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Pontiac, Michigan: Immigrant mother and five children perish
in house fire
By Elisa Brehm
9 August 2003
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An immigrant family from Mexico perished in a house fire in
Pontiac, Michigan, a small industrial city 30 miles north of Detroit.
A mother, in her seventh month of pregnancy, and her five young
children died in a fire that swept their rented home the night
of July 29. It appears the cause was an overheated extension power
strip connected to an air conditioner, which caught on fire and
ignited a carpet and a couch. Fumes from the couchs foam
cushions and superheated toxic gases, which rose to 800 degrees
Fahrenheit, killed everyone in the house.

The victims were the mother, Guilllermina Valiente Carrasco
26; Grecia, 7; twins Eduardo and Francisco, 4; Veronica, 2; and
Selena, 1. The father, Francisco Valiente, 26, was the only survivor.
According to a next-door neighbor, the father left shortly before
the fire to help a friend repair his car; when he returned home
he found his entire family had perished.
Francisco and Guillermina left their home in Puebla, Mexico,
when they were only 16 years old, searching for a better life
in the United States. They lived in Texas and California before
coming to Michigan three years ago. The family stayed with relatives
in Pontiac until they found their own place to rent, the brick
home on Perry Street. Three months later, the house fire claimed
six of their lives.
While the immediate cause of the tragedy points to faulty electrical
wiring, the fundamental cause can be traced to the conditions
of life of the family, who entered into a web of relations and
circumstances that caught them fatally unaware.
Several months before the fire, city inspectors found numerous
violations in the house. There was not a single smoke detector
in the three-bedroom, two-story home the family rented nearly
three months ago for $600 a month. Fire officials believe that,
had the family been alerted to the fire, they may have been saved.
Fire officials are pursuing criminal negligence charges against
the landlord, Bobby Dansby, who reportedly owns another 50 properties
in Pontiac. An inspection May 2 by the citys Community Development
Department cited Dansby for a number of code violations, including
the lack of smoke detectors. Dansby was warned at that time that
smoke detectors had to be installed before the house could be
occupied. All floors and bedrooms must have a working smoke
detector, the notice read.
The City of Pontiac Community Development Department, Building
and Safety Engineering Division inspectors report noted
these additional violations:
* Sewer backing up in the basement
* Exposed wiring in a basement wall
* Steps need a handrail
* Windows wont stay open
* Missing caulk around a toilet and tub
* Repair all wood on windowsills
The report also noted the following: Warning: Damage
or injuring resulting from delay or failure to comply with this
notice will be attributed to negligence on the part of the responsible
party or parties.
The certificate of occupancy was not issued, and Dansby was
given until October 1 to make corrections or face possible court
action. Dansby had made not a single repair, however, when the
Valiente Carasco family moved in. Pontiac fire chief Wilburt McAdams
said that no one should have been living inside the home until
the corrections were made.
The story of the family is not unlike those of hundreds of
thousands of immigrants who come to the United States hoping to
improve their lot, but soon come face to face with hardships of
economic and social inequality. Last summer in Pontiac, nearly
100 immigrant workers were found living in unsafe housing owned
by landscaper Torre and Bruglio. Two immigrant workers tipped
off city inspectors, who later found numerous code violations.
As many as 25 people were crowded into a single-family, one-bathroom
home, sleeping on the floor. Torre and Bruglio deducted $30.00
a week for rent from the workers meager $7.54-an-hour paychecks
to stay in the squalid accommodations.
Insecurity, fear and lack of knowledge of their rights make
immigrant workers extremely vulnerable to abuse, as well as reluctant
to protest their conditions. For example, the workers who exposed
the situation at Torre and Bruglio were threatened with deportation
back to Mexico.
The Oakland Press has reported that the Immigration
Naturalization Service (INS) is not pursuing charges at this time
against Francisco Valiente, who is an undocumented immigrant.
The World Socialist Web Site spoke to neighborhood residents
following the fire. According to next-door neighbor Rudy Valez,
They were good people. They loved their children. I never
heard any arguments. Francisco was a hard worker. He fixed houses,
he knows how to lay brick. He worked very hard, long hours, sometimes
10 to 12 hours a day. Both the mother and the father were very
attentive and loving toward their children.
You cant give a landlord six months to bring a
house up to code. They should have inspectors to check these houses.
If the city is good enough to collect our taxes, they should be
good enough to have inspectors go house to house. She did not
have a chance. She died with the youngest in her arms. How many
people will die unnecessarily next time because the city is lax?
The tragedy has struck a deep chord in the community. More
than 350 people, the majority of whom did not personally know
the family, attended the funeral service. Upon learning of the
tragic fire, the childrens grandmothers traveled to Pontiac
from Puebla, Mexico on temporary visas but were denied permission
by the authorities to stay through to the funeral, just six days
after the fire.
A neighbor who lived on the same block as the family told the
WSWS, The landlords have no conscience. They suck the economic
value out of a house and walk away. They prey on people who do
not know their rights, who have no credit history, who cannot
afford to buy, but are forced to rent. They may slap some paint
on the house, but nothing substantial is changed.
Sometimes this housing becomes the housing of last resort.
The landlords do not think twice about putting small children
in an unsafe house. There are so many houses like this. There
are cases where five to six people are crowded into each room,
so the next tragedy might kill 20 people. Certain landlords should
be hung out to dry for this. What happened here can happen again.
Nearly half of Pontiac residents live in renter-occupied housing
units. According to the 2000 Census, 47.2 percent of Pontiacs
population rent apartments or houses, double the average of Oakland
County cities. The city has only seven inspectors to examine thousands
of units. Much of the housing is now in a state of disrepair,
and with Housing and Urban Development (HUD) funds cut by 14 percent,
there is little prospect of meeting the most elementary needs.
Pontiac was once vibrant and prosperous, like many industrial
cities in the US after the Second World War. General Motors
Pontiac car division dominated the city, but is now only a skeleton
of its former self. During the past 15 years, GM has eliminated
almost 13,000 jobs in Pontiac, closing three of the five plants
it had operated. The poverty rate in the city is staggering, with
43 percent of the 66,337 residentsor 4 of 10living
below the governments official poverty line of $17,400 for
a family of four. In the downtown area, conditions are even worse,
with more than 64 percent living below poverty level.
In an ironic twist, the house where Guilllermina Valiente Carrasco
and her children met their deaths is in a registered historic
district. General Motors built the neighborhood of 261 modest
homes in 1919, when the city was experiencing a severe housing
shortage that threatened factory expansion. GM offered incentives
to the workers to purchase the new homes, including limiting the
price of the new homes to $3,500-$5,500 and limiting down payments
to 5 percent. Other incentives included housing credits of up
to $800 if an employee remained in service to GM for at least
five years.
See Also:
Michigan migrant workers
face deportation after exposing abusive conditions
[14 August 2002]
Pontiac, Michigan
police raid homeless shelter
[30 January 2001]
More victims of US
immigration policy: 14 Mexicans die in Arizona Desert
[28 May 2001]
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