Anonymous wrote:The house is new construction and cost $2 Mil!!
New houses burn much easier than old houses.
I cannot help but wonder if this would have made the news if it had been a smaller income family in a smaller house. I guess when something happens to those with money it becomes front page news
Anonymous wrote:The house is new construction and cost $2 Mil!!
New houses burn much easier than old houses.
I cannot help but wonder if this would have made the news if it had been a smaller income family in a smaller house. I guess when something happens to those with money it becomes front page news
Anonymous wrote:And you know what? I bet this poor woman read about the tragedy involving the woman who drove the wrong way down a highway in New York, killing herself, her daughter and her three nieces and thought, "wow, that is tragic but that will never happen to me." Folks, smart people do dumb things all the time. So, thanks to the pp who took the time to tell us about smart fire behavior.
Anonymous wrote:The house is new construction and cost $2 Mil!!
New houses burn much easier than old houses.
I cannot help but wonder if this would have made the news if it had been a smaller income family in a smaller house. I guess when something happens to those with money it becomes front page news
Anonymous wrote:Why would anyone attempt to remove hot ashes from the fireplace? What reason could there have possibly been? You let the fire die in the fireplace and remove the ashes when they accumulate periodically, when they are cold. Is this tragedy the result of stupidity? Am I missing something here?
I did it. I actually ran my fingers through the ashes to make sure they were cold before I put them in the trash. And I burned our garage down. Thankfully, we had fire alarms and everyone got out of the house quickly. The fire department was at our house in two and a half minutes. Had it not been for their quick response, our house would have been a total loss.
I had used one of those chemical starter logs to get the fire going. According to the firefighters, pieces of those logs can stay hot for more than 24 hours. When I ran my hand through the cold ashes, I just didn't feel the lone piece of still hot starter.
It was horrible. If anything had happened to anyone in the house, I'm not sure how I could have gone on living. The guilt from the fire alone just about destroyed me for a long time.
I can't even imagine the families pain. I pray they all somehow eventually find peace.
Anonymous wrote:something is really messed up with this whoe situation. When it is all over, someone is up to no good
Anonymous wrote:Thanks so much to the PPs who offered their own personal experiences - we don't have a fireplace (which usually bums me out) but I will look at this tragedy as an impetus to get backup smoke alarms and think more carefully about fire safety.
To the PP who questioned whether the interest in this story is class-oriented: I don't think so. I think the details of this awful event, with a woman's three children AND her parents killed, would have drawn attention no matter what. Add to that the fact that her father was a Macy's Santa AND a safety expert, and it's totally understandable why there is such interest.
Ditto!Anonymous wrote:7:58, I'm glad you and your family were able to make it out unscathed. Thanks for sharing your story.