Interesting event Bobbie.  I'm glad to read that everything worked out  and 
you were able to return to the building.
Best Wishes
 
 
In a message dated 6/7/2011 1:06:55 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:


Hi everybody, 
Baldwin Oaks Apartments was evacuated Thursday June  2nd
What happened was we had the owner's here  and/or HUD doing a yearly 
inspection. Somebody turned off then on power to the  elevator's and when the 
they 
turned everything back on, it shorted out the  entire power source that 
supports all 3 elevator's, all the lights in each  stairwell, the 2 laundry 
rooms, half the lights in the hallways and half of  the air conditioning  
system. Every individual apartment unit had  complete power though. No fire 
alarm 
went off but the fire doors were  automatically closed. 
At 1:30 in the  afternoon I got a pound on my door, Pete and I were both 
home when 2 EMT's  asked if we were alright, that the emergency pull cord 
system was activated in  my apartment unit and a bunch of other unit's randomly 
in the building. We all  went out in the hallway when Pete said "I smell 
smoke" that's when the fire  department was called.
I'm not sure of the timeline for  much of the afternoon but there were at 
least 6 or 7 fire trucks with 40  fireman, 2 EMT's and maybe 10 to 12 
policemen. EVERYBODY in the building, 364  souls, were told to go to the common 
area's, the closest exit or outside -  that God it was a beautiful sunny day, 
not to  hot.
Sometime around 3:00 or 4:00 the town deemed "the  building unsafe and an 
immediate mandatory evacuation." the Red cross was  called in to set up 200 
cot's to be put up at the community center and they  were also preparing 
food. Now try to imagine senior citizen's with mutable  physical impairment's 
using scooter's, walker's cane's, oxygen, even some here  in hospice, then 
people like me in power wheelchair's on every floor? Also,  there was the 
language barrier with resident's speaking Chinese, Russian,  Italian and 
Spanish. 
Each person had to have a policeman or fireman escort  them to their 
apartment so they could call family or a friend to spend an  unknown amount of 
time. Then we had to pack whatever they are going to need  like medication's, 
cloths and to do it all in haste and under extreme  pressure.
I had no where to go, my Mom's place dose not  have a hospital bed and no 
hotel's in the immediate area have hospital bed's  (I am right now contacting 
corporate headquarter's of the Hilton, Sheraton and  Embassy Suite's to 
suggest that they have ONE room that has a hospital bed). A  young girl, Dawn 
from the 4th floor, who is a quad also had nowhere to go. She  is request to 
have her apartment moved to the first floor and 2 other's who  are in power 
wheelchair's.
At around 8:30 after me, Pete  and Dawn got back from the pizza place 
across the street (while we were there  they got an order for 40 pie's for 
police 
and fireman) they, the large group  of town's people gathered around the 
mobile command vehicle, decided that all  first floor resident's could return 
back to their apartment's because a group  of young handsome fireman were 
spending the night. With the elevator's still  out of order Dawn spent the 
night with us. Then the light's in one of the  stairwell's was repaired so 
anybody that was able to climb the stair's and  lived on the upper floor's were 
now allowed to return home. By 2:00 Friday  June 3rd one elevator was now 
working so everybody could return  home.
With all that went on, I only know of  one man that had a heart attack. I 
am pretty darn proud of how this town came  together and helped those that 
needed it. We all here at Baldwin Oak's were  minority inconvenienced compared 
to flood's, fire's and tornadoes'.  Bobbie 




Sent  from my iPad








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