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@werinamess @sdapcd Yes I detected lithium specific odors on that day and confirmed with the meteorologist that smoke from the battery fire was coming from Escondido through Rancho Santa Fe to the coast.
@werinamess @sdapcd Better in rsf today which is exactly why it was the battery fire. The Mexico fire is still very much raging and the air was much, much better. Utterly ridiculous so we had to breathe in lithium without so much as a warning. Infuriating.
@RandySchreck @SanDiegoWCMwx Exactly. And they treated it in the exact same way as a cover up saying it was ok to breathe and not at toxic levels until a couple months later when the truth came out that we were breathing HIGHLY carcinogenic fumes. I'm DONE trusting anything this city says.
An e-bike battery exploded, triggering a blaze that sent two backpackers fleeing for safety. The blaze, caused by a faulty e-bike battery left on charge, forced 70 people to evacuate and prompted a swift response from 22 firefighters and six trucks.
@sdapcd Same brown smoke/haze as helicopter video over battery fire. Very reminiscent of Navy fire when you said nothing to see here or worry about and later we found out it was incredibly carcinogenic.
https://t.co/rJgFOHe8f2
@sdapcd Just looked up other lithium battery fires that have burned in the past and ppl described a horrible smell like burning glue and sulfur. This is exactly how I would describe what we smelled. Can Escondido residents confirm who were near the battery fire?? Was that the same smell?
@CALFIRESANDIEGO Please confirm that this toxic chemical odor and brown chemical cloud and brown spotted wash up on beach that blanketed North County was coming from this fire and not the Escondido battery fire. The public demands to know.
@sdapcd@sdapcd furthermore I was in Santa Barbara during the Thomas fire when we had a toxic chemical cloud over our town from a melting pot of multiple wildfires that at the time was the largest in history. It did not smell like this. This is not wildfire smoke.
@sdapcd@sdapcd if you are unable to identify the source, please let us know how you arrived at the decision that this is not related to the lithium battery @SDGE fire. I smelled it in Rancho Santa Fe from 11:00 a.m. onward all day. Gave me horrible symptoms. Smelled like rubber burning.
@MunnyWillam@sdapcd It's not just the city of Carlsbad. It was smelled over the entirety of North County. I'm in Rancho Santa Fe and it was horrific all day.
@EncisFinest@sdapcd It's utterly ridiculous to say this did not come from the battery fire and completely nonsensical. I smelled it from 12:00 p.m. all the way up leading to evening in RSF. It was burning my lungs and made me feel nauseous and headaches. I'm a PPE manufacturer. Not wildfire smoke.
@KtotheEye@Grayson_Gregory@sdapcd Are you certain that it wasn't just the smoke traveling from the battery fire after they extinguished it? It's very common for fire smoke to linger in the air, especially in high temperatures and when it meets ozone after a fire has been out.