Category: FireGrounds

  • NYC Teen Leaps to Death During Apartment Fire

    NYC Teen Leaps to Death During Apartment Fire

    The distressed 18 year old ran away from responding FDNY firefighters and leaped to his death from atop a 10-story East Harlem apartment building.

    Sept. 19, 2021 – By Elizabeth Keogh – Source New York Daily News

    A Manhattan teen died Saturday when he jumped from the roof of his apartment building as firefighters fought a kitchen blaze in his 10th-floor apartment, witnesses and authorities said.

    Firefighters responded at 4:23 p.m. to 440 E. 105th St., a New York City Housing Authority building in East Harlem.

    When firefighters arrived at the 10th floor apartment, Jamel Martinez, 18, fled, said police sources.

    Martinez’s family was not home at the time, said the sources. Witnesses said Martinez jumped from the building’s roof.

    “He was a sweet kid. Respectable, decent, loving and caring. Just a beautiful kid,” said a 10th-floor neighbor. She added that Martinez had recently graduated from high school.

    The neighbor said she and her daughter were napping in their home when the fire broke out.

    “All of a sudden, we couldn’t see,” the neighbor said. “There was smoke everywhere.”

    Firefighters banged on her door and told her and her daughter to stay put, the woman said.

    But when they were able, they got out.

    “We got up and we ran because the apartment was filling up with smoke,” she said. “We couldn’t breathe. We just ran.”

    Twenty Fire Department units and 80 firefighters responded to the scene, officials said.

    ©2021 New York Daily News. Visit nydailynews.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • Firefighters Battle Dallas Apartment Complex Fire

    Firefighters Battle Dallas Apartment Complex Fire

    Firefighters responded early Thursday morning as a large fire swept through a Far East Dallas apartment complex, leaving 23 families homeless.

    September 16, 2021 – By Catherine Marfin – Source Dallas Morning News

    The American Red Cross has been called to help the residents of about two dozen apartments that were damaged early Thursday by a large fire at a Far East Dallas complex.

    Dallas Fire-Rescue responded to the fire just before 1 a.m. at 11050 Woodmeadow Parkway, near Ferguson Road and Interstate 635.

    The three-story apartment complex had heavy flames coming through its roof when firefighters arrived. The blaze was “well advanced,” but first repsonders were able to cut it off by attacking it through a breezeway in front of the flames, Fire-Rescue spokesman Jason Evans said.

    Of the 24 apartments in the building, 12 sustained damage. The rest were uninhabitable because of water and smoke, Evans said. One of the units in the building was not occupied.

    One resident was taken to a hospital with burns that were not believed to be life-threatening. He was hurt while he was trying to escape the building, Evans said. No other injuries were reported.

    Dallas Fire-Rescue investigators think the fire began in a third-floor apartment but don’t know yet the exact cause.

    Firefighters were headed back into the building  around 9 a.m. to clear debris and put out embers they feared could reignite the fire, a spokesman said at the scene.

    Fire alarms were still whirling as residents, who had yet to be placed in temporary housing, watched from the complex’s parking lot.

    Jelisa Richards, 32, who lives in the building next door, described the fire as “devastating.” She was at work when the fire started, but came home after her 13-year-old son called her and said the building was being evacuated.

    Her son was asleep in their car this morning, and the family wasn’t allowed back into the building because of safety concerns.

    Wesley Gaddison’s second-floor apartment was near the heart of the fire.

    Gaddison, 34, said he was waiting to be told where to go and whether or not he could grab things from his apartment. A spokesman on the scene said the fire department advised it was not safe for residents for go back into the building.

    The apartment manager said the complex was waiting on an official report as to what caused the fire, and residents would be moved into vacant housing at a sister property across the highway.

    Krystle Kennison, 36, was comforting friends at the scene. Kennison lives in a nearby building unaffected by the fire.

    ”I didn’t think anything of it,” she recalled thinking after waking up to alarms and sirens. “But then I woke up to this mess.”

    Others who lived in the complex said their apartments were flooded by fire hoses, and some cars sustained damage from debris.

    ©2021 The Dallas Morning News. Visit dallasnews.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • Dozens of Animals Killed in FL Pet Shelter Blaze

    Dozens of Animals Killed in FL Pet Shelter Blaze

    The director of the Pet Alliance of Greater Orlando called it his “worst nightmare” after a fire tore through the building and killed between 20 and 30 cats.

    September 16, 2021 – By Lisa Maria Garza – Source Orlando Sentinel

    An estimated 20 to 30 cats were killed in a fire at the Pet Alliance of Greater Orlando late Wednesday in what the shelter’s executive director called his “worst nightmare.”

    The blaze, reported to Orange County Fire Rescue at 10:21 p.m., heavily damaged the 5,000-square-foot building, located at 2727 Conroy Road near the Mall at Millenia. “Flames [were] through the roof” of the shelter, the agency said on Twitter.

    Steve Bardy, executive director of the nonprofit organization, said rescuers arrived in time to safely evacuate all 25 dogs, who were in an area farther from the origin of the fire.

    “It appears the fire started in the front building by the clinic, which made it more difficult for fire rescue to go into the adjacent cat room,” Bardy told reporters on the scene, his voice breaking at times.

    “If you run a shelter, this is literally your worst nightmare — to see your building on fire and know that there are animals in there that you’re charged to care for and you can’t go in,” he said.

    The blaze heavily damaged at least half of the building, which sits across a parking lot from Orange County Animal Services. The cause of the fire was not immediately known. No humans were reported injured.

    The Pet Alliance has a second shelter in Sanford, where the dogs and five to 10 surviving cats were being transferred. Another 150 animals in the agency’s care — including the youngest kittens — currently live in foster homes, which kept the death toll from being higher.

    According to a report by WFTV, about 19 cats have been rescued.

    Bardy said he didn’t have an exact number of cats in the shelter at the time but that it may have been as many as 35. Ten were rescued, but some of them may not survive, he said.

    He praised a quick response from Orange County firefighters and the Orange County Sheriff’s Office, which helped with evacuations.

    “I’m grateful that the firefighters have, you know, put their lives at risk to … help save as many as they could,” he said. “I’m eternally grateful for that.”

    ©2021 Orlando Sentinel. Visit orlandosentinel.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • Four Injured in MD Senior Living Facility Fire

    Four Injured in MD Senior Living Facility Fire

    A fire in a fourth floor apartment at an Edgemere senior living apartment building injured four residents, including one who is in critical condition.

    September 15, 2021 – By Rose Wagner – Source Baltimore Sun

    A fire in a fourth floor apartment of a senior living apartment in Edgemere Wednesday morning injured four residents, including the occupant of the apartment who is in critical condition, according to Baltimore County Fire Department spokesman Tim Rostkowski.

    The Baltimore County Fire Department got a call from a resident around 10:30 a.m., notifying them of a fire in their apartment at St. Luke’s Place, a Catholic Charities Senior Community, in the 2800 block of Lodge Farm Road, according Rostkowski.

    The fire was contained to one apartment and sprinklers in the building controlled the fire, which was extinguished by 11 a.m.

    The occupant of the apartment is in critical condition from burns and smoke inhalation. Three other people who lived on the fourth floor suffered non-life-threatening injuries, according to Rostkowski.

    Approximately a hundred building residents have been temporarily displaced due to water damage. Some residents will not be able to move back into their homes today and the Red Cross and Catholic Charities are working to find temporary housing for these residents, Rostkowski said.

    Rostkowski said he did not believe the fire was a kitchen fire, but the cause is not yet known.

    ©2021 Baltimore Sun. Visit baltimoresun.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • Car Slams into Vacant PA Home, Sparks Fire

    Car Slams into Vacant PA Home, Sparks Fire

    The driver was taken to a hospital after crashing into the vacant Allentown home Monday, causing serious structural damage and sparking a fire.

    September 14, 2021 – By Tony Rhodin – Source The Express-Times

    A driver was taken to an area hospital after crashing a car into a vacant house about 9 p.m. Monday at South Albert Street and East Emmaus Avenue in Allentown, a city fire department official said.

    The driver’s medical condition wasn’t available early Tuesday.

    The Honda Civic with New York plates went onto the front porch and through the front door, causing a fire and serious structural damage, Capt. John Christopher said. Utilities were cut by responding firefighters and they quickly knocked down the fire in the living room area, Christopher said. Both the car and the house were burning at one point, he added.

    The speed of the effort was fortunate because the firefighters had to leave the building after the home’s structural integrity was called into question, Christopher said. City codes personnel placarded the house as not suitable to be lived in, Christopher said.

    No first responders were hurt, Christopher said. The driver was able to get out of the car and was taken to a hospital by city EMS personnel, Christopher added.

    The home was empty because renovations were underway and the residents were living elsewhere, Christopher said.

    A city fire marshal and police are investigating.

    ©2021 Advance Local Media LLC. Visit lehighvalleylive.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • Three Children among Five Dead in OH Fire

    Three Children among Five Dead in OH Fire

    Five people were killed, including three children, and four others were hospitalized with injuries in a fire that destroyed an Akron home early Monday.

    September 13, 2021 – By Sean McDonnell – Source Akron Beacon Journal

    Five people — including two adults and three children — were killed in a house fire early Monday morning in Akron. Four others were taken to the hospital.

    Akron firefighters responded to the blaze at about 12:50 a.m. Monday morning in the 1100 block of Linden Avenue in the city’s North Hill neighborhood.

    Akron Fire Lt. Sierjie Lash said the home was engulfed in flames when firefighters arrived.

    Three adults and a child also were taken to the hospital with injuries, and a neighbor who tried to help was treated at the scene, Lash said.

    The Summit County Medical Examiner’s Office confirmed that two adults and three children died in the blaze. Investigators were still working to confirm their identities Monday morning.

    5 dead, 4 injured in Akron house fire. Neighbor & family members outside trying to get to the victims when fire crews arrived. pic.twitter.com/4j9B9xYyEm— staceyfreyfox8 (@staceyfreyfox8) September 13, 2021

    Akron Public Schools spokesperson Mark Williamson told Beacon Journal partner News 5 Cleveland the children killed in the fire were students at Leggett elementary school, Jennings middle school and North High School.

    Lash said neighbors believed the victims were all related to each other. She said firefighters were still investigating the cause of the fire, and the home is a total loss.

    Cleveland television station Fox 8 (WJW) reported that emergency crews arrived to find relatives and neighbors trying to get people out of the burning house.

    A neighbor told News 5 Cleveland she heard screaming and called 911.

    “My bedroom window was open and I heard screaming and I looked out the window and saw the flames and I ran in the living room and dialed 911…yelled at my kids to get out of the house,” Jean Hudson, the neighbor, told News 5.

    Lash said this is Akron’s deadliest house fire since May 2017 on Fultz Avenue, when a mother, father and five children died in what was later ruled an arson. Stanley Ford is currently standing trial in that case and is accused of starting that and another fatal house fire.

    This is a developing story and will be updated as details become available.

    ©2021 www.beaconjournal.com. Visit beaconjournal.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

  • WA Firefighters Battle Second-Alarm Church Fire

    WA Firefighters Battle Second-Alarm Church Fire

    Bellingham firefighters confronted heavy flames upon arrival before striking a second alarm to battle a fire at a church in the Sunnyland neighborhood.

    September 10, 2021

    Sep. 10—The Bellingham Fire Department battled a two-alarm blaze at a church early Friday on Cornwall Avenue in the Sunnyland neighborhood.

    Crews were called to the 2500 block of Cornwall Avenue at 4:25 a.m. for a commercial fire, according to the PulsePoint app.

    “First arriving crews found heavy fire with fire through the roof,” a Bellingham Fire Department tweet at 5:15 a.m. read.

    An earlier tweet said traffic in the area was impacted and asked people to avoid the area.

    A follow up tweet at 5:39 a.m. said that there were no injuries and investigators were on the scene.

    “Crews have a good knockdown,” the tweet read.

  • IN Firefighters Battle Massive Railroad Tie Blaze

    IN Firefighters Battle Massive Railroad Tie Blaze

    Smoke could be seen for miles after a stack of about 200 railroad ties went up in flames alongside a train track Thursday night in Chesterton.

    September 08, 2021 – By Anna Ortiz – For The Times, Munster, Ind./TNS

    Sep. 10—CHESTERTON, IN — Firefighters battled a massive blaze next to railroad tracks Thursday evening.

    At 5:10 p.m. crews were called to a fire south of Waskom Park, off of Michael Drive, next to train tracks, said Chesterton spokesman Kevin Nevers.

    Smoke from the blaze could be seen from Ind. 49 and the Chesterton Town Hall at 726 Broadway, eyewitnesses said.

    Officials have not yet disclosed whether the cause of the fire has been determined. No further information was immediately available.

    A stack of about 200 railroad ties were on fire, officials reported.

    (c)2021 The Times (Munster, Ind.)

    Visit The Times (Munster, Ind.) at www.nwitimes.com

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