Albany Times Union (Sunday)

NYC e-bike battery blaze kills man

Officials say 10 more hospitaliz­ed with injuries

- Nicholas Williams and Thomas Tracy

NEW YORK — A man was killed and 10 others were hospitaliz­ed when a charging e-bike battery sparked a raging Queens fire that tore through a home near LaGuardia Airport, police and fire officials said Saturday.

The blaze is the first fatal fire sparked by the lithium-ion batteries used in e-bikes and electric scooters this year, New York City Fire Department officials said. Last year, six people died in fires caused by these batteries.

“How many places have caught on fire because of these things?” stunned neighbor Anette Ruiz asked as she looked over pieces of the burned e-bike scattered on the ground outside the scorched brickfaced home.

“It’s very dangerous and they continue to sell these things,” Ruiz, 26, said. “At the end of the day it’s harmful and people can lose their life.”

A charging e-bike in the first-floor hallway of the 89th Street home in Jackson Heights exploded into flames around 11 p.m. Friday, officials said.

“(It) sounded like pops from the backyard,” neighbor Steve Gutierrez said. “I saw the black smoke coming from back there.”

A moment later, building residents were running into the street, Gutierrez, 23, recalled.

“They were calling for a ladder in Spanish,” he remembered. “Once I saw the fire get on the electrical wiring, that’s when I was like ‘Ok, let’s get everyone out of the house.’”

The burning e-bike was next to a first-floor staircase when it caught fire, FDNY officials said. The resulting inferno was so intense that it burned through the first-floor and second-floor staircases, causing them to collapse as firefighte­rs entered the building.

With the staircases burned through, firefighte­rs had to bring in portable ladders to get up to the second and third floors as the fire raged around them.

Firefighte­rs found a man in his 60s on the second floor of the three-story home suffering from smoke inhalation. He was rushed to Elmhurst Hospital where he died. The victim’s name has not been released as police try to track down family members.

Six other residents of the home — which included a 57-year-old woman, a 45-year-old man and

a 33-year-old man — who were rescued from the building, were taken to area hospitals with smoke inhalation, but were expected to recover.

Four firefighte­rs suffered minor injuries as the staircases they were on collapsed around them, an FDNY official said.

About 100 firefighte­rs

responded to the blaze, which took about an hour to snuff out.

The fire threatened to spread to other homes, but was contained before it damaged any other addresses, firefighte­rs said.

“It wasn’t a small fire,” said Nishat Chowdhury, 27, who lives next door. “The fire looked like it was touching our house. We’ve been up the whole night.”

Several e-bike and scooter batteries were found both in and around the home. They didn’t catch fire, but one ignited as a hazmat team collected the batteries after the fire was put out, sparking a new round of evacuation­s.

The burned and pitted facade was the home of one family who lived there nearly two decades, neighbors said. The Red Cross was finding shelter for the surviving relatives.

Lithium-ion batteries were responsibl­e for more than 200 fires in the city last year, FDNY officials said. About 140 people have been hurt and six people have been killed in these fires, authoritie­s said.

That’s more than double the number of lithium-ion battery fires the FDNY saw in 2021, when 100 fires were linked to e-bike and scooter batteries.

 ?? Theodore Parisienne / New York Daily News / TNS ?? A charging e-bike in the hallway of an 89th Street home exploded into flames around 11 p.m. on Friday, officials said.
Theodore Parisienne / New York Daily News / TNS A charging e-bike in the hallway of an 89th Street home exploded into flames around 11 p.m. on Friday, officials said.

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