Feb. 17 fire declared 'incendiary'
by _Jessica Yu_ (http://www.dailypennsylvanian.com/author/jessica-yu)  |  
Thursday, February 24, 2011 at 11:33  pm 
 
 
_(_ (http://thedp.com/files/images/2011/02/24/01102011_BuildingFire053.jpg) 
A Jan. 10 fire at 48th and  Walnut streets at an apartment building left 
nearly 200 tenants without a place  to live. Two other fires have recently 
erupted in the area, including one on  Feb. 17 that was declared 'incendiary.' 
(Alexandra Fleischman/DP Senior  Photographer)  
 




 
Three big fires have blazed in West Philadelphia this year. 
The Philadelphia Fire Marshal’s Office has identified the cause of the Feb. 
 17 fire at 45th and Walnut streets as ‘incendiary,” with the Philadelphia 
Police  Department now looking for an arsonist at large. 
Two victims were caught in the fire and no deaths occurred. One man was  
handcuffed — but not arrested — for giving rescue workers a hard time, Deputy 
 Chief James Bonner said, adding that the man may have been under the 
influence  or panicked at the emergency situation. 
“That fire was an aggressive attack,” Bonner said. “People were picked up 
on  the fourth floor. There was an enormous number of rescue workers at work.
” 
The fire marshal welcomes any information, as the case is still open. 
Smoking in bed was the cause of a fire the previous day, Feb. 16, at  
Transition to Independent Living, located at 45th and Spruce streets. The Fire  
Marshal’s Office said the fire started with a carelessly discarded cigarette  
that lit into the mattress’ plastic and brought severe damages to the room. 
Smoke and flames soon hospitalized two patients and left seven without  
shelter, who were relocated and given groceries, shoes and winter clothing from 
 the Red Cross. No Penn students were harmed. 
Transition to Independent Living operated for 23 years assisting disabled  
adults live on their own. 
“Usually we get there to contain the fire in time,” Fire Department 
Executive  Chief Daniel Williams said. “Fires happen — it is what it is. 
Sometimes it’s  just a careless action that causes it.” 
The Windermere Court apartments, located at 48th and Walnut streets, was 
the  site of a five-alarm fire earlier this year. 
On Jan. 10, the fire gutted the residential complex, leaving nearly 200  
tenants homeless. 
With various protests for the owner to allow residents to salvage their  
belongings, the case has since been closed and labeled ‘undetermined’ by the  
Fire Marshal’s Office based on evidence and interviews it conducted. 
Plans for the building remain uncertain, but the Windermere complex has 
been  classified as “Imminently Dangerous,” Philadelphia Licenses and 
Inspections  spokeswoman Maura Kennedy said. According to Kennedy, less than 1 
percent of  Licenses and Inspections cases reach such classification. 
“It’s not unusual for us to have many significant fires in one part of the 
 city,” Bonner said of the three West Philadelphia fires. “There’s no 
reason to  believe they are related.” 
Philadelphia averages 700 incidents of fire a day, Bonner said, adding that 
 this year the number was unusually high compared to past winters. 
Bonner said the biggest problems with fire emergencies are the lack of  
working smoke detectors and victims’ refusal to ‘get out and stay out.’ Last  
year, 30 fatalities resulted just from people going back into a building to 
look  for a person or retrieve an item. 
“In winter, you have people in houses using heating plants and electric  
heater appliances,” Williams added. 
The Philadelphia Fire Department cautions students and West Philadelphia  
residents to “Make sure houses are not full of clutter, since that is fuel 
for  fire,” Williams said. “Residents should have a working smoke alarm to 
give early  warning that there is a problem.” 
A benefit show for those affected by the Windermere fire will take place at 
 The Rotunda on Friday, March 4. 


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