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WSWS : News
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US: Chicago fire kills six children
By Tom Mackaman
5 September 2006
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Early Sunday morning a third-floor apartment on Chicagos
North Side caught fire, killing six children ranging in age from
3 to 14 years. Two more children remain in critical condition.
The fire was started by a candle, according to the Chicago
Fire Department, and quickly spread throughout the three-bedroom
apartment. The family of Amado Ramirez and Augusta Tellez had
been without electricity since May and had been using candles
for light. Officials have not indicated why the electricity had
been turned off, however, it is common for working families to
lose their heat and electricity service if they are unable to
pay their bills.
The children killed were Vanessa, Eric, Suzette, Idaly, and
Kevin Ramirez, ages 14, 12, 10, 6, 3; and Escarlet Ramos, age
3. Escarlet Ramos had been staying over at the home of the Ramirez
family the night of the fire.
Ten children plus two adults were living in the crowded apartment.
The father and eldest daughter, aged 17, were gone at the time.
The mother of five of the children, Augusta Tellez, was treated
for injuries along with three other children. Tellez saved her
three-month old baby, and neighbors saved one child. Further rescue
efforts were blocked by flame and smoke, and by a locked door
that could not be broken down. Later, firefighters rescued one
more child.
As the fire raged, children were heard screaming in the apartment.
The childrens bodies were later discovered huddled together
in one room. Autopsies indicate that most died of smoke inhalation.
The Ramirez family is a working class family. Both Ramirez
and Tellez were employed in a Chicago-area laundry. Initially
from Mexico, they entered the US without documentation some 15
years ago and have lived in Chicago since. Some of the children
took odd jobs to add to the family income. By all accounts, Amado
Ramirez and Augusta Tellez were dedicated parents.
One neighbor, Liz Stutler, who also tutored the children, said
that the children studied at night by candlelight.
A 4th-grade teacher at the grade school the children attended,
Stephen Brown, described the difficulties the family confronted,
The mother was very hard working. She had to face a life
of economic hardship, but she really did put the kids first in
every way.... Its too sad, thats all. How is it possible
that they dont have electricity? I dont understand.
A neighbor, Jasmin Lamb, said, The community is in shock.
They were a nice, warm family. My friend never got into any trouble.
Early press accounts in both the Chicago Tribune and
the Sun-Times have focused on the fact that no working
fire alarms were found in the building by Chicago firefighters.
Landlords are required by law to ensure that every apartment has
a fire alarm in it.
The building is owned by a wealthy Chicago developer, Jay Johnson,
who is proprietor of a number of apartment units in the area.
He has contributed to the electoral campaigns of Democratic Party
Alderman Joe Moore, and Moore in turn has appointed Johnson to
the local planning and zoning commission. Johnson rejected responsibility,
and has claimed that functioning smoke alarms were in place when
the Ramirez family moved in and that it is the responsibility
of the tenant to inform the landlord if the alarms malfunction
or are missing.
Moore, who also sits on the Executive Committee of the Democratic
National Committee, expressed regret after the incident that the
family had not approached him for help with their power bill.
This is the typical response of a machine politician, who considers
it his role to allocate scarce goods not as a right, but as a
favor. It is also disingenuous. Moore knows full well
that tens of thousands of Chicago residents go regularly without
electricityeven in the winter.
Chicago Fire Commission Raymond Orozco also pinned responsibility
on the victims, If the batteries went out in someones
remote control, how long would that last? But they wont
spend a dollar on a 9-volt battery.
Yet the landlord, Johnson, has said that the smoke alarms in
his apartment building were hard-wired directly to the main electrical
system. If so, it is possible that when the Ramirez familys
power was shut off, this simultaneously shut down their smoke
alarms. The Sun Times has pointed to this possibility,
but as of yet neither the landlord, nor the fire department, nor
the power company has explained whether or not the decision to
cut off power to the Ramirez family also cut off their smoke alarms.
Johnson told the Sun-Times he was investigating the matter.
The Chicago Tribune offered the most callous interpretation
of the disaster. It opened its lead article on the disaster by
pinning blame squarely on the family itself, stating, Using
candles for light ...was a dangerous decision that proved to be
deadly early Sunday. The Tribune does not ask why
a family with two working adults should be without power in the
first place.
ComEd, the power company responsible for suspending the electricity
to the Ramirez family, has so far refused to comment. ComEd is
a unit of Exelon, one of the nations largest privately owned
utilities, which claims annual revenues of more than $15 billion
dollars. In the second fiscal quarter for 2006the same period
in which the Ramirez family went without powerComEd boasted
$644 million in profit.
The utilities giant, together with Ameren, which monopolizes
power distribution in downstate Illinois, has promised a rapid
increase in residential rates in the coming years. ComEd has suggested
it will increase rates by of 8, 7, and 6 percent per year through
2009. This will inflict a serious hardship on millions of already
overburdened Illinois families.
For its part, Ameren has proposed that residential rates will
increase by as much as 30 percent in one year. Politicians from
both the Democratic and Republican parties have authorized this
changeending years of state regulation on energy prices
at the behest of ComEd and Ameren, which stand to reap windfall
profits in the coming years.
Joe Parnarauskis, the Socialist Equality Party candidate for
state Senate in Illinois 52nd District, released a statement
on Monday addressing the disaster:
The fire that killed six young Chicagoans is an enormous
tragedy that demonstrates the barbarity of the capitalist system.
Workers everywhere should be outraged, as these deaths were not
merely a tragic accident. They were the easily avoidable result
of an economic and political system, which puts the profit imperatives
of enormous corporations above the most basic needs of working
people.
Even though both parents and a number of children in
the Ramirez family worked, they apparently could not afford to
pay their electricity bills. They were then compelled to illuminate
their house with candles, one of which caught the apartment on
fire while the family slept.
This tragedy highlights the social crisis facing millions
of working people in Illinois and throughout the United States,
who are facing rising costs and stagnating wages. On a daily basis,
people are forced to struggle to meet the costs of basic necessitiesfood,
electricity, housing, and health care. At the same time, a small
layer of the population continues to amass huge fortunes.
Alone among all the campaigns in 2006, the Socialist
Equality Party campaign calls for the nationalization and placing
under the democratic control of the working people all major utilities.
Electricity in homes should be a basic human right, and no longer
subject to the merciless pressures of the profit system.
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