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WSWS : News
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America
US: Nine firefighters perish in warehouse fire in Charleston,
South Carolina
By Kate Randall
21 June 2007
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Charleston, South Carolina is mourning the deaths of nine firefighters
who perished battling a blaze that raged through a furniture store
and warehouse Monday night. Just before dawn Tuesday, the last
of the firefighters bodies was carried from the wreckage
as the ruins of the building continued to smolder.
Excluding the September 11 attack at the World Trade Center,
which claimed the lives of 343 firefighters and paramedics, the
tragedy at the Sofa Super Store warehouse and showroom was the
nations deadliest episode for firefighters in three decades.
The fallen firefighters ranged in age from 27 to 56, and had
131 years of experience between them. Killed were James Earl
Drayton, 56, with 32 years; Michael French, 27, on the job only
18 months; 30-year veteran Capt. Bill Hutchinson, 48, who worked
off-duty at a barber shop; Brad Baity, 37, a part-time house painter;
Capt. Louis Mulkey, 34, also a high school football and basketball
coach; Capt. Mike Benke, 49; Mark Kelsey, 40; Brandon Thompson,
37; and Melvin Champaign, 46, who joined the department just three
years ago.
News of the fatalities hit the Charleston community hard. With
a population of 106,000, the city has 237 surviving firefighters
in one of the oldest professional fire departments in the US.
Some firefighters wept outside the scene of the blaze; others
sat despairing on the bumpers of their fire trucks. A steady stream
of area residents drove by, some stopping to leave flowers on
the sidewalk near the site of the fire.
The nine men entered the building in an attempt to rescue employees
who were inside as the inferno quickly spiraled out of control.
They died doing what firefighters do across the country on a daily
basis: risking their lives to save those in danger.
One employee trapped inside was able to escape relatively quickly.
Another, Jonathan Tyrell, a part-time repairman, tried to leave
but could only see smoke. Firefighters punched a hole in the wall
of the burning building and pulled him to safety. Some witnesses
reported seeing firefighters drag a total of four people from
the burning building, covered in black soot.
At first glance, the tragic outcome of Monday nights
fire seems to have been unavoidable considering the scope and
strength of the blaze. It began about 6:30 p.m. at the Sofa Super
Store, a one-story corrugated-metal structure about 5 miles west
of Charlestons historic district.
Witnesses described a scene with plumes of black smoke, flames
shooting up more than 30 feet, and overwhelming fumes of burnt
plastic. Windows popped out of the warehouse one after the other,
shattering below. The front of the store collapsed within an hour
of the warehouse catching fire.
Entering the building, firefighters had to make their way through
rows of sofas and mattresses stacked five and six high. Charleston
fire Capt. Jeff Harrison said that gases inside may have heated
the building and its contents so quickly that it burst into flames,
a condition known as flashover.
Furniture warehouses are particularly vulnerable to such high-intensity
fires, because polyurethane foam, wood lacquer and other highly
flammable materials can reach flashover at relatively low temperatures,
sometimes within minutes. The building also had a drop ceiling,
trapping oxygen to fuel the blaze.
All of these factors seemed to intersect on Monday night, resulting
in a raging fire that claimed nine of those battling to tame it.
But as in other such tragic incidents, as information has begun
to emerge certain details suggest that the magnitude of the tragedy
could have been reduced. And as is so often the case in contemporary
America, these factors are connected to money and politics.
The cause of the fire is under investigation, although arson
is not suspected in this case. The building, however, did not
have a sprinkler system. According to Charleston Fire Chief Rusty
Thomas, sprinklers probably would not have put out the fire, but
would have at least slowed it.
Despite the lack of fire sprinklers, the building had been
up to code when the land it was on was annexed by the city. Michael
Parrotta, president of the South Carolina Professional Firefighters
Association, told the New York Times that the state legislature
killed a bill two years ago that would have required older buildings
to install sprinkler systems. The only explanation for such a
vote is that legislators were pressured by businesses not to enact
the regulation.
Parrotta also said that firefighters in South Carolina do not
operate under federal recommendations which advise that for every
two firefighters involved in rapid-intervention missions, another
two should remain outside the burning structure. He said the state
followed a two-in, one-out rule as opposed to the
two-in, two-out guideline.
Under the US federal system, regulations governing fire safety
are predominantly the responsibility of state and local authorities,
and they can vary widely. This results in an inadequate and underfunded
approach to the prevention and fighting of fires, both industrial
and residential, and a subsequent increase in unnecessary and
preventable fatalities among both firefighters and fire victims.
Abandoned warehouses are prime targets for fires. Just two
days after the fatal blaze in Charleston, a fire swept through
an abandoned textile warehouse in Philadelphia early Wednesday
morning, collapsing the roof and forcing about 100 residents to
evacuate nearby homes. Firefighters rescued a man from the second
floor of the building and was taken to the hospital. One firefighter
was taken to a hospital in stable condition.
Deaths from fires and burns are the fifth most common cause
of unintentional injury death in the United States and are the
third leading cause of home injury fatalities. According to the
Centers for Disease Control (CDC), someone died in a fire about
every two hours in the US in 2005. In that same year, fire departments
responded to 396,000 home fires in the United States, claiming
3,030 people, excluding firefighters.
Growing poverty and the deteriorating infrastructure in the
USreflected particularly in blighted urban districts and
rural areascompound the dangers. Most at risk are children
under the age of four, adults over 65, African Americans and Native
Americans, residents of rural areas, and the poor. Fires are often
started by candles or space heaters when utilities have been cut
off because poor families cannot pay the bills.
House fires engulfing century-old wood-frame homes claiming
the lives of parents and young children are a regular feature
of local news broadcasts. Most recently, on June 12, a fire killed
five children, ages three to seven, in a poverty-stricken neighborhood
in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In one week in May, fatal house fires
claimed a total of 16 lives, including 13 children, in three homes
in Baltimore, Maryland, and Detroit and Saginaw in Michigan.
Building collapses remain one of the biggest dangers facing
firefighters, according to experts. Despite many departments providing
firefighters with improved fire-retardant clothing and breathing
equipment, a 2002 report by the National Fire Protection Association
found that firefighters entering burning buildings are dying at
higher rates than ever. While in the 1970s, traumatic deaths inside
structures occurred at a rate of 1.8 deaths per 100,000 fires,
by the late 1990s the rate had increased to 3 deaths from 100,000
fires.
The studys authors asked, Are firefighters putting
themselves as greater risk while operating at fires inside structures?
Do firefighters think modern protective equipment provides a higher
level of protection but do not realize the limitations of that
equipment or are ignoring those limitations?
The answer to the first question seems clearly to be Yes.
Firefighters are known for their compassion and dedication to
saving lives, even when their own are in great danger.
Aside from the catastrophic deaths of firefighters in the 9/11
attack, the most recent multiple-fatality tragedy occurred on
December 3, 1999, when six firefighters died in a blaze at the
Worcester Cold Storage and Warehouse Co. in Worcester, Massachusetts
as they attempted to rescue homeless people from the burning building.
The Worcester firefighters plan to send a contingent to a memorial
service scheduled to be held for the fallen firefighters in Charleston.
The commemoration for the firefighters will undoubtedly be
addressed by politicians who will extol the virtues of the men
and praise their service for going the extra mile. At a time of
growing popular opposition to government policy, particularly
the war in Iraq, Democrats and Republicans alike are quick to
exploit such tragedies, celebrating their self-sacrifice and human
decency to divert attention from the vast social problems confronting
millions of people.
However, while they are called heroes at such ceremonies, these
accolades find little expression in the compensation paid to the
vast majority of working firefighters in the US. Median hourly
earnings for firefighters as of May 2004 stood at just $18.43
an hour, with the lowest 10 percent earning less than $9.71 an
hour. The highest rate was $29.21.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the mean hourly
wage of firefighters in Charleston is only $10.83 an hour, with
annual earnings of just $29,837. An estimated 70 percent of firefighters
in the US are volunteers or part-time workers, receiving minimal
or no pay.
See Also:
Deadly fire kills five children in Pittsburgh
home
[16 June 2007]
Mother, three children perish
in Detroit house fire
[22 May 2007]
New York City fire tragedy
kills eight children, one adult
[9 March 2007]
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