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"WHAT WE KNOW
At least 13 people, including seven children, were killed in a fire Wednesday morning in a house in Philadelphia’s Fairmount section, authorities said.
The rowhouse is located on the 800 block of North 23rd Street, and is owned by the Philadelphia Housing Authority.
At least 26 people were living in the three-story rowhouse, according to Deputy Fire Commissioner Craig Murphy."
Where to donate to help victims of the Fairmount fire
It is still early, but there is at least one way to help, whether you are in Philadelphia or not.
Children First, a Philadelphia-based child advocacy nonprofit, has launched a fundraiser to help those affected, and is “reaching out to the community to find ways” to help. Formerly known as Public Citizens for Children and Youth, the group adds that all donations will go to the family and community affected by the fire.
It is likely that more fundraisers and ways to help will be announced in the coming days.
Fire officials say it’s still unclear how the blaze moved so quickly
Philadelphia fire officials said it’s unclear how a house fire killed 13 people in a short period of time, saying that firefighters rescued people swiftly once they arrived on scene.
Deputy fire commissioner Craig Murphy said during a news conference that just past 6:30 a.m., firefighters arrived at 869 N. 23rd St. and found that eight people had evacuated. Two others were rescued by first responders and taken to area hospitals.
Murphy denied the suggestion that authorities were slow to respond, and said “they got people out very quickly.”
He said the “heavy fire” engulfed the kitchen area of the second-floor apartment and ran up an open stairwell to the third floor.
“The only thing that was slowing that fire down from moving was,” he paused, “nothing was slowing that fire down.”
A catastrophic fire tore through a rowhouse in Philadelphia’s Fairmount neighborhood before sunrise Wednesday and killed 12 people, including eight children, in one of the nation’s deadliest residential fires in decades.
Authorities did not identify the victims, but relatives and friends said they included two mothers and their children, some who attended a nearby elementary school and one possibly as young as 2. Together, they occupied the top unit of a three-story brick home in which at least four smoke detectors weren’t working.
Investigators couldn’t say what sparked the 6:30 a.m. blaze or why it became so deadly so swiftly. Federal agents were expected to join Philadelphia fire marshals in what is likely to be a complex and lengthy probe.
Authorities did not identify the victims, but relatives and friends said they included two mothers and their children, some who attended a nearby elementary school and one possibly as young as 2. Together, they occupied the top unit of a three-story brick home in which at least four smoke detectors weren’t working.
www.inquirer.com...
originally posted by: ketsuko
a reply to: BrokenCircles
There are constant articles in the public housing newsletters not to disable the smoke detectors which suggests it's a constant issue. No way to know if that was the case here.