Detroit residents and firemen denounce social decay in fire deaths

By Daniel Douglass, D’Artagnan Collier and Tim Tower
29 October 2008

Residents and firemen in Highland Park and Detroit, Michigan have
denounced the social conditions that led to a tragic house fire in the
early morning hours of October 22. Orlando "Dewey" Glover, 11, Zeryha
Dale, 9, and Melvin "Petey" Turner, 5, died in the blaze. Their great
aunt, Josephine Dale, 51, died after reentering the burning house to
save the children. Josephine's son Willie and his girlfriend were able
to escape with their infant child.

An investigation is still under way to determine the definitive cause
of the fire in Highland Park. Friends of the family, however, reported
that basic utility services to the house—electricity, gas, and water—
had been cut off. It was feared that these very difficult conditions
contributed to the blaze, which reduced four adjacent houses to
smoldering cinders and damaged a fifth house nearby.

A majority of homes in Highland Park have at least one of their
utilities cut off at any given time. Most houses in the area date from
the early decades of the 20th century, when production at the nearby
Ford plants, which produced the Model T and the Model A, was booming.
Most lack insulation, caulking and updated windows, which are
routinely required under contemporary building codes, to protect
inhabitants against the loss of heat. Too often, desperate efforts to
keep warm lead to terrible tragedies.

These aging wood-frame structures were built at a time when basic fire
stops in wall cavities and the penetrations between levels were not
required by building codes. The use of fire retardant materials, which
also satisfy contemporary code requirements, was unheard of. The
terrifying result is that houses can function as firetraps.

Budget cuts have tied the hands of firefighters. While the number of
fires has steadily increased, the number of firemen and open fire
stations has been cut. In Highland Park, instead of closing stations
permanently, the city has adopted a policy of alternating temporary
shutdowns. Often, as in the case of the Dale home fire, nearby fire
hydrants have inadequate water pressure to fill a hose.

On Saturday, the World Socialist Web Site sent a team of reporters to
talk to residents and firemen in the area. An initial reaction of
shock and sorrow has been supplemented with a growing sense of anger
over the role of big business in precipitating the city's decay,
contributing to this tragic loss of life.

Curtis Johnson, a carpenter who knew Josephine and her family, said he
was shocked by her death. He had seen her only the Monday before the
tragedy.

He noted that many in the area cannot afford utilities and that things
are getting worse. "We have professionals here who work in healthcare,
or as factory workers, and can't pay their bills," he said. He
gestured along Highland Park's Waverly Road. "In the summer all these
houses were open. Now they're closed down."

Curtis and his wife Ayeisha live with close family in the neighborhood
and are trying to buy a house of their own. When we met them they were
standing in front of a vacant home they have been trying to purchase
for four months. After a multitude of appeals, said Ayeisha, "we still
can't get the $2,000 loan we need to move in."

While the couple has counted as many as six vacant homes on a nearby
city block, they cannot acquire one for themselves and their six
children.

"People are helping us out," said Curtis, "neighbors, friends and
family. We as a society have to do that now. We've had no help from
the city; just other people."

Curtis lost his job two years ago after becoming ill. "I've applied
for Social Security four times. They told me, ‘when your kidneys are
failing and you're on dialysis, then you can come back.' They can keep
their food stamps. I just want insurance."

He said that his monthly medications had increased from $6 to $80
dollars in the space of a year. Without help from the local pharmacy,
he said, they would cost $720.

Curtis said that he would vote for Obama, but that he was furious
about the bailout of Wall Street and the political programs adopted by
both parties. "How on earth can we all share the cost of this bailout
if we're not equal in the first place?"

"The auto companies and banks did this to themselves, with their
executive bonuses and golden parachutes. What do they have to complain
about?" he asked.

Across the street at a family gathering, Renee Tripp said she was
"disgusted, frustrated and angry" about the fire that had claimed
Josephine and the children.

Renee and her family were coping with another loss. During the summer,
Renee's sister Deborah, 41 years old, had disappeared. When we spoke
with Renee she had just learned that a body found in Detroit might be
that of her sister.

Larry Williams, Renee's brother in law, said that the authorities had
cut off Deborah's utilities before she disappeared, forcing her into
the street. "I think that contributed to this tragedy," he said. "It
was the first home she'd owned her whole life. At one time we could
appeal for lights and gas. Now there's nobody to appeal to. Only money
can appeal."

Local firemen spoke to the WSWS about the fire on Wednesday and the
condition of Detroit's fire department. Danny, a firefighter for over
two decades, said that more firemen were needed and that fire
companies needed to be kept open.

"Half a dozen companies are closed every day," he said, adding that
the orders from above were not meant to save lives, but money. "The
city's playing Russian roulette with our safety," he said.

In 2003, Fire Commissioner Tyrone Scott worked with Mayor Kwame
Kilpatrick to shut down fire companies "on a rolling basis," reducing
the safety budget. The two initially stated that the closures would be
temporary, lasting perhaps only the duration of the summer.

According to the Detroit Free Press, Danny and other firefighters
opposed these measures without success. Neither Scott nor Kilpatrick
are mentioned among firefighters without an immediate outburst of
anger and contempt.

One fireman, Hunter, said that Detroit suffered from more fires than
other cities. "How many is it now," he asked, "25 a day?"

"Those are real fires," added his colleague Wayne, "not false alarms."

Wayne noted that fires used to be concentrated in poorer
neighborhoods. "Now they're everywhere," he said. As more and more
people face economic ruin, some try to burn their houses down to
collect insurance. This puts them, their neighbors and firemen at
risk.

"People lose their jobs. They sometimes set fire to their homes
because they're desperate. I don't condone their actions—they could
get themselves killed—but I understand them," Wayne said. "They've got
their kids sitting there without food or utilities. They don't know
what to do."

He added, "It's because of these predatory lending practices and
adjustable rate mortgages. These banks come in and say the home that's
selling for $80,000 is worth $220,000. Then you start getting the
bills; how are you going to pay for that with a retirement check?"

Asked about the influence of racial politics in Detroit, Wayne, who is
black, insisted, "Workers have got to look beyond color. I'll tell you
what I care about. I want my daughter to get a good education. I want
your son to have medical care. I want families to be able to put food
on the table."

"And we need to have city infrastructure," added Hunter, "that gives
funding to the fire department so we can protect its citizens."





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