance package’ of fines that can exceed $1,600, covering registration, insurance, and licensing offences simultaneously.

Police hold the authority to impound devices suspected of being involved in an offence. While owners can often go to court to seek the return of their property, a magistrate may order the permanent forfeiture or destruction of devices that are heavily modified or deemed a persistent public risk.

Community Views and Infrastructure

Community sentiment remains divided. While many residents express frustration with dangerous riding, others advocate for better infrastructure. Some community members suggest that the Brisbane 2032 Olympics provide an opportunity to build dedicated high-speed cycling networks that could safely accommodate evolving e-mobility technology.

Critics of the current crackdown argue that the speed capabilities of some modern devices—reaching up to 100 km/h—require them to be regulated as motorcycles rather than bicycles. Meanwhile, police continue to encourage residents to report dangerous behaviour or organised rideouts via Crime Stoppers.



Published 08-February-2026.

Narangba Train Station Adds 100 Car Parks to Meet Rising Demand


Commuters in Narangba will soon see relief from packed train station car parks, with work underway to add more than 100 new spaces and improve safety features at the busy northside facility.



Early works began in September on vacant rail corridor land off Main Street, northwest of Narangba train station. The Department of Transport and Main Roads is delivering the project on behalf of Queensland Rail, with major construction works to follow. The initial stage includes fencing, earthworks, drainage and preparing a new site access, while the next stage will bring the full construction program.

Narangba Station
Photo Credit: TMR QLD

What’s changing at Narangba

Once complete, the upgrade will increase the station’s capacity from about 380 to nearly 500 spaces. The design features four new accessible parking bays, six motorcycle bays, and a dedicated left-turn lane from Main Street to enhance traffic flow into the site. 

New lighting and CCTV will be installed across the facility to improve safety, while a new pedestrian pathway will provide safer and easier access to the station platforms. Retention and detention basins are also planned to improve stormwater management. These features are designed not only to add more space but also to deliver a safer and more efficient environment for commuters.

The project is intended to improve everyday convenience for people travelling to work, study or appointments. Residents have long raised concerns about congestion in surrounding streets and the lack of safe pedestrian links. The design changes are also expected to ease congestion along Main Street, where vehicles currently queue or circulate in search of parking.

Narangba Station
Photo Credit: TMR QLD

Part of a wider network approach

In the past, upgrades were focused on simply increasing numbers. More recent projects, including Narangba’s, are shaped by the Park ‘n’ Ride Strategy and the Public Transport Infrastructure Manual, which emphasise safety, accessibility, and better management of parking. Features like CCTV, lighting, stormwater works and pedestrian connectivity are now standard inclusions.

TMR Minister Brent Mickelberg has stated that more than 300,000 trips were made through Narangba station in the last financial year, underscoring its role as a key commuter hub for the City of Moreton Bay. Narangba’s population was estimated at about 23,130 in mid-2024, reflecting nearly three per cent growth in a year. 



The introduction of permanent 50-cent fares across South East Queensland has also driven up patronage, adding pressure to stations already operating at capacity. For locals, full car parks often mean either arriving unusually early or spilling into residential streets, an issue the expansion is intended to ease.

Published 25-Oct-2025