Memories seared in a community
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Deepa Bharath
The last year has felt longer that it should have for Julie May.
A year ago, on March 2, 2002, her townhome burst into flames as
she was lounging by the swimming pool with her family. May lost six
pets and everything she had collected since she was a little girl --
dolls, figurines, glass, crystal, beanie babies and memories -- along
with pictures and heirlooms bequeathed to her by her recently
deceased mother.
“I’ve learned to let it all go,” May said. “Losing all that is not
like losing a person.”
May’s home in the Monticello Town Homes Complex, off Fairview Road
and Vanguard Way, burned down less than 48 hours after another
explosive early morning fire in the same complex killed a 68-year-old
man and jolted neighbors out of their beds. That fire also shattered
windows and caused structural damage to neighboring homes.
The two fires left the small community dazed, confused and
paranoid for a while, said Julia Cross, a board member of the
Monticello Homeowners Assn.
A year later, people are pulling their lives back together, she
said.
“I’m excited to see people’s lives getting back on track,” Cross
said. “There’re still some rattled nerves, but we’ve been able to get
past repairs, insurance and legal issues.”
She said board members sympathized with those whose lives were
turned upside down by the incidents.
“It was extremely difficult because rebuilding was a very slow
process,” Cross said. “I think we have a couple of windows that are
still boarded up. If we learned something from this experience, it’s
the truth about insurance, paperwork and lawyers. The corporate wheel
turns very slowly, and that’s frustrating.”
CAUSES AND CONCERNS
Fire investigators concluded that the fire in May’s home was
sparked by too many appliances being hooked to one outlet.
The explosion in the Feb. 28 fire was set off when paint fumes
were ignited by an unknown source, they say. They believe that the
man who died in the fire, Robert Jamison Marshall, stored several
cans of paint and fuel throughout his house. The fire broke out in
the garage and burned through the house, charring everything in its
fiery path.
That scene is etched in John Leighton’s memory. Leighton’s town
home was across the way from Marshall’s. Like many of his neighbors,
he bolted out as soon as he heard the explosion.
He saw Marshall come out of his burning home.
“He was on fire,” Leighton recalled. “He was walking around and he
was on fire.”
So Leighton tried to put out the fire on Marshall with an
extinguisher. But to his utter shock and dismay, Marshall ran back
into his house, only to be brought out in a body bag hours later.
Leighton said the entire episode, for him, has been “terribly
disruptive.”
“My windows were blown out, and there was a lot of other damage,”
he said. “I’m still negotiating with insurance agencies to fix some
of the damage. Most of it has been taken care of, but I’ve had to pay
for a lot of the stuff myself.”
Resilience has been the mantra for most residents.
“Everyone’s pulled together,” said Sam McDowell, who arrived on
scene before firefighters did and actually managed to snap a couple
shots of the explosive fire with the camera she always kept ready and
loaded on her mantel.
A CHANGE IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD
McDowell said neighbors have gotten closer since the back-to-back
fires shook the sleepy little community by its roots.
“People are stopping and waving these days,” she said. “It seems
as if we care more about each other. I think we feel free to approach
one another.”
Costa Mesa Fire Chief Jim Ellis likened the incidents to a
microcosmic version of Sept. 11.
“It was a terrible, devastating couple of situations within a
short span of time,” he said. “But we learned from it. It reinforced
a sense of community. We had town hall meetings, we talked about it.
We reached out and comforted one another.”
It’s that comfort and support that helped May get back on her
feet, she said. May returned to her refurbished home in August.
“The first night I spent after I got back, the fire alarm went
off,” she said with a laugh. “It was bizarre, but it helped me look
at it with a sense of humor.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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