NEW YORK (1010 WINS) —Two men were struck and injured by fireworks early Wednesday morning as the city sees a surge in the number of illegal fireworks being reported to 311, with hundreds of reports this week alone.
One of the men was injured in the Bronx shortly before 1 a.m. when he was watching a firework display, according to WABC. The man was hit in the chest by a firework on University Avenue.
The man, reportedly 18 or 19 years old, was in stable condition at St. Barnabas Hospital.
Meanwhile, a 33-year-old man was injured on Bedford Avenue in Brooklyn when he was setting off a firework. The man was reportedly struck by the firework after it misfired shortly after 1 a.m.
The man was in serious but stable condition at Kings County Hospital.
Illicit bursts of fireworks from street corners and rooftops aren't uncommon in the city's neighborhoods in the days before the Fourth of July, but the past few weeks has seen an extraordinary surge in such displays.
There have already been more than 1,300 fireworks-related complaints to the city's noise complaint hotline through the first half of the month, including 455 on Sunday. Usually, there are just a few dozen such complaints during that time period.
The shows start around sunset, when the bridges begin to light up over the East River. It's lasting at times long past midnight, too late for those who have to rise early the next morning for work — even it's from the comfort of their living room with many New Yorkers still working from home.
Fed up, fatigued or just fascinated, they are turning to social media to ask some form of the same question: What's up with the fireworks?
Where they are coming from is also a mystery.
While the short sparklers that parents let kids twirl until they quickly flame out can be purchased, the kind of fireworks that create the booming blasts in Brooklyn can't be sold legally in New York.
But people are getting them — a lot of them, from the sound of things.
"Complaining about the fireworks is goofy and probably a little racist but I am curious how every teenager in Brooklyn got a month's supply," Brooklyn resident Rachel Millman wrote on Twitter.
Millman added in an email that fireworks are common in Brooklyn every summer and she doesn't mind them, but she's confused like many others why there are so many nightly now.
The fireworks fun — or fury — isn't limited to New York. They can be heard further to the north in Westchester County, and are ringing out more than normal in locations throughout the Northeast. Boston, Baltimore, Hartford, Connecticut and Syracuse, New York are among the cities where residents have noticed a similar phenomenon.
In Brooklyn, a sharp divide has opened between residents aggravated by the noise and threatening to call authorities and others who cautioning that could lead to the type of dangerous police action they've just spent weeks protesting against.
An NYPD spokesperson stressed that fireworks are illegal in New York City and urged people to report violations involving them. Brooklyn resident Brittany Sturrett hasn't done that, though she said the noise is a nuisance.
"They are a block from my house," she said. "I see them from my window and it freaks out my dog."
Brooklyn has been the center of some of the nation's largest demonstrations following the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after a white Minneapolis police officer pressed a knee to his neck.
Maybe, some Brooklynites figure, the pyrotechnics are a show of support for the protesters.
Perhaps they're a way to blow off steam — and plenty of smoke — after being stuck at home all spring because of the coronavirus.
Whatever it is, it's loud.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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