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Fire at CA Apartments Displaces 15

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Jan. 14, 2023 Four departments responded to a fire that started in a car part of a Petaluma apartment building and spread to the structure.

By Alana Minkler, Don Frances Source The Press Democrat Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Firefighters from Petaluma Fire Department and other agencies responded to the fire.
Firefighters from Petaluma Fire Department and other agencies responded to the fire.

Jan. 13—Fifteen people were displaced late Thursday night by a fire at an apartment complex in Petaluma, and a battalion chief confirmed that it appears to have started in the ground-floor carport area.

Firefighters were dispatched a little after 11:30 p.m. Thursday to Oak Creek Apartments at 110 Graylawn Ave., and arrived within three minutes to find the structure “well involved,” Petaluma Fire Department Battalion Chief Kevin Weaver said.

Heavy fire was coming from the carport area, with five vehicles on fire there along with the exterior of the building and upper-floor apartments, Weaver said. Firefighters worked quickly to extinguish the blaze, and no injuries were reported.

The complex was deemed uninhabitable, causing 15 people to be displaced, and damage is estimated to be near $500,000, the department said.

Weaver said firefighters always make a “head count” of displaced residents and report it to the local Red Cross in order to find them temporary housing.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation. Weaver said it could take days or weeks to make a final determination.

A resident of the complex posted on social media that the fire began with an electric vehicle in the carport.

“I can see that section of carport from my patio,” the resident said. “I was awake and had my slider open so I heard it when the flames started. I ran outside with my phone and called 911 and it was just that car on fire at that time. Then it quickly spread! Such a sad night for our neighbors!”

The resident added that “firemen spent a large portion of their visit focused on that car after flames were extinguished as well.”

Weaver confirmed one of the vehicles that burned was electric, but whether it was the cause of the fire was “hard to say because of the smoke and fire damage. … All the area was well involved when we arrived.”

Rancho Adobe Fire District, Sonoma Valley Fire Department and North Bay Fire District personnel also responded to the blaze.

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