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Heights fire engulfs four houses, displaces several families -- 126, 128, 130, and 132 Beacon Ave.
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Jersey City fire in Heights engulfs four houses, displaces several families, officials say
By Ken Thorbourne/The Jersey Journal December 20, 2009, 2:07PM Jersey City blaze on Beacon Avenue in Heights engulfed five buildings and has displaced several families. Several families have been displaced by a nearly four-alarm fire in Jersey City this morning that engulfed four buildings along Beacon Avenue in the Heights section of the city, officials say. Fire officials are calling the blaze the stiffest challenge they have faced all year due to the snow and sub-freezing temperatures they had to operate in. The fire, which was called in at 12:38 a.m. at 130 Beacon Avenue, eventually spread to involve four houses, 126, 128, 130, and 132 Beacon Ave., Fire Director Armando Roman said. Three of the buildings are in such bad condition -- 128, 130, and 132 -- they will have to be torn down, Roman said. Fire companies are still at the scene checking for spot fires her and there, Roman said. The blaze wasn't declared under control until 8 a.m. Several of the fire victims were back at the fire scene this morning, chipping ice to gain access to their apartments and recover some belongings. beacon avenue residents.JPGJoe Shine photoBeacon Avenue fire victims returned this morning to salvage some belongings One resident was transported to the Jersey City Medical Center as a result of the fire. She is an asthmatic patient, Roman said. Two firefighters suffered minor injuries and were treated at the Medical Center and released, he said. Many of these displaced families had to be temporarily sheltered at School 6 on St. Paul's Avenue. Five families -- a total of 20 people -- were taken in by the American Red Cross. The other families are staying with relatives or friends, Roman said. The fire -- which forced the department to call in additional units even after it was bumped up to three alarms -- was the most difficult for Jersey City firefighters to handle all year due to the snow and sub-freezing temperatures, Roman said. "Without a doubt this was one of the biggest ones (fires this year) and without a doubt one of the most difficult to fight because of the inclement weather," Roman said. "It (snow, cold and ice) slows your firefighting capabilities down. It makes for slow movement," he said. "Just walking in that kind of weather without having to perform a firefighting task is difficult. And everything starts freezing up. Any residual water turns to ice." The cause of the blaze is under investigation. Arson investigators are on the scene.
Posted on: 2009/12/21 3:17
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