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Nationally, sprinkler systems are required by local ordinances and building codes in most hotels built or remodeled within the last 10 years, but those laws generally don't apply to older facilities. It's also hard to track where sprinklers are required, partly because sprinkler regulations are often in local ordinances and not state laws. In Alabama, all motel and hotel rooms must have smoke detectors, but sprinkler requirements vary by city. They were not required at the Days Inn in Hoover, where the Mississippi University for Women students checked in for a day of shopping. The four -- 18-year-old cousins Alondan "Angel" Turner and Catherine Ann Muse of Cordova, Ala.; Jamelia Brown, 18, of Grenada, Miss.; and Joslynn McGee, 19, of Corinth, Miss.
-- were staying in a room upstairs and a few doors down from the room where a maintenance worker, Dhirajlal Bhagat, 55, had been burning incense in a makeshift Hindu shrine. The fire began after he left the room. Without sprinklers, there was nothing to slow the fire as it spread up the outside walls. The two-story building had firewalls, but Paulk said those were mostly ineffective since the fire spread on the outside.
The blaze blocked firefighters from reaching the women, who sought shelter in a bathroom. There was a far different outcome on Nov. 8 at a Clarion Suites Hotel in Yuma, Ariz., where an occupant started a fire while using an appliance to heat cups of liquid. After the person left the room, the device overheated, catching the surrounding counter and wallboard on fire, said Yuma fire spokesman Mike Erfert. But a sprinkler head kept the fire from spreading to other rooms. The MGM Grand fire on Nov. 21, 1980, that killed 87 is the second-worst hotel fire in modern U.S. history. It prompted the adoption of strict fire codes in Las Vegas and elsewhere. There has not been a fatal high-rise hotel fire in Las Vegas in at least 15 years, partly because of ordinances adopted by the city following the MGM fire, including one requiring sprinklers in all high-rise hotels, said Tim Szymanski, public information officer for Las Vegas Fire and Rescue. Most times, high-rise hotel fires are confined because of sprinklers by the time firefighters arrive. "They are worth their weight in gold, Szymanski said.
[Associated
Press;
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