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Public Act 104-0414 |
SB2247 Enrolled | LRB104 07607 SPS 17651 b |
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AN ACT concerning business. |
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly: |
Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Micromobility Fire Safety Act. |
Section 5. Findings. |
(a) Micromobility devices, such as electric bicycles, |
electric scooters, and personal e-mobility devices, like |
hoverboards and electric unicycles, are increasingly popular, |
battery-powered transportation options for American consumers |
and workers. |
(b) As battery-powered devices, micromobility devices can |
be a fire and explosion safety hazard if they do not meet |
safety standards. |
(c) For micromobility devices that do not meet safety |
standards, there is a heightened risk of the lithium-ion |
batteries that power these devices experiencing a cascading |
failure where the overwhelming generation of heat triggers the |
release of toxic gases, explosions, or the spread of flames. |
(d) In 2021 and 2022, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety |
Commission received reports from 39 states of at least 208 |
fires or overheating events that were associated with electric |
bicycles and personal e-mobility devices that caused 19 |
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fatalities. |
(e) There are consensus standards available that mitigate |
the battery and electrical system hazards of electric bicycles |
and personal e-mobility devices that can cause fires. |
(f) In 2022, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission |
issued a letter to the manufacturers, importers, distributors, |
and retailers of electric bicycles and personal e-mobility |
devices urging these products to be "designed, manufactured, |
and certified" to the appropriate UL standard as |
"manufacturing these products in compliance with the |
applicable UL standards significantly reduces the risk of |
injuries and deaths from micromobility device fires." |
(g) In 2023, after 216 micromobility device-related fires |
in 2022 that caused 147 injuries and 6 fatalities, New York |
City enacted legislation requiring micromobility device and |
battery certification to the applicable UL safety standards by |
an ISO-accredited laboratory. |
Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act: |
"Accredited testing laboratory" means an independent |
third-party organization providing certification and testing |
for micromobility products, including low-speed electric |
bicycles and personal e-mobility devices, that has received |
ISO/IEC 17065 or ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation from an |
independent accreditation body that is a member of the |
International Accreditation Forum. |
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"Electric personal assistive mobility device" has the |
meaning set forth in Section 1-117.7 of the Illinois Vehicle |
Code. |
"Lithium-ion battery" or "cell" means a rechargeable |
electrochemical cell or battery in which the positive and |
negative electrodes are both lithium compounds constructed |
with no metallic lithium in either electrode. "Lithium-ion |
battery" or "cell" includes a lithium-ion polymer battery or |
cell that uses lithium-ion chemistries. |
"Low-speed electric scooter" has the meaning set forth in |
Section 1-140.11 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. |
"Moped" has the meaning set forth in Section 1-148.2 of |
the Illinois Vehicle Code. |
"Motor-driven cycle" has the meaning set forth in Section |
1-145.001 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. |
"Off-highway motorcycle" has the meaning set forth in |
Section 1-153.1 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. |
"Personal e-mobility device" means a consumer mobility |
device, other than a low-speed electric bicycle, intended for |
a single rider with a traction battery and electric motor or |
drive train that propels the device, which may be |
self-balancing and may be provided with a handle for grasping |
while riding, a seat for the rider, or operable pedals. |
"Personal e-mobility device" includes an electric personal |
assistive mobility device and low-speed electric scooter. |
"Personal e-mobility device" also includes a skateboard, |
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motor-driven cycle, moped, and off-highway motorcycle, if |
those vehicles are propelled by an electric motor. |
"Recycling" means any process by which materials that |
would otherwise become waste are collected, separated, or |
processed for the purpose of returning the materials to the |
economic mainstream in the form of raw materials for new |
products. |
"Traction battery" means a rechargeable lithium-ion |
battery used to power the electric drive motor of a low-speed |
electric bicycles or personal e-mobility devices. |
Section 15. Manufacture and distribution of low-speed |
electric bicycles, personal e-mobility devices, and traction |
batteries. |
(a) No person shall manufacture, distribute, sell, lease, |
rent, offer for sale, offer for lease, or offer for rent a |
low-speed electric bicycle unless the electrical drive system |
for the low-speed electric bicycle has been tested by an |
accredited testing laboratory and found: (i) before January 1, |
2028, to comply with ANSI/CAN/UL Standard 2849 or EN Standard |
15194; or (ii) on or after January 1, 2028, to comply with |
ANSI/CAN/UL Standard 2849. |
(b) No person shall manufacture, distribute, sell, lease, |
rent, offer for sale, offer for lease, offer for rent, or |
operate in furtherance of a business activity a personal |
e-mobility device unless the electrical system for the |
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personal e-mobility device has been tested by an accredited |
testing laboratory and found to comply with ANSI/CAN/UL |
Standard 2272. |
(c) No person shall manufacture, distribute, sell, lease, |
rent, offer for sale, offer for lease, or offer for rent a |
traction battery for a low-speed electric bicycle unless the |
traction battery has been tested by an accredited testing |
laboratory and found: (i) before January 1, 2028, to comply |
with ANSI/CAN/UL Standard 2271, ANSI/CAN/UL Standard 2849, or |
EN Standard 15194; or (ii) on or after January 1, 2028, to |
comply with ANSI/CAN/UL Standard 2271 or ANSI/CAN/UL Standard |
2849. |
(d) No person shall manufacture, distribute, sell, lease, |
rent, offer for sale, offer for lease, or offer for rent a |
traction battery for a personal e-mobility device unless the |
traction battery has been tested by an accredited testing |
laboratory and found to comply with ANSI/CAN/UL Standard 2271. |
Section 20. Reconditioned traction batteries. |
(a) It is unlawful for any person to: |
(1) assemble or recondition a traction battery using |
cells removed from used lithium-ion batteries; or |
(2) sell or offer for sale a lithium-ion traction |
battery that uses cells removed from used lithium-ion |
batteries. |
(b) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit |
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the recycling of traction batteries or their components. |
Section 25. Enforcement by Attorney General. A violation |
of any of the provisions of this Act is an unlawful practice |
under the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act. |
All remedies, penalties, and authority granted to the Attorney |
General by that Act shall be available to the Attorney General |
for the enforcement of this Act. |
Section 90. The Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business |
Practices Act is amended by adding Section 2HHHH as follows: |
(815 ILCS 505/2HHHH new) |
Sec. 2HHHH. Violations of the Micromobility Fire Safety |
Act. A person who violates the Micromobility Fire Safety Act |
commits an unlawful practice within the meaning of this Act. |
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect January |
1, 2026. |