Published Wednesday, April 25, 2001 Yalies flee fire at off-campus
apartments Three-alarm blaze seriously damages the Oxford
BY ARIELLE LEVIN BECKER YDN Staff Reporter
Nearly 40 students will be scrambling to find housing for the last weeks of
school in the wake of a three-alarm fire at the Oxford Monday night.
The blaze, which investigators said likely began at 10:30 p.m. Monday in
the basement or a first-floor closet, drew 14 firetrucks, 60 firefighters
and scores of onlookers to 36 High St., a stone building between Chapel and
Crown streets. No injuries were reported, although two students received
oxygen for smoke inhalation, an officer at the scene said.
For the past two nights residents of the Oxford have been offered housing
at the Holiday Inn on Whalley Avenue, paid for by Yale. Seventeen students
stayed in the hotel, and the rest stayed with friends.
The cause of the fire remains under investigation, said New Haven Fire
Marshal Joe Cappucci on Tuesday.
But several of the building's residents said the building's poor physical
condition and upkeep were likely to blame and added that the fire did not
take them by surprise.
"It was just a matter of time," said Reilly Dibner '02, a second-floor
tenant. "There were wires exposed that people reported, but nothing was
fixed all year."
Many students said they mistook the fire alarms for false alarms and did
not initially plan to exit the building.
"We heard the alarm, and at first we laughed because it goes off frequently
for no reason," said Deanna Sahady '01, a resident on the first floor. "We
were going to yell to the guys upstairs to keep it down, but then we saw
flames shooting from the stairwell."
As residents tried to escape the burning building, several got stuck on the
fire escape in the back, which did not have a ladder connecting the second
story to the ground. Eventually, students on the fire escape were rescued
by firefighters using a ladder.
"People told us to run to the back and go from the fire escape, but there
was no way to get down," Anne Rippetoe '01 said. "We hung out there for
about 20 minutes before some really nice firemen came with a ladder. It
felt like it happened pretty quickly."
As firefighters finished putting out the blaze and inspected the building,
residents, many dressed in their pajamas, lingered on High Street. Some
tearfully telephoned friends, while others blamed building owner Odis
Coleman for failing to keep the building in a safe condition.
Coleman, who purchased the building this year with plans to renovate over
the summer, did not return phone calls Tuesday.
Around 11:30, residents met with arson investigators and Dean of Student
Affairs Betty Trachtenberg in Linsly-Chittenden Hall to discuss where they
could stay for the night.
Residents were allowed to return to their apartments Tuesday afternoon
escorted by fire fighters. Walking out carrying duffel bags full of
clothes, stuffed animals and laptop computers, residents said most of their
valuables had survived the fire, though two laptops were reported stolen.
The physical condition of the building, which residents said included
exposed wiring, dripping pipes and leaky toilets, sparked much discussion
among those evacuated from the building.
"The building was a death trap," said Mike Schulte '01, of the second
floor. "We sent letters but never heard from them."
Residents said their frequent phone calls to Coleman about various problems
in the building were seldom answered.
Fire investigators said they had never heard any complaints about the
building until Monday night, and Cappucci said no complaints or requests
for inspection had been filed with his office.
Copyright © 2001 Yale Daily News. All rights reserved.
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