The Norwalk Hour

A child’s death prompts questions about brake safety on e-bikes

- By Gretchen Reynolds and Teddy Amenabar

Two years ago, 12-yearold Molly Steinsapir was sitting behind her best friend on a borrowed electric bike when the girls started descending a steep hill in Los Angeles. Molly’s friend pulled the brakes, but the bike began to shimmy, and the girls crashed. Molly, who was wearing a helmet, sustained severe head injuries.

After the accident, Molly’s mother posted a call for prayer on Twitter, rallying hundreds of thousands of new followers who used the hashtag #TeamMolly to cheer for the child’s recovery. But after multiple brain surgeries, Molly died on Feb. 15, 2021.

While Molly’s death prompted an outpouring of grief on social media, the tragedy has taken a new turn. Her accident is raising questions about the safety of e-bikes — specifical­ly the quality of ebike brakes — and whether the wildly popular bicycles are safe for young people to ride.

Molly’s parents, who are both attorneys, have sued Rad Power Bikes Inc., maker of the e-bike the girls were riding and the largest e-bike company in the United States, claiming that its bikes “inappropri­ately” are marketed to children and contain “multiple design defects.”

The case, already a hotbutton topic in the cycling community, garnered renewed attention this month with the publicatio­n of a lengthy investigat­ion by Bicycling magazine. It sparked a viral wave of passionate, sometimes excoriatin­g online chatter about e-bikes and their possible benefits, downsides, price, quality, regulation, and, especially, their appropriat­eness for young riders.

E-bikes, with their battery-powered motors and pedaling help, have surged in popularity in the United States and around the world as an eco-friendly alternativ­e to cars and a less strenuous and sweaty option for getting around compared to a regular bike. By all accounts, they are the fastest-growing segment of the bike market, with sales topping 420,000 in 2021 and probably exceeding that last year, according to data from PeopleForB­ikes, the industry trade group for bicycle manufactur­ers.

There are three types of “e-bikes,” bicycles equipped with a battery and motor. Many are capable of carrying extra passengers or cargo, unlike most convention­al bikes. Class 1 e-bikes, the most common, are pedal-assist models with motors that work only while you’re pedaling. They have a top speed of 20 mph. Ride faster, and the motor automatica­lly flips off.

Class 2 e-bikes feature a throttle, so the motor powers the bike even if you don’t pedal. It stops working if you exceed 20 mph, though. Molly was a passenger on a Class 2 model.

Class 3 e-bikes are the most powerful. These pedal-assist bikes can reach 28 mph before the motor stops.

Legally, almost anyone can ride an e-bike. “There is currently no federal law or guideline regarding the appropriat­e minimum age” for e-biking, said Matt Moore, the policy counsel for PeopleForB­ikes. “The Consumer Product Safety Commission considers very young children capable of riding bikes, and ebikes are classified as bikes.”

Thirty-nine states and additional municipali­ties regulate minimum rider age, usually for the powerful Class 3 bikes, although the requiremen­ts vary. Some localities also limit ebikes, especially Class 3, in bike lanes. You can find more informatio­n about local regulation­s at the PeopleForB­ikes website.

According to the Steinsapir­s’ lawsuit, the bike the girls were riding, a 65pound RadRunner 1 model bought a month before by the friend’s family as a Christmas gift for an older sister, “began to shake and wobble” when Molly’s friend applied the brakes. The complaint claims the bicycle’s brakes, a type known as mechanical disc brakes, and the skewer and lever holding the front wheel in place, an easily removed mechanism called a quick release, were inadequate to the demands of handling and stopping the bike and contribute­d to the accident.

Brandie Gonzales, the director of public relations and communicat­ions for Rad Power Bikes, wrote in an email that the “entire Rad Power Bikes team extends its deepest condolence­s to the Steinsapir family on the tragic loss of Molly Steinsapir.” The company would not comment on the incident or lawsuit, she said.

Stacey Stewart, vice president of engineerin­g at Rad Power Bikes, added that the company is “confident in the safety and quality of all of our ebikes and components, including the disc brakes and release mechanism, which are standard in the industry, used on thousands of bikes, and when used and maintained properly, are safe.”

Gonzales also provided a previously unreported letter, dated Jan. 12, from the Consumer Product Safety Commission, in which the agency said it had “completed its review of the informatio­n you provided” in response to the agency’s inquiries about the RadRunner 1 bike following Molly Steinsapir’s death. “Based upon the informatio­n you provided, the staff does not believe the problem identified necessitat­es further action.”

But anecdotes about brake issues and other concerns with the quality or handling of some ebikes are common online and among cyclists of all ages and their mechanics. John Martinous, a 24-yearold teacher in Sanford, Fla., posted on Reddit about his e-bike, a Christmas gift from his parents. Contacted by The Washington Post, he said the brakes had stopped working while he was riding the bike, and he collided with a car turning into a preschool parking lot.

“The problem was that I wasn’t able to stop in time,” he said, adding that he wound up scraping his feet along the ground to stop the bike.

Peter Flax, a longtime cycling journalist in Los Angeles, said that after his story on Molly was published in Bicycling, several cyclists and mechanics contacted him to describe brake pads wearing out after only a few weeks of use or otherwise failing to fully stop the bikes when applied. “I heard from lots of people,” he said.

In the article, Flax described his own experience with brake concerns, after the brakes on a Rad Power bicycle he had purchased for one of his teenage sons weeks earlier stopped working. An experience­d cyclist, he adjusted the brake cables and bought new brake pads, but the e-bike’s brakes continued to work erraticall­y and burn through brake pads, he said.

After publicatio­n, he said, his Twitter feed and DMs filled with messages similar to that from one bike shop manager in Minneapoli­s, who told Flax that “every single Rad that comes through has brake issues.”

“It’s the Wild West” for e-bikes, said Dave Nghiem, the manager at College Park Bicycles in Maryland.

He and other bike mechanics contacted by The Post said the problems are not confined to one brand, but apply to many models of relatively inexpensiv­e road e-bikes designed for recreation and commuting. These bikes typically retail for less than $2,000 and usually are sold directly to consumers, not through a bike shop. They make up the bulk of e-bike sales.

By law, all bicycles sold in the United States must comply with federal regulation­s on the safety of their components, Moore, the PeopleForB­ikes counsel, said. Depending on the bicycle’s weight and the total weight it claims to be able to carry, the brakes must be able to stop the bike within a certain distance, he said.

Stacey Stewart, the Rad Power Bikes VP, said in a written statement that the company’s “internal design and validation methods exceed the minimums required by the US ebike regulation­s,” adding that “[e]very single bike is ridden one mile before getting boxed up. Then we conduct random sample outof-box testing prior to shipment.”

But not all e-bike manufactur­ers follow similar voluntary standards. Some inexpensiv­e e-bikes sold online can arrive from their overseas manufactur­ers without certificat­ion that the bicycles comply with all U.S. safety regulation­s. And many of the parts are unfamiliar to mechanics here, several bicycle mechanics said.

“I won’t work on them,” said Robert Lynn, the service manager for BicycleSpa­ce in Washington, D.C., referring to low-cost ebikes sold directly to consumers and featuring inexpensiv­e components. “I won’t touch anything with cheap brakes.”

Karl Stoerzinge­r, a mechanic at Perennial Cycle in Minneapoli­s, likewise said the store has stopped working on electric bikes people ordered online because he’s often “flying completely blind” on the repair, dealing with unknown

batteries and parts.

Some of the cheapest electric bikes people order online are using components that “aren’t really up to snuff,” Stoerzinge­r said. “If they’re using cheap brakes or something that’s not strong enough, that can quickly be a genuine safety issue.”

Even components that comply with bicycle safety regulation­s and have worked well on convention­al bikes can be problemati­c on e-bikes, Lynn said, because e-bikes tend to be far heavier and sometimes carry passengers, adding to the weight.

“These things are going 20 miles an hour, which is faster than most people ever ride a regular bike, and then you have to stop all that weight,” he said. “Do that a few times, and you burn the brake pads down real fast.”

Anyone who rides an ebike, whatever its make, should frequently check its brakes and other components, said Amy Korver, the community education manager for Cascade Bicycle Club in Seattle. (So should anyone who rides a convention­al bike, she said.)

If the brakes’ levers get “really close to your handlebar” when you pull them back to stop, that’s a sign the brakes have lost stopping power and you need to get them checked, Korver said.

“You want at least a thumb’s width worth of distance between your handlebar and your brake lever,” she said.

Similarly, if you hear a scraping sound from the brakes or notice that the brake pads’ grooves, which help shed road debris, have worn down, you should have the brakes serviced.

On convention­al bikes, the brake pads typically last for as much as 1,000 miles of use, but mechanics warn that the same pads may wear out with less usage on heavier ebikes. “Those things can wear out in a couple of weeks,” Lynn said.

Accidents involving ebikes are not due solely to

mechanical failures. According to data from the Consumer Product Safety Commission, 53 people died as a result of e-bike accidents from 2017 to 2021. (By comparison, 68 people died as a result of e-scooter accidents during the same period.) In most of these incidents, Moore said, “it appears they are related to crashes with motor vehicles or rider error, rather than product defects.”

Younger riders can be especially vulnerable. “A lot of kids aren’t used to riding on these fast devices,” said Makenzie Ferguson, the injury prevention coordinato­r at Children’s Hospital of Orange County (CHOC) in California. “So, they might not have the skill or knowledge on how to maneuver them.”

In an article on its website, CHOC noted that it had treated more than 80 pediatric injuries from ebike riding in the past three years. Ferguson said the injuries generally have involved kids about 14 to 16 years old, but some have been younger. She noted that the count only includes cases within their hospital system in Orange County and there are “probably more” injuries treated at other emergency rooms in the area.

“Usually, they’re riding, and they lose control,” Ferguson said. “Maybe they hit a curb or something or they’re not used to the weight of the bike.”

The resulting injuries can be more serious than after crashes on a convention­al bike, some recent studies show. In a 2019 Israeli study of 196 pediatric emergency room visits related to bicycle accidents, more young people crashed convention­al bikes, “but injuries of higher severity only occurred among the E-bikers,” the authors wrote. A separate 2019 study of 337 pediatric hospitaliz­ations after biking and other traffic-related accidents likewise found that serious injuries, especially to the head, were far more common among young e-bikers than those riding convention­al bikes.

 ?? Maggie Shannon/Contribute­d photo ?? Photos of Molly Steinsapir and her family. Molly, 12, died in February 2021 after sustaining severe head injuries in a crash on an electric bicycle in Los Angeles.
Maggie Shannon/Contribute­d photo Photos of Molly Steinsapir and her family. Molly, 12, died in February 2021 after sustaining severe head injuries in a crash on an electric bicycle in Los Angeles.

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