Fire claims house, family dog When...
- Share via
Fire claims house, family dog
When firefighters on Engine Two pulled up to a residential fire in
the 1600 block of Thalia Street they were faced with a fully involved
fire that was starting to spread to a neighboring home.
“It was working on the house next to it,” said Capt. Dan Steffano
of Station Two.
The call came in at about 9:12 a.m. Friday from residents who
watched helplessly as their neighbors’ home was engulfed in flames.
Along with the crew from Engine One that arrived on their heels,
Steffano began an attack plan to save neighboring structures.
The family had already left for the day when the fire started,
Battalion Chief Jess Latendresse said. The husband returned from
grocery shopping to find his home surrounded by four Laguna engines,
four from the Orange County Fire Authority and two Orange County Fire
Authority ladder trucks. A neighbor contacted the wife at her work.
Sadly, the family dog was inside the home.
“Our people did hear the dog when they arrived on the scene,”
Latendresse said. “But there was nothing we could do to try to save
it.”
The fire was under control by 9:57 a.m., allowing firefighters to
enter the structure and begin their investigation. At this time the
fire is being ruled as accidental but it is still under
investigation, Latendresse said.
It caused about $15,000 in damages to the neighboring home. A
damage figure has not yet been affixed to the main home.
“One of the good things that came out of this is the support
system to help the family out,” he said. “One lady came up to them
with $100 in cash and asked them to take it.”
-- Mary A. Castillo
Emergency crews to participate in drill
The Laguna Beach Fire and Police departments will participate in a
statewide disaster drill next Thursday.
They will practice responding to a suspected terrorist attack on a
central telecommunications facility. About 20 “victims” will be
treated and transported to local hospitals, while fire and police
manage the emergency scene.
“Disaster exercises assess the effectiveness and evaluate the
readiness of our community emergency preparedness programs and
communications links,” Battalion Chief Mark Baker said in a written
statement.
South Coast Medical Center, Mission Regional Hospital, Orange
County Fire Authority, Mercy Air Ambulance and the Orange County
Amateur Radio Emergency Services are among the agencies that will
participate.
-- Mary A. Castillo
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.