Thursday, January 23, 2014

Death toll expected to rise in raging fire at Quebec senior complex

from nbcnews.com



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Dramatic footage of first responders battling a deadly fire that engulfed a senior home in Quebec.
Neighbors of an eastern Quebec senior home watched in horror as a ferocious inferno swallowed the building early Thursday while cries for help from trapped residents could be heard over the roaring blaze.
At least three people were killed and 30 others were still missing after the fire ravaged the 52-unit Residence du Havre in the small community of L'Isle-Verte about 12:30 a.m. ET, officials said. The death toll is expected to increase, as responders have had trouble accessing the structure.
Alphonse Gagnon, 79, and his wife, Yvette Michaud, 73, watched the massive fire burn from their home across the street. They didn't see anyone escape, they told NBC News.
"The fire was so red, it lit up everything. ... I saw all of the tragedy," Michaud said in French. "We spent the whole night watching."
Michaud said authorities set up a white tent at the site, possibly for the dead. She said a number of the residents, most of them older than 75, used wheelchairs or suffered from illnesses, such as Alzheimer's.
"It was frightening," said Michaud, adding that she was shaking as she watched the blaze, thinking about her friends inside. "It's so dreadful."





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A massive fire tore through a nursing home in Quebec on Thursday.
Collette St. Laurent, 77, who lives near the home, said she knew people who lived in the three-story complex.
"It's a village. Everyone knows each other. It's heartbreaking, so heartbreaking," she said.
She hadn't gone by the site but feared for the missing: "They must be in the ashes. ... They couldn't save them," she said.
The acting mayor of the town of 1,500, Ginette Caron, told reporters that most of the residents couldn't get around on their own, according to CTV News.
A Quebec police spokeswoman, Ann Mathieu, said at a televised briefing: "Right now, 30 people are missing. Three are confirmed dead."
"That does not necessarily mean 30 people have lost their lives. It's possible that some were relocated with other people. Some might be away with their families," she said, Reuters reported.
Fire crews battled the blaze in subzero temperatures, with high winds making rescue attempts even more dangerous, Fire Chief Yvan Charron said. Some residents waited on balconies to escape the flames.
"It was a ball of fire ... a total conflagration," Charron told the local newspaper Info Dimanche, describing the scene as a "night from hell."
"These are elderly, some of whom are very limited mobility," Charron added. "Others were afraid and they hid under blankets."
Witnesses described the chaotic blaze as "spreading fast as gunpowder."

Mathieu Belanger / Reuters
Firefighters walk past the Residence du Havre after a fire in L'Isle Verte, Quebec, on Thursday.
Mario Michaud, a longtime resident who lives across from the complex, told NBC News that he awoke just after midnight to go to the bathroom when he saw the fire from one of his windows.
"It burned, it burned. ... It was so engulfed in fire," Michaud, 68, said in French. "Everything is burned."
He said he saw people trapped in the home, including a woman standing on a balcony whose son tried to reach her with a ladder. Michaud went down to the street and heard cries.
The son "climbed up a ladder, but he wasn't able to get her down," Michaud said.
Michaud said the blaze was still burning Thursday morning. "It's less fire but a lot of smoke," he said

Initial reports said 20 residents had been transported to safety, but it was unclear just how many were missing. Mathieu said Thursday authorities were trying to determine the exact number of victims and learn the cause of the blaze.
Most residents were older than 75, and 37 of them were older than 85. The building included single rooms and apartment-style dwellings.
The fire's fury has raised questions about whether the complex, built in 1997, had functioning sprinklers. According to Residence du Havre's website, the building has a fire alarm zone, sprinklers and smoke detectors in every room.
Yves Desjardins, who helped build the residence, told CBC News that only a newer annex to the complex built in 2002 had a sprinkler system.

residence certification on file with Quebec's Health Ministry says the home has a partial system. It also says the building was constructed entirely of wood.
Temperatures in the region were brutally cold overnight, with wind chills still in the minus-20s at 10 a.m. ET.
L'Isle-Verte is on the St. Lawrence Seaway about 150 miles northeast of Quebec City. The building, which was home to more than 50 people, also housed a social agency, a pharmacy and a hair salon.
Several fire departments in the region were called in to help extinguish the blaze, which destroyed the building.
The fire comes six months after another deadly blaze in Quebec killed 47 people. An unattended freight train carrying oil derailed, creating a powerful explosion that destroyed the downtown of Lac-Megantic, a community on the Maine-Quebec border.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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