NYC building space heater malfunction sparks fire that kills 19,
including 9 children
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[January 10, 2022]
By Maria Caspani
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Nineteen people were
killed, including nine children, and dozens were injured when a fire
started by a malfunctioning space heater spread smoke through a
low-income building in The Bronx borough of New York City on Sunday,
city officials said.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams, just over a week into the job, confirmed
19 people had died from the blaze that broke out around 11 a.m. in the
imposing 19-floor Twin Parks North West building which provided
affordable housing units and was home to a Gambian community.
Earlier on Sunday, officials said 32 people had been hospitalized with
life-threatening injuries and some 60 people were injured in total as
smoke drifted through the building on a cold winter morning.
"This is a horrific, horrific, painful moment for the city of New York,"
Adams told reporters. "The numbers are horrific."
The fire itself started from a space heater in an apartment that spanned
the second and third floors of the building, and only made it to the
hall, officials said.
But smoke still spread to every floor of the 120-unit building, likely
because the door to the apartment was left open, the city's fire
department commissioner Daniel Nigro told reporters at a news briefing.
"Members found victims on every floor in stairwells and were taking them
out in cardiac and respiratory arrest," Nigro said.
Fire marshals had determined through physical evidence and accounts from
residents the fire started in a portable electric heater in the
apartment's bedroom, Nigro said. He added the heat had been on in the
apartment building and the portable heater had been supplementing that
heating.
The catastrophe was likely to stir questions on safety standards in
low-income city housing. This was the second major deadly fire in a
residential complex in the U.S. this week after twelve people, including
eight children, were killed https://www.reuters.com/world/us/least-13-killed-philadelphia-house-fire-local-media-report-2022-01-05
early on Wednesday when flames swept through a public housing apartment
building in Philadelphia.
U.S. Representative Ritchie Torres, a Democrat whose district includes
the New York building, told MSNBC that affordable housing developments
such as the Bronx one pose safety risks to residents. "When we allow our
affordable housing developments to be plagued by decades of
disinvestment, we are putting lives at risk," he said.
Adams said many of the residents were from the small west African
country of Gambia. The Gambian consulate in New York did not immediately
respond to a request for information.
TRAPPED BY SMOKE
The building did not have external fire escapes, and residents were
meant to evacuate through interior stairways, Nigro said. "I think some
of them could not escape because of the volume of smoke," he said.
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Emergency personnel from the FDNY provide medical aid as they
respond to an apartment building fire in the Bronx borough of New
York City, U.S., January 9, 2022. REUTERS/Lloyd Mitchell
Some 200 firefighters helped put out
the blaze, and some ran out of oxygen in their tanks but pushed
through anyway to rescue people from the building, Adams said.
"I really want to thank them for putting their lives on the line to
save lives," Adams said.
A Reuters photographer at the scene on Sunday saw emergency
responders performing CPR on at least eight people in front of the
building. Firefighters with hose lines were working to push smoke
out of the building, and one of them was seen breaking a window on
an upper floor to release the fumes.
A NYC emergency management official said everyone who needed housing
would be registered and would be placed in hotels for an "extended
period" until it was safe to return to the building.
Inside a school acting as an emergency shelter, displaced residents
sat at tables, dressed in thick coats and with a few belongings
huddled around them. Many of the women wore hijabs and several
people were on the phone, including one masked woman wrapped in a
Red Cross blanket.
A distraught Gambian woman exiting the shelter in heavy rain told
Reuters her sister-in-law and her child were missing in the fire.
OWNERSHIP
The building is owned by a joint venture, Bronx Park Phase III
Preservation LLC, made up of three firms: LIHC Investment Group,
Belveron Partners and Camber Property Group.
The building was constructed in 1972 as part of a state program to
provide affordable housing, a spokesperson for the joint venture
said. All 120 units are covered by subsidy programs, the
spokesperson said.
The fire alarm system appeared to work as designed and the heat was
working, the spokesperson added.
At the Angelo Patri Middle School makeshift shelter on Sunday
evening, Frantz Sannon was rushing in to see his parents, who had
been living on the fourth floor of the building for years.
Sannon, 45, said his parents must have left their phones in the
apartment because he was not able to reach them after learning about
the fire.
"I can't wait to get to speak to them right now," he said before
entering the school.
(Reporting by Maria Caspani, Gabriella Borter, Eric Beech, Michael
Martina, Alexandra Ulmer, Doina Chiacu, Katharine Jackson, and Lloyd
MitchellWriting by Gabriella Borter and Alexandra UlmerEditing by
Chris Reese, Diane Craft and Michael Perry)
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